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Books with author Ashley Barron

  • Love You Head to Toe

    Ashley Barron

    Board book (Owlkids, March 15, 2020)
    Pairing creative rhyming similes with cut-paper collage art, Love You Head to Toe is an adorable book that compares newborn babies to baby animals on every page. Bright, playful illustrations show a different baby and a different species of animal, both engaged in similar behavior: babies stretch their limbs like sea stars, splash in the water like ducklings, toddle around like bear cubs, and fill their chubby cheeks like chipmunks. Action verbs on each page give the book energy and movement and reflect the varied activities of a baby’s day, with key elements like mealtime, bath time, and bedtime in chronological order. Babies and caregivers of a wide range of ethnicities are represented in this heartwarming read-aloud designed to show little ones how much they are cherished and loved.
  • Sizing Up Winter

    Flatt, Ashley Barron

    Paperback (Owlkids, Aug. 15, 2018)
    As young readers journey into the natural world, they will discover that numbers, patterns, shapes ― and much more! ― can be found in everyday plants and animals. What if animals and plants knew math, just like us? Would snowflakes all fall from the same height in the sky? Would otters spread themselves evenly across lakes? Would groundhogs be aware of the date? In Sizing Up Winter, the third title in the Math in Nature series, nature comes to life to help children grasp concepts of time and measurement.
    M
  • Love You Head to Toe

    Ashley Barron

    Hardcover (Owlkids, March 15, 2019)
    Pairing creative rhyming similes with cut-paper collage art, Love You Head to Toe is an adorable book that compares newborn babies to baby animals on every page. Bright, playful illustrations show a different baby and a different species of animal, both engaged in similar behavior: babies stretch their limbs like sea stars, splash in the water like ducklings, toddle around like bear cubs, and fill their chubby cheeks like chipmunks. Action verbs on each page give the book energy and movement and reflect the varied activities of a baby’s day, with key elements like mealtime, bath time, and bedtime in chronological order. Babies and caregivers of a wide range of ethnicities are represented in this heartwarming read-aloud designed to show little ones how much they are cherished and loved.
    L
  • Zippers, A Short Story

    Ashley Barron

    language (, Nov. 12, 2012)
    Short story.A boy meets a soldier injured in war."Usually, I consider grill lessons and swimming pools to be the best parts of summer. Not today. My mind is locked on the soldier, on the zippers in his skin, on how they got there."
  • Pretty Tricky: The Sneaky Ways Plants Survive

    Etta Kaner, Ashley Barron

    Hardcover (Owlkids, Sept. 15, 2020)
    Have you ever thought of plants as tricky? Probably not. But in this nonfiction book, readers are introduced to the tricky techniques some plants use to defend themselves, reproduce, or acquire food. From the copycat Boquila vine that changes shape to match its host plant, to the pungent carrion flower that lures pollinating flies with the scent of rotten meat, plants across the globe have adapted to survive all kinds of threatening fauna. Each amazing plant adaptation is described through fact bubbles and easy-to-grasp blocks of text. End matter includes a list of sources for kids to explore, a glossary defining scientific terms, and an index. Brought to life with eye-popping cut-paper collage illustrations, this book is a garden of knowledge that will leave kids with a better understanding of how living things adapt to their environments.
  • Hello Green Mountains: It's a Soggy Spring by Ashley Charron

    Ashley Charron

    Hardcover (Outskirts Press, March 15, 1722)
    None
  • The Little Lizard Girl

    Ashley Barnes

    eBook
    This is a story about a very special little girl called Astrid. Astrid is a little Australian girl but she had something that makes her a little different from the other kids. Even though many of the other children thought she was a little weird at first, Astrid showed them all something new, she showed them that sometimes different can be fun and exciting.