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This book was created to enable parents to read to their children to help them sleep. Children over six can also read this book. Simonne is an experienced teacher with the knowledge and expertise of reading to children and understanding what children love to read. Simonne has added some educational facts about clouds—what are clouds made of, how are clouds formed, and many other facts about clouds and our solar system. The book is also available as an e-book. I look forward to writing many more educational books.
Clouds! is aligned to the Common Core State Standards for English/Language Arts, addressing Literacy.RI.2.7 and Literacy.L.2.5a. Full-page color photographs and narrative nonfiction text help readers learn about how clouds form and what kind of weather they bring as they study some of the foundational concepts of meteorology. A graphic organizer is included. This book should be paired with “What the Clouds Are Telling You" (9781477723098) from the Rosen Common Core Readers Program to provide the alternative point of view on the same topic.
It’s Hazel’s birthday, but instead of excitement, she feels disappointed. Her parents are too busy arguing to remember her special day, and her best friend, Sarah, is home sick. Hazel’s hopes for birthday fun fade quickly. After a lonely day at school, Hazel returns home, feeling sad and angry. The house is eerily quiet – no surprise party waiting for her. She stomps upstairs in tears, but just as she does, she notices the wind picking up outside, strange shadows forming, and a curious noise. Alone in her bedroom, sobbing quietly, Hazel hears a tapping at the window. What she sees makes her believe that maybe, just maybe, a birthday adventure awaits after all.
Discusses the history, types, and cultural fascination with clouds and explains what they mean in terms of climate and weather.
Author Shannon Hale presents "Tell Me What You See?" A beautiful picture book for anyone who has ever delighted in the quiet beauty of "Goodnight Moon" or "Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?" Sure to tug on the heart strings of children and adults alike.
Fact-filled, fun-filled, as interesting to parents as it is to kids, the How Come? series is the trusted source for lively, clear answers to kids’ science queries. Now the best questions and answers from all three books—How Come?; How Come? Planet Earth; and How Come? In the Neighborhood—have been revised, updated, freshly illustrated in full color, supplemented with twenty completely new questions, and combined into one bigger, better volume. How Come? explains, in fascinating detail, more than 200 mysteries and phenomena in the world around us. These are the questions that pique kids’ curiosity—and stump parents. When it rains, does running (rather than walking) to the nearest shelter really keep you any drier? How can a stone skip across a pond (instead of sink)? If the Earth is spinning, why can’t we feel it? Why don’t we fly off? Why do elephants have trunks? And the all-time classic, Why is the sky blue? (Sunlight has a hidden rainbow of colors, and air molecules scatter blues the most—sending bright blue light down to Earth.) The text is clearly written, engaging, and accessible. It’s for every kid who wants to know—and every grown-up who simply doesn’t know.
Nowadays references to the afterlife-angels strumming harps, demons brandishing pitchforks, God enthroned on heavenly clouds-are more often encountered in New Yorker cartoons than in serious Christian theological reflection. Speculation about death and its sequel seems to embarrass many theologians; however, as Greg Garrett shows in Entertaining Judgment, popular culture in the U.S. has found rich ground for creative expression in the search for answers to the question: What lies in store for us after we die? The lyrics of Madonna, Los Lonely Boys, and Sean Combs; the plotlines of TV's Lost, South Park, and The Walking Dead; the implied theology in films such as The Dark Knight, Ghost, and Field of Dreams; the heavenly half-light of Thomas Kinkade's popular paintings; the ghosts, shades, and after-life way-stations in Harry Potter; and the characters, situations, and locations in the Hunger Games saga all speak to our hopes and fears about what comes next. In a rich survey of literature and popular media, Garrett compares cultural accounts of death and the afterlife with those found in scripture. Denizens of the imagined afterlife, whether in heaven, hell, on earth, or in purgatory, speak to what awaits us, at once shaping and reflecting our deeply held-if often somewhat nebulous-beliefs. They show us what rewards and punishments we might expect, offer us divine assistance, and even diabolically attack us. Ultimately, we are drawn to these stories of heaven, hell, and purgatory--and to stories about death and the undead--not only because they entertain us, but because they help us to create meaning and to learn about ourselves, our world, and, perhaps, the next world. Garrett's deft analysis sheds new light on what popular culture can tell us about the startlingly sharp divide between what modern people profess to believe and what they truly hope and expect to find after death--and how they use those stories to help them understand this life.
If you are a serious person don't buy this book! If you love wackiness, by all means shell out your dough for a most unusual book. Written by a married couple trying to ruin each other's story, America's Most Wanted Short Stories is a wacky anthology of fun! Filled with tales poking fun at romance, business, family, entertainment, music, and much more! - America's Most Wanted Short Stories is written to entertain! The British have called these stories "bizarre." Funny. Their own brand of DNA. For those with a warped sense of humor and for those who want a warped sense of humor - this is a must-have book for your collection! Buy your copy, today!
Presents a children's book for early readers that describes the different kinds of clouds, how clouds are formed, how clouds make rain and snow, storm clouds, and more.