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Books with author Bette Killion

  • The Same Wind by Bette Killion

    Bette Killion

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, March 15, 1850)
    None
  • The princess and the pea

    Bette Killion

    Unbound (Publications International, March 15, 1994)
    The queen has a plan to help the prince find a real princess to marry.
  • Princess Rosie’s Rainbows

    Bette Killion, Kim Jacobs

    Hardcover (Wisdom Tales, Oct. 7, 2015)
    What is it that makes you happy? For little Princess Rosie, it was rainbows. Being a Princess, she could have anything she wanted. Toys, games, books. But she didn't want any of those things. Possessions didn't matter to her. Only rainbows could make her smile. "I wish I could have a rainbow all the time," Princess Rosie often sighed. Her parents, the King and Queen, tried everything they could think of to give Princess Rosie a rainbow, but with no success. Would the young Princess ever be happy? Maybe Becca, the wise old woman from the farthest village, could hold the secret to making Rosie smile? Princess Rosie's Rainbows is a stunningly illustrated new fairytale that offers young readers the precious lesson that true happiness doesn't come from outward possessions, but from deep within us.
    M
  • Princess Rosie’s Rainbows

    Bette Killion, Kim Jacobs

    language (Wisdom Tales, Oct. 7, 2015)
    What is it that makes you happy? For little Princess Rosie, it was rainbows. Being a Princess, she could have anything she wanted. Toys, games, books. But she didn’t want any of those things. Possessions didn’t matter to her. Only rainbows could make her smile. “I wish I could have a rainbow all the time,” Princess Rosie often sighed. Her parents, the King and Queen, tried everything they could think of to give Princess Rosie a rainbow, but with no success. Would the young Princess ever be happy? Maybe Becca, the wise old woman from the farthest village, could hold the secret to making Rosie smile? Princess Rosie’s Rainbows is a stunningly illustrated new fairytale that offers young readers the precious lesson that true happiness doesn’t come from outward possessions, but from deep within us.