It’s 8:00 a.m. and Ted is waking up. Not Fred! He’s going to snooze a little bit longer. Kids will love moving the hands on this sturdy clock book as they follow P. D. Eastman’s dynamic dog duo throughout their day. Learning to tell time has never been so much fun!
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When separated from his mother, a baby bird asks every animal and each thing he comes across, “Are you my mother?” until the joyful reunion. Colorful, cartoon-like illustrations depict the baby bird’s search in this modern classic.
Two dogs who are opposite in every way are also the best of friends. The bold, colorful drawings are appealing and emphasize the concepts of size, color, and opposites.
When a strange egg appears in their nest, Mr. and Mrs. Bird kindly take it upon themselves to raise the “baby bird” inside. But when the egg hatches, the Birds are in for a big surprise “Junior” is the oddest-looking baby bird they’ve ever seen with big, long jaws full of teeth and an appetite to match. In fact, he looks more like a baby alligator than a baby bird! Nevertheless, the devoted Birds run themselves ragged feeding Junior until he gets so big, he must leave the nest or it will collapse underneath him. But how can Junior fly without wings? To the delight of the Birds and readers! the dilemma is solved when Junior takes off from a branch overlooking a pond.
Big dogs, little dogs, and all kinds of dogs are on the go throughout the pages of this surprising and funny classic easy reader. Illustrations use strong lines with muted colors to show playful mutts of all sizes in outrageous activities that keep beginning readers reading.
A decades-old dictionary that you can still use today (and know that children will love it) is an amazing testament to the genius of the Seuss stable. The roughly 12-per-page colored drawings are dated, of course the humans far more than the animals, funnily enough but they’ve aged in a way that adds to their charm rather than detracting from it. (Phonograph may take some explaining; ditto typewriter.) The 1,350 words are well balanced between the obvious stuff common nouns and verbs and more abstract language, from about to yet. Each word is accompanied by a drawing and an illustrative sentence. Along the way, naturally, we meet a wacky menagerie of humans and animals.