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Girls just want to have fun. Follow them as they play. Wiggly Giggly Girls is a celebration of life.*Parents who read to their infants and toddlers give them an immeasurable boost for their future. Parents and grandparents, who frequently read to their young, also create a lifelong bond with them. It's such a little thing, to read to a child, but what a huge reward we get in return.
In clever rhyme and reason children are taught the true value of the common earthworm.
A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year Winner of the Paterson Prize for Books for Young People Arnold Adoff Poetry Honor Award This lyrical middle-grade novel-in-verse celebrates the power of story and of finding one’s individual voice. Keet knows the only good thing about moving away from her Alabama home is that she'll live near her beloved grandfather. When Keet starts school, it's even worse than she expected, as the kids tease her about her southern accent. Now Keet, who can "talk the whiskers off a catfish," doesn't want to open her mouth. While fishing with her grandfather, she learns the art of listening and gradually, she makes her first new friend. But just as she's beginning to settle in, her grandfather has a stroke, and even though he's still nearby, he suddenly feels ever-so-far-away. Keet is determined to reel him back to her by telling him stories; in the process she finds her voice and her grandfather again. A Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices Selection
Ellie finally meets a boy. The right boy. And she wants to spend all her time with him. Her curfew is way too early, but if her stepmother doesn’t tell, her father will never know she’s been out late. It’s not like anything bad is going to happen, and her father doesn’t need to know what she does every minute of every day. As long as she brings her friends along, everything should be all right. Too bad the best laid plans often go wrong!
The Memory Key author Liana Liu delivers a thrilling story of one girl struggling to claim her own identity while becoming an unwitting participant in the strange fate of a wealthy dynasty. The house on Arrow Island is full of mystery. Yet, when Mei arrives, she can’t help feeling relieved. She’s happy to spend the summer in an actual mansion tutoring a rich man’s daughter if it means a break from her normal life—her needy mother, her delinquent brother, their tiny apartment in the city. And Ella Morison seems like an easy charge, sweet and well behaved. What she doesn’t know is that something is very wrong in the Morison household. Though Mei tries to focus on her duties, she becomes increasingly distracted by the family’s problems and her own complicated feelings for Ella’s brother, Henry. But most disturbing of all are the unexplained noises she hears at night—the howling and thumping and cries. Mei is a sensible girl. She isn’t superstitious; she doesn’t believe in ghosts. Yet she can’t shake her fear that there is danger lurking in the shadows of this beautiful house, a darkness that could destroy the family inside and out...and Mei along with them.
Contained herein are accounts from the Wasteland, a curious realm teetering on the Edge of the Abyss between Heaven and Hell. It is in this oddity of mankind’s own making that choices between good and evil hold center stage and are at the very heart of determining if one, in fact, has a soul.
"Brown Girl Lost and Found is a collection of poems, prose and musings. You will experience the poets feeling of lost, then transition with her as she triumphantly transitions to being found!"--Amazon.com
No matter how hard we try, and no matter how much we want to believe such a thing exists, there are no perfect parents. There are no perfect spouses. So rather than sit around lamenting his own shortcomings, Jon Ziegler decided to do something about it . . . Laugh! Single Family Asylum is a hilarious celebration of all the family events and attitudes that make us human. And as ridiculous as some of these short stories can get, they are all still wrapped around elements that are familiar to nearly every family on the planet. So if perfection, or even sound advice on parenting and marriage is what you are seeking, this book will be of little value. But if a humorous, offbeat look at life through the eyes of a well-intentioned but less than perfect husband and father , you might just want to check out Single Family Asylum.