Browse all books

Books with author Carolyn%20Croll

  • Too Many Babas

    Carolyn Croll

    Paperback (Harpercollins Childrens Books, Jan. 1, 1994)
    The soup Baba Edis requested to warm her frail bones is spoilt when Baba Basha, Baba Yetti, and Baba Molka each decide something--salt, pepper, garlic--is missing, in an illustrated folktale with a Russian flavor. Simultaneous.
    K
  • The Little Snowgirl

    Carolyn Croll

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, Oct. 24, 1989)
    Caterina and Pavel's wish for a child is fulfilled when the snowgirl Pavel makes in the yard comes alive.
  • Redoute: The Man who Painted Flowers

    Carolyn Croll

    Hardcover (G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, March 19, 1996)
    An introduction to an artist who has been called the most accomplished flower painter follows his small-village, underprivileged youth and his services under Queen Marie Antoinette and the Empress Josephine.
    V
  • Too Many Babas

    Carolyn Croll

    Hardcover (Harper & Row, Jan. 1, 1994)
    Four peasant ladies discover that too many cooks without a plan can spoil the broth
    K
  • The Three Brothers

    Carolyn Croll

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, Sept. 18, 1991)
    Unable to decide which of his three sons should inherit the family farm, a farmer comes up with a way of choosing his heir.
    M
  • The Story of Christmas Story Book Set & Advent Calendar

    Carolyn Croll

    Paperback (Workman Publishing Company, Jan. 10, 1994)
    A wonderfully illustrated retelling of the story of Mary, Joseph, and baby Jesus through a delightful holiday tradition: the keeping of an advent calendar. Twenty-four miniature board books are arranged in sequence and nestled in a backer. The books are numbered 1 through 24 and, like the peek-a-boo windows of an Advent calendar, are meant to be opened one-per-day from December first through Christmas Eve. Read in sequence, the full-color four-page books capture the mystery of the first Christmas, from Gabriel's visit to Mary to Jesus' birth in the manger. The Jewel-like books, with gold-thread loops and three different trim sizes, also make memorable ornaments for the Christmas tree. 168,000 copies in print.
  • Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam: A Sing-Along Book of Songs About the Savior

    Carolyn Croll

    Hardcover (Shadow Mountain, Oct. 20, 2006)
    Now you can teach your children six beloved childrenā€™s songs about the Savior, Jesus Christ. This book with portable accompaniment is the follow-up to the popular I am a Child of God sing-along book. Six full-color illustrations adorn this convenience-sized boardbook. Each illustration includes the first verse to each favorite childrenā€™s song. A child or parent simply presses the touch-pad that corresponds to that page, and the music begins to play. Features these favorite songs: ā€œJesus Once Was a Little Childā€ ā€œTell Me the Stories of Jesusā€ ā€œJesus Wants Me for a Sunbeamā€ ā€œI am Trying to Be Like Jesusā€ ā€œI Feel My Saviorā€™s Loveā€ ā€œWhen He Comes Againā€
    N
  • Too Many Babas

    Carolyn Croll

    Library Binding (HarperCollins, Nov. 6, 1979)
    ā€˜First published in 1979, Crollā€™s funny, popular too-many-cooks story ā€¦is newly illustrated here, with the babas (grandmothers) in a Russian winter setting. The simple, bright pictures in folk-art style show the bustling peasant women in the kitchen, each one tasting and adding and making a bigger mess of the soup.ā€™ ā€“ā€“ BL.
    K
  • The Little Snowgirl

    Carolyn Croll

    Paperback (Puffin, Oct. 15, 1996)
    Caterina and Pavel's wish for a child is fulfilled when the snowgirl Pavel makes in the yard comes alive
    Q
  • My Giant Preschool Life-the-Flap Book

    Carolyn Croll

    Board book (Dutton Juvenile, Aug. 1, 1999)
    Book by
    F
  • Too Many Babas

    Carolyn Croll

    Hardcover (Harper and Row, Jan. 1, 1979)
    First published in 1979, Croll's funny, popular too-many-cooks story in the I Can Read series is newly illustrated here, with the "babas" (grandmothers) in a Russian winter setting. The simple, bright pictures in folk-art style show the bustling peasant women in the kitchen, each one tasting and adding and making a bigger mess of the soup.
    K
  • Too many Babas

    Carolyn Croll

    Unknown Binding (Houghton Mifflin, March 15, 1999)
    Put four babas together to make a soup and what do you get? A soup that's too salty, too peppery, and too spicy. But maybe good friends can find a way to make a good soup.
    K