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Books with title Vanishing Pumpkin

  • The Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston, Tomie dePaola

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Aug. 22, 1996)
    A classic Halloween story about a pumpkin gone missing is certain to delight readers of all ages!When a 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man want to make pumpkin pie on Halloween, they can’t find their pumpkin. “Our pumpkin’s been snitched,” cries the woman. And off they go to find it. “A good bet for Halloween story hours.”—School Library Journal “There can never be enough Halloween stories. This one is appealing, participatory, fast-paced and a delight in the telling.”—Children’s Book Review Service
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  • Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, Oct. 28, 1983)
    A 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man, both witches, go searching on Halloween night for the pumpkin someone snitched from them.
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  • The Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston, Tomie dePaola

    language (Puffin Books, Aug. 20, 1996)
    A classic Halloween story about a pumpkin gone missing is certain to delight readers of all ages!When a 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man want to make pumpkin pie on Halloween, they can’t find their pumpkin. “Our pumpkin’s been snitched,” cries the woman. And off they go to find it. “A good bet for Halloween story hours.”—School Library Journal “There can never be enough Halloween stories. This one is appealing, participatory, fast-paced and a delight in the telling.”—Children’s Book Review Service
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  • Vanishing Pumpkin GB

    Tony Johnston

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, )
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  • Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston, Tomie dePaola

    Paperback (Putnam Juvenile, Aug. 27, 1984)
    A 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man, both witches, go searching on Halloween night for the pumpkin someone snitched from them.
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  • The Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston

    Library Binding (Demco Media, Aug. 1, 1996)
    A seven-hundred-year-old woman and an eight-hundred-year-old man question a ghoul, a rapscallion, a varmint, and a wizard in their search for a missing Halloween pumpkin
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  • The Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston, Tomie De Paola

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Aug. 22, 1996)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A seven-hundred-year-old woman and an eight-hundred-year-old man question a ghoul, a rapscallion, a varmint, and a wizard in their search for a missing Halloween pumpkin.
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  • The Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston

    Audio Cassette (Scholastic inc, July 6, 1992)
    audio cassette reading of The Vanishing Pumpkin
  • Vanishing Pumpkin San

    Tony Johnston, Tomie dePaola

    Paperback (Putnam Juvenile, Aug. 1, 1992)
    "There can never be enough Halloween stories. This one is appealing, participatory, fast-paced, and a delight in the telling. A 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man, both witches, search out their lost pumpkin only to find it under the hat of a wizard."--Children's Book Review Service. Full-color illustrations.
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  • The Vanishing Pumpkin

    Tony Johnston, Tomie Illustrated by Depaola

    Paperback (Scholastic, July 6, 1983)
    A charming children's book about a pumpkin that was "snitched" before Halloween.
  • The vanishing pumpkin

    Tony Johnston, Tomie de Paola

    Paperback (Scholastic Inc, July 5, 2000)
    A 700-year-old woman and an 800-year-old man, both witches, go searching on Halloween night for the pumpkin someone snitched from them.
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  • Vanishing

    Bruce Brooks

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, June 4, 1999)
    Alice just can't stop crying. To her, it seems as if it should be simple. If your parents split up, you live with the one who understands you best. Alice's father had always been the one to "get" her. But somehow she had ended up living with her mom, who drank too much, and her stepfather, who didn't like her and didn't care who knew it. So when a bout with bronchitis lands her in the hospital, she decided she just can't face going home again--ever.What if she simply stops eating--goes on a hunger strike? They would have to keep her there, wouldn't they? It seems like the simplest solution, even when the hallucinations start, even when they kind of take over. But suppose she goes into a coma--or dies? If that happens, she'll have her new friend Rex, the mysterious boy who says he's dying, but whose jaunty ways have brought Alice to life.Once again, Bruce Brooks tells an intriguing story that puts new twists on the oldest, biggest issues--love, death, and taking charge of your own life as you move toward adulthood.
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