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Books with author Bruce McMillan

  • Growing Colors

    Bruce McMillan

    Paperback (HarperCollins, April 25, 1994)
    A tasty picture book about colors!Join award-winning photographer Bruce McMillan as he takes his camera in search of some of nature's gorgeous colors found in gardens and orchards—and expect the unexpected!With vibrancy, clarity, and brilliance, these photos will help young readers learn about their fruits and veggies, and also help them explore all the colors of the rainbow through everyday foods.“A vibrant introduction to the beauty of colors in nature.” —School Library Journal“Such a brilliant presentation of colors will be an eyeful for any small child.” —Publishers Weekly
    LB
  • Becca backward, Becca frontward: A book of concept pairs

    Bruce McMillan

    Hardcover (Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, March 15, 1986)
    Photographs of a girl involved in various activities illustrate such opposite concepts as above/below, full/empty, and big/small.
  • Eating Fractions

    Bruce McMillan

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Aug. 1, 1992)
    Eating Fractions by McMillan, Bruce
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  • Going on a Whale Watch

    Bruce McMillan

    Paperback (Scholastic, Inc., March 15, 1992)
    paperback book
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  • The Problem With Chickens

    Bruce McMillan, Gunnella

    language (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Sept. 26, 2005)
    The ladies of Iceland have a problem: the birds lay their eggs in nooks on the sides of steep cliffs, so the ladies have a very difficult time getting any of the eggs for baking. They go to town to buy chickens to lay eggs for them instead. For a while, everyone is happy: there are plenty of eggs to bake plenty of yummy things. But the ladies' problems are far from solved, for the more time the chickens spend with the ladies, the more they begin to act like them too, until eventually they stop laying eggs all together. Now this is a problem indeed, but you can be sure, the clever ladies will find a solution. Full of fun and silliness, this lighthearted tale and vibrant illustrations are a delight.
    L
  • Nights of the Pufflings

    Bruce McMillan

    Paperback (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, March 27, 1995)
    A photoessay about the children of an Icelandic community who band together every summer in order to save stranded puffin chicks from predators. By the creator of Penguins at Home.
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  • The Problem With Chickens

    Bruce McMillan, Gunnella

    Hardcover (HMH Books for Young Readers, Sept. 26, 2005)
    The ladies of Iceland have a problem: the birds lay their eggs in nooks on the sides of steep cliffs, so the ladies have a very difficult time getting any of the eggs for baking. They go to town to buy chickens to lay eggs for them instead. For a while, everyone is happy: there are plenty of eggs to bake plenty of yummy things. But the ladies' problems are far from solved, for the more time the chickens spend with the ladies, the more they begin to act like them too, until eventually they stop laying eggs all together. Now this is a problem indeed, but you can be sure, the clever ladies will find a solution. Full of fun and silliness, this lighthearted tale and vibrant illustrations are a delight.
    L
  • Eating Fractions

    Bruce Mcmillan

    Hardcover (Scholastic Press, Sept. 1, 1991)
    Food is cut into halves, quarters, and thirds to illustrate how parts make a whole. Simple recipes included.
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  • Remarkable Riderless Runaway Tricycle

    Bruce McMillan

    Paperback (Orchard Pr, June 1, 1985)
    A tricycle relegated to the trash heap manages its own salvation.
    K
  • Jelly Beans for Sale

    Bruce McMillan

    Hardcover (Scholastic, Sept. 1, 1996)
    An introduction to counting and numbers features delicious illustrations of colorful jellybeans and closeups of four types of coins, as well as on informative history of the jelly bean.
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  • Salmon Summer

    Bruce McMillan

    Hardcover (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 30, 1998)
    Every summer the salmon return to spawn in the streams of Kodiak Island, Alaska, and nine-year-old Alex, a native Aleut, comes here to fish with his family as his ancestors did. The abundant salmon are a source of food for the bears, eagles, foxes, magpies, gulls, and best of all, Alex's family. Bruce McMillan lived with the Shugak family at their fishing camp in Moser Bay, Kodiak Island. Here, with his Alaskan native hosts, he ate smoked salmon, salmon-berries, and tamuuq. This close-up look at another way of life in the United States will fascinate young readers. With crisp photographs and a text rich in detail, Salmon Summer captures the natural beauty of the Alaskan island and the intense bond of family and tradition, revealing a faraway place seen by few outsiders.
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  • Sense Suspense - a Guessing Game for the Five Senses

    Bruce McMillan

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1994)
    Book has never been read or opened.