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Books with title Butterfly Roundup

  • Butterfly

    Louise Spilsbury

    Hardcover (Raintree Publishers, Aug. 20, 2003)
    None
    L
  • Butterfly

    Mick Inkpen

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 15, 1707)
    Excellent Book
  • Butterfly

    Bobbie Kalman, Margaret Amy Reiach

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, Oct. 31, 2001)
    Describes the various stages of a monarch butterfly's life, from egg to pupa to caterpillar to butterfly, as well as its migration and dangers that it faces.
    P
  • Butterfly

    Nancy Dickmann

    Hardcover (Brown Bear Books, Jan. 1, 2020)
    All living things grow and change during their lives. Indroduce readers to life cycles with this simple, interesting series. Young life, growth, and reproduction are explained in simple terms. Amazing facts and unusual examples make the titles extremely engaging.
    F
  • Butterfly

    Sonya Hartnett

    Paperback (Penguin Books, Aug. 16, 2009)
    .
    Z+
  • Butterfly

    Sonya Hartnett, Rebecca Macauley, Bolinda Publishing Pty Ltd

    Audiobook (Bolinda Publishing Pty Ltd, Jan. 1, 2010)
    Here is a gripping, chilling, beautifully observed tale of what a teenage girl will do to keep her friends, by one of Australia's finest writers. Growing up during the 1980s in the safe complacency of the Australian suburbs, Plum Coyle should be happy. But on the cusp of her 14th birthday - and on the fringe of her peer group - she lives in terror of the disapproval of her cruel and fickle girlfriends and, most of all, she hates her awkward, changing body with a passion.So when Plum's glamorous next-door neighbour, Maureen, a young wife and mother, befriends Plum, Plum responds with worshipful fervour. Plum feels herself reinvented. With Maureen, she becomes the girl she's always wanted to be. But Maureen has an ulterior motive for taking Plum under her wing. Butterfly is a brilliant and beautifully written novel about the bonds of family, about growing up in suburbia, and about the terrifying vulnerability of early adolescence. It is about the costs of interfering in the lives of others, the consequences of being hurt, and, ultimately, it is about how we must all eventually leave childhood behind.