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Books with author Gyo fujikawa

  • Babies

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Board book (Grosset & Dunlap, Jan. 1, 1991)
    A charming first look at the soft and sweet world of babies.
    LB
  • Baby Animals

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Board book (Sterling, March 4, 2008)
    Chubby puppies, furry kittens, fuzzy chicks, downy ducklings: Gyo Fujikawa’s lovable baby animals will captivate children. They’re big (elephants) and small (mice), plump (piglets), and playful (lambs). With each picture, kids learn a little bit about the animal—the sound it makes, how soft it might feel, and what it can do. Plus, they’ll discover something else very important: that very young creatures have to be petted, snuggled, and hugged very gently…just like the children themselves.
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  • Oh, What a Busy Day

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Hardcover (Sterling, April 6, 2010)
    I’m up! I’m up!It’s going to be a busy day . . . What a special treat! Gyo Fujikawa has concocted a big, beautiful book that goes from morning till night, completely capturing a child’s world along the way. Filled with silly jingles and fun rhymes; imaginative ideas for games; things for a daydreaming child to think about, and gentle little lessons on kindness and friendship, it will hold kids’ attention for hours. And, as always, Fujikawa’s sweet and appealing art features a diverse group of youngsters and a menagerie of delightful animals.
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  • Gyo Fujikawa's A to Z Picture Book

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Hardcover (Sterling, Sept. 7, 2010)
    A is for absolutely adorable! Beloved artist Gyo Fujikawa teaches toddlers their alphabet in a picture-packed A to Z. Each letter is illustrated by a multitude of marvelous things to help build a child's vocabulary, including chicks, chocolate cake, and cuckoo clock for Cand moon, mouse, and monkey for M. As always, Fujikawa has created a charming collection of cute children and huggable animals of all kinds.
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  • Let's Play

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Board book (Sterling, April 6, 2010)
    It’s play day for Gyo Fujikawa’s adorable group of toddlers! They’re sliding and hiding, running and splashing, tumbling and wrestling, and having a blast. But as night falls and the moon rises, it’s good to be quiet, too. . . .It’s an imaginative invitation to fun, games, and friendship that no child can resist!
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  • Fairy Tales and Fables

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Hardcover (Sterling, Feb. 5, 2008)
    Gyo Fujikawa creates magic with this enchanting collection of fairy tales and fables. These are the stories that all children should experience, that will nourish their young minds and imaginations: Little Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, The Hare and the Tortoise, The Little Red Hen, The Three Little Pigs, and many more. Some are well known and beloved; others are unfamiliar, but they’re all beautifully written and illustrated. As always, Fujikawa’s characters (human and animal) are endearing and rich in personality. Her stunning images include the ugly duckling looking up plaintively at swans flying in a sunset sky; a lovely princess atop dozens of colorful mattresses (but she can still feel the pea); and tiny Jack chased by a giant large enough to take up nearly an entire spread!
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  • Sleepy Time

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Board book (Sterling, March 1, 2011)
    Babies yawning, babies bathing, babies sweetly slumbering: day is done and it's time for bed, in this brand new board edition of Gyo Fujikawa's classic book. Fujikawa's gorgeous illustrations contrast the children's nighttime rituals with the horse that sleeps standing up, the lazy sloth that snoozes upside down, and animals that doze the winter away. Parents and children will find this book a lovely way to say “good night.”
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  • A Child's Book of Poems

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Hardcover (Sterling, Sept. 1, 2007)
    William Blake, Kate Greenaway, Emily Dickinson: the writers in this charming anthology of 200 poems—first published in 1969—are among literature’s most beloved. And Gyo Fujikawa’s appealing illustrations depict children of all races sweetly interacting, as well as an engagingly rendered menagerie of animals and the natural world in all its wonderment. Among the verses that children will love are Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s “Christmas Bells,” Lewis Carroll’s “The Melancholy Pig,” and Eugene Fields’ “Wynken, Blynken, and Nod,” along with proverbs, limericks, nursery rhymes, and folk songs.
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  • Mother Goose

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Hardcover (Sterling, Sept. 1, 2007)
    Pat-a-Cake,” “Simple Simon,” “Rock-a-bye, Baby:” these and the many other rhymes that make up Mother Goose have become almost as much a staple of child-rearing as the rattle and the bottle. Little ones love its mix of lullabies and limericks, humor and sing-song verse, and they learn from it too. Gyo Fujikawa brought her inimitable style to this version, which features a mix of enchanting line drawings and warm color pictures. Adorable mice, led by a duck in uniform, man the boat in “I Saw a Ship a-Sailing.” A multicultural group of children circle round “The Mulberry Bush.” And “The Three Kittens” have never been cuter. Fujikawa has succeeded in creating a truly magical world for kids to enter.
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  • Gyo Fujikawa's: A Child's Book of Poems

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, July 20, 1989)
    An illustrated collection of poems by a variety of poets from around the world
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  • Ten Little Babies

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Board book (Sterling, Aug. 5, 2008)
    You can count on Gyo Fujikawa to create adorable babies—and this rhyming counting book has ten little ones to start the fun! All together the toddlers enjoy their bottles; then one throws his away, leaving nine. Naptime’s next, as the group snuggles peacefully into a soft cloud—but a wide-eyed child starts to play and now we’ve got eight. The joyful hijinks continue as the tots get sticky with marmalade, get up to some naughty tricks, bang on the floor, and more. Page by page, the countdown continues until: One little baby, alone having fun. He became a grownup, and then there were NONE!
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  • Millie's Secret

    Gyo Fujikawa

    Board book (Grosset & Dunlap, Aug. 1, 1978)
    After much suspense Millie finally reveals to her riends that her secret was that her pet dog, Buttercup, was pregnant.