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Books with author Elizabeth MacLeod

  • Chock Full of Chocolate

    Elizabeth MacLeod, June Bradford

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, Sept. 1, 2005)
    From a polka-dot pie that's perfect for a party to a silly salami you can eat for dessert, this book in the Kids Can Do It series is choc-a-block with more than 45 tasty chocolate recipes. Includes Quick Treats, delicious chocolate ideas kids can prepare in minutes, or even seconds! Kids can make * triple chocolate cookies * cool shakes * s'more gorp * candy-covered pizza * dirt dessert
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  • Listening With Our Hearts: Collection of children's stories and rhymes

    Elizabeth Maas

    Paperback (I Street Press, Nov. 13, 2019)
    Collection of Dynamic lessons for Children made of short stories and rhymes
  • The Graveyard Book: A Teaching Guide

    Mary Elizabeth

    Cards (Garlic Press, Nov. 1, 2015)
    The Challenging Level of the Discovering Literature Series focuses on a variety of reading strategies to help students construct a meaningful literature experience as well as develop critical thinking and academic skills. An in-depth teaching guide for Neil Gaiman's Newbery Award–winning book This teacher guide helps students understand Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book by grouping by strands: Community Strand and Journey Strand, providing a reference to focus student attention. Each chapter analysis includes Journal and Discussion Topics, Vocabulary, and Chapter Summaries. Other features of the guide include: Strategy Pages, Testing, and the Writer's Forum, along with an answer key.
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  • Secrets Underground: North America's Buried Past

    Elizabeth MacLeod, David MacDonald

    Paperback (Annick Press, Jan. 9, 2014)
    Uncover the spine-tingling mysteries and eerie surprises that lurk right under your feet! In Secrets Underground, history buff Elizabeth MacLeod takes readers deep down, below the earth’s surface, and introduces them to a completely different world—sometimes terrifying, often baffling, and always fascinating. Discover: • the Civil War secrets carefully concealed in Organ Cave, West Virginia • the top-secret equipment that lies deep below Grand Central Terminal in New York City • how the Aztec city Tenochtitlan, the largest and most powerful city of its time in what is now North America, nearly disappeared without a trace • the abandoned ships buried beneath San Francisco that reveal the city’s history as a top destination for fortune seekers during the Gold Rush • the nuclear shelter the U.S. government kept hidden for decades underneath an exclusive resort in West Virginia called The Greenbrier. Guiding readers through these fascinating places, MacLeod reveals their long-kept secrets and deftly explains how these lost and hidden subterranean passages, spaces, and caves answer decades-old puzzles, help us understand our own past, and lead us to discover what life was really like in eras gone by.
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  • Lucy Maud Montgomery

    Elizabeth MacLeod, John Mantha

    Paperback (Kids Can Press, Feb. 1, 2008)
    Meet Lucy Maud Montgomery -- world?famous author. The story of her dedication to her craft and the creation of Anne of Green Gables, her best?loved novel, is told in level?appropriate language and detailed illustrations. A Level 3 first reader.
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  • Bake and Make Amazing Cookies

    Elizabeth MacLeod, June Bradford

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, Sept. 1, 2004)
    With these fast and simple recipes, kids can ring in the New Year with icy shortbread, wow a dinosaur fan with oatmeal dinos, brighten a summer picnic with mouthwatering watermelon cookies or make wishes come true with delicious magic wands. Special days, special friends or just for fun -- there are lots of reasons to make cookies in this book in the Kids Can Do It series.
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  • The Kids Book of Great Canadians

    Elizabeth MacLeod, John Mantha

    Paperback (Kids Can Press, Feb. 1, 2008)
    Canada is the world's second largest country, but Canadians are second to none. Many of our extraordinary men, women and children have been recognized worldwide for their contributions to exploration, science and technology, business, the arts, government and sports. Featuring fact boxes, quotes, a timeline and more, this title in the Kids Book of series is a tribute to more than 150 "greats" and their incredible accomplishments.
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  • Royal Murder: The Deadly Intrigue of Ten Sovereigns

