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Cover: Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift - Children's Literature

Taylor Swift knew from a young age that she wanted to be a songwriter and singer. Her parents, recognizing Swift’s tremendous talent, began entering little Taylor in local singing contests and even moved to Nashville when Swift was eleven years old in order to provide her more… View →

 
Cover: What comes in sets?

What comes in sets? - School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 1—These titles resemble sections of a textbook, focusing on one concept and offering several approaches to it. In Comparing Fractions, the proverbial pizza is one example used to solve a problem and for sharing. Other examples include peppers, corn, tomatoes, radishes, and eggs.… View →

 
Cover: Vanessa Hudgens

Vanessa Hudgens - Children's Literature

This heavily illustrated biography of Vanessa Hudgens covers her life and career in brief headlined segments. The first two pages summarize her current status in four such segments: “The Rest Is Herstory,” a description of the audition for High School Musical that accelerated View →

 
Cover: Water Wise!

Water Wise! - Children's Literature

Book eleven in the Crabtree “Connections 2” series, which teaches about history, medicine and environment among other things. This paperback discusses water and the ways we can use it more wisely. For instance, only three % of all water on our planet is drinkable, yet people… View →

 
Cover: The Appalachians

The Appalachians - Children's Literature

The historic Appalachians—separating the eastern coastal plain of North America from the interior—stretch from Labrador in Canada to northern Georgia and Alabama. Readers of this “Mountains Around the World” series will discover that the Appalachians influenced the early… View →

 
Cover: What Caused the War of 1812?

What Caused the War of 1812? - Children's Literature

In 1812 the United States had grown to seventeen states but remained rather fragile in terms of its position as a free nation. In Europe, war raged on as the British and their continental allies continued to fight against the forces of Napoleon. While this seemingly endless warfare was… View →

 
Cover: Arts and Culture in the Ancient World

Arts and Culture in the Ancient World - Children's Literature

Reading this title in the “Life in the Ancient World” makes you realize how much was developed thousands of years ago—music, calligraphy, painting and games. The Chinese were masters of all and played a game of qi or Chinese chess. In many societies women were not given the… View →

 
Cover: Backyard Cookbook

Backyard Cookbook - Children's Literature

Growing and cooking one’s own food can be a lot of fun to share with family and friends. Fruits and vegetables grow in a garden at different times of the year. Cooking with the seasons offers an array of garden delights, and the final product can be crunchy, sweet, tangy or tart.… View →

 
Cover: Groundhog Day

Groundhog Day - Children's Literature

With stunning colored photographs of groundhogs and simple text, many facts about Groundhog Day are shared. Groundhog Day is February 2nd in the United States and Canada. If the groundhog sees his shadow on that day, six more weeks of winter weather is predicted. If the groundhog does… View →

 
Cover: What Are Sedimentary Rocks?

What Are Sedimentary Rocks? - Children's Literature

Sedimentary rocks are a common form of rocks, as they result from sediment forming to build a new structure. Hyde walks the reader through the process of this creation, from bits of sand or particles of rock falling off and being carried away by wind, ice or rain, to the deposits of… View →

 
Cover: What Are Metamorphic Rocks?

What Are Metamorphic Rocks? - Children's Literature

Metamorphic rocks are created from intense heat, such as lava. Aloian takes the reader through the origins of metamorphic rock, especially natural features created through the shifting of the Earth’s tectonic plates. The Himalayas, for example, were formed after the continents of… View →

 
Cover: Egypt - the people (revised, ed. 2)

Egypt - the people (revised, ed. 2) - Children's Literature

The best part of this series of small volumes is the scattering of striking photographs—women veiled in the Muslim tradition making political speeches as far back as 1919 or modern high school graduates in cap and gown showing a mixture of headscarves, mortar boards and flowing… View →