|
|
Clara and Clem Take a Ride
by Ethan Long
When Clara and Clem build a car out of blocks, they have no idea where it will take them, but with a little imagination, the two take the trip of a lifetime down winding roads, up tall mountains and across the sky. Simultaneous.
|
|
|
Rabbit & Robot : The Sleepover
by Cece Bell
This is also a great series for Frog & Toad fans. Rabbit is excited about the sleepover he has carefully planned for his friend Robot, but Robot has some different ideas about how things should go.
|
|
|
Okay, Andy
by Maxwell Eaton
Presented in an engaging comic-style format for transitioning readers, a collection of early chapter book stories features unlikely friends Andy the alligator and Preston the coyote pup, who confront other animals, their fears and their own patience levels.
|
|
|
Have You Seen my Dragon?
by Steve Light
Traveling among taxis and towers in the heart of an intricately detailed cityscape, a small boy requests help finding his missing dragon, in a story that invites young children to practice counting to 20 and spot the dragon hiding from his friend.
|
|
|
Billions of Bricks
by Kurt Cyrus
A counting book that leads readers through the day in the life of a construction worker building with bricks.
|
|
|
Once Upon an Alphabet : Short Stories for All the Letters
by Oliver Jeffers
A wryly whimsical alphabet primer reinforces letter-recognition skills by introducing an Astronaut who is afraid of heights, a Bridge that ends up burned between friends and a Cup that is stuck in a cupboard. By the award-winning creator of The Day the Crayons Quit.
|
|
|
Fish
by Liam Francis Walsh
A boy and his dog reel in different letters of the alphabet while on an unusual fishing trip
|
|
|
Lindbergh : The Tale of a Flying Mouse
by Torben Kuhlmann
A sumptuously illustrated debut inspired by Charles Lindbergh's solo flight follows the trials of a small mouse who pursues a brilliant idea to escape to America by plane after the introduction of the mechanical mousetrap.
|
|
|
Toilet : How it Works
by David Macaulay
A celebrated author-illustrator brings his acclaimed voice and style to a high-interest nonfiction book about the complex inner-workings of one of the most familiar objects in our lives, the toilet.
|
|
|
The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip
by Joanna Cole
Ms. Frizzle's class learns firsthand about how electricity works by traveling via the Magic School Bus through the town's power lines, where they jump from atom to atom, riding electrical currents within familiar appliances.
|
|
|
Ada Twist, Scientist
by Andrea Beaty
Ada Twist is a very curious girl who shows perseverance by asking questions and performing experiments to find things out and understand the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|