    Elizabeth MacLeod, Michael Wyatt

    Hardcover (Annick Press, Sept. 30, 2008)
    What would you do for absolute power? For many monarchs throughout history, it was a question that ruled their lives. Step into the world of palatial intrigue, where holding the throne means evading death or causing it. Some sovereigns were cunning at avoiding their killers. Cleopatra of Egypt once rolled herself into a rug and was carried out past her enemies’ noses. Other royals were brutal when dealing with foes. Vlad the Impaler’s monstrous methods inspired the legend of Dracula the vampire. From monarchs murdered at the hands of their subjects to kings killed on the battle field, the stories of ten royals are told: • Cleopatra of Egypt (69 BCE – 30 BCE) • Vlad III the Impaler of Wallachia (1431 – 1476) • “Bloody Mary” I (1516 – 1558) • Mary, Queen of Scots (1542 – 1587) • Elizabeth I (1533 – 1603) • Louis XVI (1754 – 1793) • Marie Antoinette (1755 – 1793) • The Romanovs of Russia (1872 – 1918) A final section offers examples from the 20th century, from assassination attempts in England to a royal massacre in Nepal. Blending dramatic storytelling and historical fact, and complete with fascinating photographs and artwork, Royal Murder is a compelling account of scheming sovereigns.
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  • Bake and Make Amazing Cakes

    Elizabeth MacLeod, June Bradford

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, March 1, 2001)
    Cakes -- especially homemade ones -- make any celebration special! This book is filled with 19 easy-to-do cake designs and decorating tips simple enough for kids to try on their own. Decorating with candies, cookies and other goodies means that no fancy pastry bags or labor-intensive parental supervision is required. The illustrated step-by-step instructions, full-color photos and delicious cake and icing recipes in this book in the Kids Can Do It series help kids take cakes from plain to WOW in no time flat! Kids can make a * scary dinosaur * bright butterfly * spooky jack-o'-lantern * cuddly cat * lucky rainbow * terrific tiger
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  • Miss Snowball's Friends

    M. Elizabeth

    Paperback (Independently published, May 24, 2019)
    Miss Snowball's Friends is a small children's book. It's all about having fun with little animals. Each page has a different animal that brings something fun and includes one fact about that animal. This way children can learn about animals in a fun way. This book will have your children reading along and interacting with the book itself. This is a great way to help get your child into reading at a young age that will help them the rest of their lives. So join in on Miss Snowball's Friends and all their fun!
  • The Wright Brothers

    Elizabeth McLeod;

    Paperback (Kids Can Press, Jan. 1, 1800)
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  • Little Man: A Novel

    Elizabeth Mann

    Paperback (Mikaya Press, May 16, 2014)
    A light-hearted tale of a boy who gains self-confidence with the help of some timely mentoring. Albert is short -- very short -- and he hates it. His older brothers are tall like his father, but he takes after his petite mother. He wears too-large hand-me-down clothes from his bigger brothers. And worst of all, his very best friend moved away to Brooklyn during the school break. It was all so unfair. Albert is beginning Middle School on Little Scrub, the small Caribbean Island where he lives. As he steps on the bus, and sees the older kids, he feels smaller than ever. They take one look at him and howl with laughter, chanting "Little Man, Little Man, you so small, didn't hardly see you at all." Things go downhill from there, and would've stayed down if it wasn't for an encounter with Peachy, the leader of a troupe of stiltwalkers. The stiltwalkers do a lot more than walk: they dance and leap across the sand on spindly eight-foot high wooden stilts, their brilliantly colored costumes shimmering in the moonlight. Peachy invites Albert to join the high school students he teaches to stiltwalk. It's not an easy decision for Albert. Would they laugh at him even harder than the Middle School kids? And he is queasy about heights. The thought of wobbling around on those skinny wooden sticks makes him woozy with fear. But Albert is won over by the thought that one day he might actually be up there, tall as a palm tree, dancing around without fear or hesitation. Besides, desperate times call for desperate measures and nobody was more desperate than Albert. Slowly, as his stiltwalking improves, Albert finds his self-confidence grows. He becomes less of a target for teasing at school and he makes some new friends.
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