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“Hold On to Your Music: The Inspiring True Story of the Children of Willesden Lane” already exists in your wishlist
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A perfect introduction to how we talk and think about the weather.
By: Gail Gibbons
$11.99
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Wee Gillis is a quick study, and he soon picks up what his elders can teach him. And yet he is unprepared when the day comes for him to decide, once and for all, whether it will be the lowlands or the highlands that he will call his home.
By: Munro Leaf
$24.95
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Immerse yourself in the sea in this illustrated look at the world's largest mammals for the littlest learners.
By: Gail Gibbons
$10.99
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This title discusses the important difference between wants and needs, and how it relates to money.
By: Rachel Eagen
$10.95
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In this beautiful Caldecott Honor picture book, Steven Jenkins and illustrator Robin Page explore the many amazing things animals can do with eyes, ears, mouth, noses, feet, and tails. Young readers will relish the mystery behind this interactive guessing book.
By: Steve Jenkins
$12.50
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Best-selling author Nancy Guthrie and much loved illustrator Jenny Brake team up on this biblical theology of prayer for children. Nancy explains in child-friendly language what prayer is, how and why we should pray, and the things we can pray about. There is a Bible verse for each topic, and a prayer for children to make their own. This book will introduce children to the gift of prayer and will encourage them to enjoy speaking to their father God.
By: Nancy Guthrie
$27.50
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From the Publisher:
In clear language and art, including diagrams, the book takes readers through such details as how much trash each person creates every day (on average), where the trash goes, and ways kids can make a difference. It concludes with instructions on how to create a compost pile.
By: D. J. Ward
$7.25
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The child’s science learner What is a Mammal? teaches about the main groups of mammals, their diets, habitats, and anatomy in this colorfully illustrated book.
By: Bobbie Kalman
$12.50
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Mathematicians say that symmetry has to be identical parts, but nature is never truly identical.
However, it is far more interesting than geometric shapes!
By: Bobbie Kalman
$12.50
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What is the Animal Kingdom? explains the scientific classification of animals. It classifies and describes various creatures, including insects, mammals, and fish. It also explains the basics of kingdoms and species that form an important foundation for the study of biology, and tells how readers can help prevent their destruction.
By: Bobbie Kalman
$10.95
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From the Publisher:
Let’s-Read-and-Find-Out About Solids, Liquids, and Gases
Can you make an ice cube disappear? Put it on a hot sidewalk. It melts into water and then vanishes! The ice cube changes from solid to liquid to gas. . . . Read on to find out more about the three states of matter
By: Kathleen Weidner Zoehfeld
$10.99
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A house is a home for you, a nest is a home for a bird, and a cave is a home for a bear. But for some animals a shell is a home. Snails and turtles and crabs and clams all have shells that act as their homes and protect them from harm.
By: Kathleen Weidner Zoehfeld
$10.99
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Why does a magnet pick up a paper clip but not a leaf or a penny? How can the whole world be a magnet?
By: Franklyn M. Branley
$11.99
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If you lived on the moon, you would have two straight weeks of daylight and then two weeks of night! On earth, we have both day and night in just twenty-four hours, thanks to the quick rotation of our planet.
Read and find out more in What Makes Day and Night!
By: Dr. Franklyn M. Branley
$10.99
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Did you know that worker bees have more than 5,000 lenses in each eye and dragonflies have more than 30,000? Did you know a chameleon can move each of its eyes in opposite directions?
By: Bobbie Kalman
$12.50
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Mr. Crocodile has big plans for finally catching--and eating--five pesky monkeys, but those little rascals dupe him again and again.
By: Judy Sierra
$12.50