Browse all books

Books with title The Butterfly Ride

  • The Butterfly Club

    Jacqueline Wilson, Nick Sharratt

    Paperback (Doubleday UK, March 10, 2015)
    The wonderful new story about triplet Tina, from one of the UK's best-loved authors. Tina is a triplet, but she's always been the odd one out. Her sisters Phil and Maddie are bigger and stronger and better at just about everything. Luckily, they look after teeny-tiny Tina wherever they go -- but when the girls start in scary, super-strict Miss Lovejoy's class, they're split up, and Tina has to fend for herself for the first time. Tina is horrified when she's paired up with angry bully Selma, who nobody wants to be friends with. But when Miss Lovejoy asks them to help her create a butterfly garden in the school playground, Tina discovers she doesn't always need her sisters -- and that there's a lot more to Selma than first meets the eye. A beautiful, heartwarming story about friendship, confidence and becoming your own person, from the mega-bestselling author of Tracy Beaker, Hetty Feather and Sleepovers.
    S
  • The Butterfly

    A. Delaney

    Hardcover (Delacorte Pr, Oct. 1, 1977)
    An account of one year in the life of a butterfly is illustrated throughout in full color
  • Buttercup the Butterfly

    Marie J. Barletta, Joseph Barletta

    language (MJB Designs, May 13, 2014)
    Buttercup was a happy go lucky butterfly, who was caught in a net and put in a jar.This book was written and illustrated in 1994 for my niece Alexis, who was two at the time. The illustrations were hand drawn in watercolor pencils.
  • The Butterfly Dance

    Suzanne Barton

    language (Bloomsbury Children's Books, March 8, 2018)
    Caterpillars Dotty and Stripe do everything together. They play, they eat leaves and do all sorts of caterpiller-y things, and then one day, after spinning themselves into snuggly cocoons, they wake up as beautiful butterflies! But soon they realise that, for the first time ever, they look different. Should Dotty only play with butterflies that look like her? And Stripe only play with butterflies that look like him? A stunningly illustrated story about friendship and and being happy with who you are, from the author/illustrator of Waterstones Children's Book Prize shortlisted The Dawn Chorus.
  • The Butterfly Basket

    C. A. Waldman, Susan Hill

    language (, Dec. 15, 2014)
    It’s bad enough that Mama died and the bank man stole the family house in Chicago, but now eleven-year-old Sara Constance O’Day is being forced to live on her grandparents’ California ranch. Coyote Creek Ranch is as different from the big city as the moon is from the earth. Sara hates the brown emptiness, the heat, the prickles, and the coyotes’ howls. She’s terrified of the venomous snakes and hungry mountain lions. But mostly she’s afraid of facing Mama’s death and the feelings she has hidden deep inside.A Kawaiisu Indian girl named Lena, a beautiful butterfly basket, and the wild spirit of Coyote Canyon hold the answer to all of Sara’s problems, but only is she will listen to what they have to say.A novel for young people ages eight and up, as well as for their parents and teachers, THE BUTTERFLY BASKET is a story of the healing power of friendship, woven with strands of authentic Native American culture, and filled with the natural beauty of America's Southwest.
  • The Butterfly Hunt

    Yoshi

    Hardcover (Simon & Schuster, Dec. 1, 1990)
    A boy pursues and captures elusive butterflies but decides that it is more fun to carry home his memories than a trophy
    F
  • The Butterfly I See

    Suzanne Y. Saunders

    language (, April 9, 2019)
    While finishing her freshman year of high school, Amanda meets a mysterious boy named Brandon at a youth art exhibition. Intrigued by each other's artwork, they develop a friendship. Amanda soon finds herself attracted to Brandon, which complicates their relationship. Despite this struggle, Amanda continues to have faith in their friendship, and through it, she discovers a sense of purpose that directs her to a deeper understanding of herself and how others influence her life.
  • The Tiny Butterfly

    Hannah Hewitt, Sarah E Hewitt

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Dec. 9, 2016)
    It’s been said that it is impossible for a butterfly to see its own wings.These wonderful little souls can fly around their entire lives never knowing how beautiful they really are. The Tiny Butterfly is a story for all the amazing people who have no idea that they are beautiful, inside and out!
    S
  • The Butterfly Club

    Jacqueline Wilson, Nick Sharratt

    Paperback (Corgi, Feb. 23, 2016)
    The exciting new story from one of the UK's best-loved authors. Tina is a triplet, but she's always been the odd one out. Her sisters Phil and Maddie are bigger and stronger and better at just about everything. Luckily, they look after teeny-tiny Tina wherever they go -- but when the girls start in scary, super-strict Miss Lovejoy's class, they're split up, and Tina has to fend for herself for the first time. Tina is horrified when she's paired up with angry bully Selma, who nobody wants to be friends with. But when Miss Lovejoy asks them to help her create a butterfly garden in the school playground, Tina discovers she doesn't always need her sisters -- and that there's a lot more to Selma than first meets the eye. A beautiful, heartwarming story about friendship, confidence and becoming your own person, from the mega-bestselling author of Tracy Beaker, Hetty Feather and Sleepovers.
    U
  • Flutter The Butterfly

    Josie Vivirito

    language (, Aug. 25, 2015)
    Children's book created by a child. Josie is 6 years old and made this book for kids of all ages. It's about friendship and love. Josie wrote it by herself and made all of the illustrations with no help.
  • The Butterfly Shell

    Maureen White

    eBook (The O'Brien Press, Aug. 3, 2015)
    There are some things about me you should know. 1. I always wear my butterfly shell - even when I’m swimming or sleeping2. I don’t hurt myself any more3. I believe in ghosts.I’d better start at the beginning. The beginning of First Year. Here goes …The story of a strange year and a very special shell.
  • The Butterfly’s Ball

    Edmund Evans, Pat Stephenson

    language (, Jan. 22, 2013)
    A charming children's book written in 1880, The Butterfly's Ball is a short and sweet story of a Ball hosted by Lady Butterfly and her cousin, Mrs. Grasshopper for all of their insect friends and neighbors.The color engraving illustrations are a sweet example of Edmund Evans work. Edmund Evans produced children's books,many under the label of Aunt Mavor's Toy Books, in England in the mid to later 1800s, making the artwork a feature of the stories.