Download Free Shanah Tovah Grover Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Shanah Tovah Grover and write the review.

Kar-Ben Read-Aloud eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and text highlighting to bring eBooks to life! Shanah Tovah, everybodeeee! Help Grover get ready to welcome the Jewish New Year. Familiar Sesame Street characters teach the objects and rituals of the Jewish New Year in this bright and fun board book.
Kar-Ben Read-Aloud eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and text highlighting to bring eBooks to life! Shanah Tovah, everybodeeee! Help Grover get ready to welcome the Jewish New Year.
Grover does a mitzvah (good deed) by joining his friends to spruce up the neighborhood playground. Even Moishe Oofnik comes out of his trash can to help, eating up all the trash, and separating the cans for recycling.
Kar-Ben Read-Aloud eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and text highlighting to bring eBooks to life! At a Hanukkah party on Sesame Street, Grover and the Count welcome visiting Israeli Muppet friends Brosh and Avigail, tell the story of Hanukkah, feast on latkes, and learn that EIGHT is the perfect Hanukkah number.
At Hanukkah, 8 is especially great! Use this fun board book to count party guests, candles, latkes, and more!
Grover attends a traditional Passover seder with his friends Avigail, Big Bird, Moishe Oofnik, and Brosh.
"Grover leaves Sesame Street for a sightseeing adventure in Israel"--
Curious about the Jewish holidays? Very young readers learn about holiday customs with everyone’s favorite inquisitive spider!
Uncle Jake gets to blow the shofar twice within ten days, as the family celebrates first Rosh Hashanah and then Yom Kippur.
Hello everybodeee! This is your furry friend Grover wishing you a Shanah Tovah. That is Hebrew for “Happy New Year.” I am here in Israel with my favorite Cookie Monster, and I am going to tell you how my friend Brosh learned to be an even better friend in the New Year. Brosh can’t find his blue cap, and suspects that one of his friends has taken it. When Grover returns the lost item, Brosh is glad that the High Holidays offer him a chance to say, “I’m sorry.”