Who will rescue poor Jemima Puddle-Duck when she's tricked by the cunning Fox?
I show up bright against the sky. I swoop and swoosh and flutter by. What can I be? What do you see? Stephen Krensky’s clever, rhyming text entices young readers to guess which endangered species are hiding beneath the flaps! From a panda bear to a monarch butterfly, each spread features text and flaps which hint at the animal’s identity, until finally it is revealed by lifting the fl…
Bella and Britt think living by the beach is the coolest thing ever. When they discover an unprotected sea turtle's nest, they go into action! Will their bravery and quick thinking save the baby turtles? How can do they do it, and what lesson will they learn about themselves? The book also contains kid appealing sea turtle facts. Suggested for readers:6-9
Poor Swinging Sally isn't very good at swinging. She tries very hard but every time, she lands with a bumpety-bump on her bottom. Will she ever be able to swing along with all her gorilla fiends?'
Roaring Rory hates lion lessons. He prefers to laze around in the sun all day. But, one night, Rory hearsarustling in the bushes. Will he rememberhow to roar and pounce like a big lion?'
Several animals sleep snugly in Nicki's lost mitten until the bear sneezes.
In the forty years since Max first cried "Let the wild rumpus start," Maurice Sendak's classic picture book has become one of the most highly acclaimed and best-loved children's books of all time. Now, in celebration of this special anniversary, introduce a new generation to Max's imaginative journey to Where the Wild Things Are. Fre
Yesh! Mooch, Earl, and all their endearing Mutts friends return in this fourth Mutts collection for kids! It's been a long, cold winter—Earl and Mooch are looking forward to shmelling the flowers! Spring is the season of new beginnings. The birds are singing fresh concertos they’ve been working on all winter long. The caterpillars are dreaming of butterfly flight. And the bears could use…
A beautiful bird named Joy stops one day to visit a mountain. Every spring she flies high in the air, looking for the best place to build her nest and raise her children. As much as Joy would liked to stay with the mountain, she must leave to continue he
It is night-time in the bear cave but Copycub does not feel sleepy. So his mother tells him a story of a sleeping goose on a lake, a snoozing moose in the shadows, a snug little hare in the grass - and Copycub's ayes start to feel heavy.