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Books with author Jacqueline Rogers

  • Roly-Poly Puppies: A Counting Book

    Elaine Moore, Jacqueline Rogers

    Hardcover (Cartwheel Books, Sept. 1, 1996)
    As ten adorable puppies gather one by one at the end of the day, detailed watercolor illustrations and a simple text help youngsters master counting from one to ten. For children under four.
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  • Dixie and the Best Day Ever

    Grace Gilman, Jacqueline Rogers

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Oct. 7, 2014)
    Emma finds her inspiration with Dixie in this special wintertime adventure. When Emma is stumped by a school assignment—to write a poem about her “best day ever”—could a day of playing in the snow be exactly the thing Emma needs to help her write the perfect poem? With fun full-color illustrations on every page, Dixie’s eighth I Can Read captures all the excitement of that coveted childhood event—a snow day!Dixie and the Best Day Ever is a Level One I Can Read book, which means it’s perfect for children learning to sound out words and sentences.
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  • The Good Luck Glasses

    Sara London, Jacqueline Rogers

    Paperback (Cartwheel, April 1, 2001)
    Hating the idea of having to wear glasses, Nomi changes her tune when suddenly she can see and is no longer tripping and squinting her way through the day. Original.
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  • Story Time for Little Porcupine

    Joseph Slate, Jacqueline Rogers

    Hardcover (Marshall Cavendish Corp/Ccb, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Before he is ready to go to sleep, Little Porcupine wants to hear--and tell--stories about the Big Porcupine in the Sky, the sun, who pokes holes in the "moon's night cloak" to watch over all the little porcupines in the world.
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  • GOOSED!

    Bill Wallace, Jacqueline Rogers

    Hardcover (Holiday House, Sept. 1, 2002)
    T.P., a dog who has everything, finds his position as king of the household usurped when his family brings home a chocolate lab puppy that drives him absolutely crazy with her incessant whining and barking!
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  • I am You and You are Me: A New Age Fairy Tale

    Jacqueline Royce

    eBook (JMR Books, Oct. 8, 2017)
    'I am You and You are Me', a New Age Fairy Tale, takes a poetic journey through childhood as we follow the dreams of a girl. In her dreams we meet animals and spirit friends, each one having a message, a lesson to share. It takes the reader on vibrant colourful journeys through whimsical lands. Emotive and inspiring, touching on love, loss, loyalty and freedom; a timeless read that brings a message of hope, for people of all ages.
  • One Tractor

    Alexandra Siy, Jacqueline Rogers

    language (Holiday House, Jan. 16, 2018)
    With trucks, trains, planes, and pirates, this counting book is more than meets the eye. Guided Reading Level G. When one tractor in the grass runs out of gas, the backyard doesn't stay quiet for long. Soon pirates sail in to play, and the backyard races to life with airplanes, cranes, trucks, and trains. The simple rhyming text is paired with detailed illustrations depicting the young boy's imaginative games-- three ships full of pirates, four cranes building a city of sandcastles, five trucks zooming across the lawn. Readers can count along as the vehicles and machines soar, hoist, dig, and zoom in this fantastical number book. Young readers, boys partricularly, will love the trucks, trains, vehicles, and machines--and pirates--that spill across each page. The humorous and imaginative play portrayed in this book perfectly balances its emphasis on counting. The award-winning I Like to Read® series focuses on guided reading levels A through G, based upon Fountas and Pinnell standards. Acclaimed author-illustrators--including winners of Caldecott, Theodor Seuss Geisel, and Coretta Scott King honors—create original, high quality illustrations that support comprehension of simple text and are fun for kids to read with parents, teachers, or on their own! For early-to-mid first grade readers, Level G books feature more complex storylines than prior levels, and a wider variety of structure and punctuation. Illustrations offer support for decoding the more challenging vocabulary words introduced.
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  • Monster Soup: And Other Spooky Poems

    Dilys Evans, Jacqueline Rogers

    Paperback (Scholastic, Sept. 1, 1995)
    Features a variety of poems about things that go bump in the night by John Ciardi, e.e. cummings, and others
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  • Getting Rid of Krista

    Amy Hest, Jacqueline Rogers

    Hardcover (William Morrow & Co, April 1, 1988)
    With the help of her friend, Hank, eight-year-old Gillie seeks a way to get her aggravating older sister to leave home
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  • Accidental Lily

    Sally Warner, Jacqueline Rogers

    Paperback (Knopf Books for Young Readers, April 25, 2000)
    Lily Hill is finally getting used to living in Philadelphia with her mother and older brother, Case. She's made friends with two of the most popular girls in her first grade--LaVon and Daisy--and she's been invited to LaVon's birthday/Halloween sleep-over party! But Lily has a teensy-weensy little bed-wetting problem (Shhhhh!) and she's afraid if she goes to the party, her friends might find out and tell everyone at school. Just when everything seems to be going wrong, Lily discovers that she's not the only kid in her class with this teensy-weensy problem. With some helpful suggestions from her mom and Case, Lily finds a way to go to the sleep-over and keep her little accidents to herself. In her third story starring the spirited Lily Hill, Sally Warner tackles a sensitive subject with understanding, insight, and humor.
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  • Leftover Lily

    Sally Warner, Jacqueline Rogers

    Paperback (Knopf Books for Young Readers, April 25, 2000)
    Six-year-old Lily Hill is a medium sort of kid. She's medium smart, medium artistic, and has the medium number of best friends, which is two. Or it was two until she pushed her friend Daisy on the playground. It was an accident! Now Daisy won't play with her and neither will her other best friend, LaVon, since bossy Daisy won't let her. Lily is the left-over friend. But there's no time to feel sorry for herself. Lily's decided that it's time for her to be the bossy one. In this humorous and thought-provoking elementary school chapter book, Lily learns that being "the boss" in a new friendship isn't all it's cracked up to be. There are better ways of making and regaining friends.
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