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Books with author Mary McKenna Siddals

  • Compost Stew: An A to Z Recipe for the Earth

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Ashley Wolff

    Paperback (Dragonfly Books, Oct. 14, 2014)
    From apple cores to zinnia heads, readers will discover the best ingredients for a successful compost pile! Kids everywhere are knowledgeable about the environment and climate change. Not only is composting becoming more common in households and residential gardens, but many school gardens feature compost piles, too. But how do you start a compost pile? What’s safe to include? Perfect for an Earth Day focus or year-round reference, this inviting book provides all the answers for kids and families looking for simple, child-friendly ways to help the planet.
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  • Shivery Shades of Halloween

    Mary McKenna Siddals

    Paperback (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 2015)
    A spooky book about colors
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  • Shivery Shades of Halloween

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Jimmy Pickering

    Hardcover (Random House Books for Young Readers, Aug. 5, 2014)
    A rollicking, rhyming Halloween romp—in every color! What color is Halloween? Why, it’s as green as an “eerie glow, evil grin, vile brew, clammy skin,” as white as “cobwebs clinging, a misty trail, a skull, a spook, a face gone pale . . .” Children will learn their colors as they follow a cute little creature on his adventure through haunted halls, moonlit forests . . . perhaps even a Halloween party! Jimmy Pickering’s stylized settings and adorable monsters add a blast of colorful creepy-crawliness that will make kids giggle. Who knew that learning colors could be such spooky fun?
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  • Compost Stew: An A to Z Recipe for the Earth

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Ashley Wolff

    Hardcover (Tricycle Press, March 23, 2010)
    From apple cores to zinnia heads, readers will discover the best ingredients for a successful compost pile! Kids everywhere are knowledgeable about the environment and climate change. Not only is composting becoming more common in households and residential gardens, but many school gardens feature compost piles, too. But how do you start a compost pile? What’s safe to include? Perfect for an Earth Day focus or year-round reference, this inviting book provides all the answers for kids and families looking for simple, child-friendly ways to help the planet.
    K
  • Millions of Snowflakes

    Mary McKenna Siddals

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1998)
    How many snowflakes can you count? A lovely little book about counting in the winter wonders falling from a snowy sky!
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  • Compost Stew: An A to Z Recipe for the Earth by Mary McKenna Siddals

    Mary McKenna Siddals

    Hardcover (Tricycle Press, Jan. 1, 1710)
    None
  • Millions of Snowflakes

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Elizabeth Sayles

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, Sept. 21, 1998)
    "One little snowflake falls on my nose. It makes me shiver from my head to my toes." A little girl plays outside on a cold winter day, counting each snowflake as it falls softly to the ground. Bundled in her warmest snowsuit, she savors the snow, tasting each flake as it falls on her tongue, and makes snow angels. Simple rhyming text captures the joy of a winter afternoon while teaching basic counting skills. Exuberant pastel illustrations invite young readers to join the fun.
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  • Millions of Snowflakes by Mary McKenna Siddals

    Mary McKenna Siddals

    Paperback (Scholastic, )
    None
  • Bringing the Outside In

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Patrice Barton

    Hardcover (Random House Books for Young Readers, Feb. 9, 2016)
    A rollicking book that reminds young readers to go outside and play! “We’re bringing the outside in, oh, bringing the outside in. . . .” Nothing takes the place of splashing in a puddle or jumping into a pile of autumn leaves. Along with the mud and sand that gets tracked indoors come memories that live forever! Mary McKenna Siddals has written a joyous anthem that encourages children to play in the dirt. It will surely resonate with today’s overscheduled as well as sedentary kids, and their parents.
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  • Millions of Snowflakes

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Elizabeth Sayles

    eBook (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Sept. 21, 1998)
    "One little snowflake falls on my nose. It makes me shiver from my head to my toes." A little girl plays outside on a cold winter day, counting each snowflake as it falls softly to the ground. Bundled in her warmest snowsuit, she savors the snow, tasting each flake as it falls on her tongue, and makes snow angels. Simple rhyming text captures the joy of a winter afternoon while teaching basic counting skills. Exuberant pastel illustrations invite young readers to join the fun.
    E
  • Compost Stew

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Ashley Wolff

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, Oct. 14, 2014)
    From apple cores to zinnia heads, readers will discover the best ingredients for a successful compost pile! Kids everywhere are knowledgeable about the environment and climate change. Not only is composting becoming more common in households and residential gardens, but many school gardens feature compost piles, too. But how do you start a compost pile? What's safe to include? Perfect for an Earth Day focus or year-round reference, this inviting book provides all the answers for kids and families looking for simple, child-friendly ways to help the planet. "From the Hardcover edition."
    K
  • Tell Me a Season

    Mary McKenna Siddals, Petra Mathers

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, Sept. 16, 2001)
    “This small and simple concept book describes the colors in a spring morning, a summer day, a fall evening, and a winter night. Four specific scenes lead up to each panoramic double-page spread that features a farmhouse with a girl and a boy, a cat and a dog. Siddals’s appropriately straightforward and economical text is brought to life by Mather’s folksy watercolors. . . . It is well done without being overdone, and the size is just right.” —School Library Journal“Cheerful yet elegant, spare yet satisfying, compact yet enveloping: these are hardly the words usually associated with simple concept books for the youngest children. But words and paintings combine to create a season book that surprises to the end. . . . Both author and artist capture the seasons with poetic intensity and wonder, finishing after ‘Winter night’ with the simplest yet pleasing conclusion: ‘Good night.’”—ALA Booklist“A book of simple but deeply gratifying pleasures.” —Publishers Weekly
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