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Books with title Under the Egg

  • The Egg

    Sherwood Anderson, Cathy Dobson, Red Door Audiobooks

    Audible Audiobook (Red Door Audiobooks, Jan. 16, 2014)
    Sherwood Anderson's wonderful story of a young boy, brought up on an unsuccessful chicken farm, whose impoverished parents try their luck at running a restaurant. The father, not a natural showman by nature, attempts one night to entertain the sole diner with tricks which use eggs. The result is disastrous.
  • The Egg

    Carmen Caine

    language (, July 6, 2014)
    From USA Today Bestselling, Amazon Top 100 Bestselling, and multiple Award-winning author Carmen Caine: a Contemporary Paranormal Faerie Romance The Glass Wall Series: What if humans were more powerful than they thought? What if an alien race had a reason to keep humanity entrenched in fear? And what if ancient beings that we've met before were still trying to protect us? And just what if the fate of Earth depended upon an average 17-year-old girl with a few secrets of her own?Would she discover that the power of love was truly the strongest of all?"The Egg" - Book Four of the "Glass Wall":- A death ...- A beginning ...- An egg to change the world ...Faced with her Blue Thread of Fate, Sydney must make a choice if Rafael and Jareth are to survive. But what if it is an inner demon she's not expecting? Can she truly understand the many shades of love?
  • Under the Sea

    Christiane Gunzi

    Board book (B.E.S. Publishing, Feb. 1, 2006)
    Fish, dolphins, and huge whales are some of the sea creatures in this book. Feels Real Books each have “feels real” textures for toddlers to touch and recognize. Books feature vivid color animal photos on every page. With Mom or Dad to read each story aloud, kids will also begin learning about the many different animals that live around the world. Meanwhile, the heavy board covers and pages are sturdy enough to withstand rough treatment from tiny hands.
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  • Under the Sea

    Jupiter Kids, Dorothy Deavers, Speedy Publishing LLC

    Audiobook (Speedy Publishing LLC, Nov. 20, 2014)
    This fun and colorful book will help your child to easily learn about their numbers like never before. Each page contains different types of sea animals that will surely keep your children imagination riveted while learning about numbers.
  • The Egg

    M.P. Robertson

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Feb. 23, 2004)
    When the eggs hatches, and a baby dragon comes out, George knows exactly what to do. A baby dragon needs to learn how dragons are supposed to act, including how to fly, how to breathe fire, and how to defeat a knight-so George starts the dragon lessons right away! The dragon learns quickly, but he is anxious to find his own kind. Then George wakes up the next morning and the little dragon is missing. Will George ever see his dragon again?
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  • Under the Sea

    Alastair Smith, Judy Tatchell, Peter Scott, Ruth Russell

    Hardcover (Usborne Pub Ltd, Oct. 1, 2003)
    Examines the types, physical characteristics, and eating habits of such sea creatures as dolphins, sharks, seahorses, and corals.
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  • Under the Sea

    Kate Riggs, Leonard Tom

    Board book (Creative Editions, March 7, 2017)
    Sneaking an early grammar lesson into a book about animals, Under the Sea offers up a fun, foundational introduction to both sea life and pairs of directional words. Simple, rhythmical text introduces creatures and their surroundings by placing them in relative positions to each other. Detailed illustrations, meanwhile, provide a colorful backdrop of the developing ocean scene. Set within a durable board book format, this is a title all young readers will get behind!
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  • Under the Egg

    Laura Marx Fitzgerald, Jessica Almasy

    Audio CD (Listening Library, March 12, 2015)
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  • The Egg

    Geraldo Valério

    Hardcover (Owlkids, Aug. 15, 2020)
    The Egg is an imaginative and unusual story about a bird and a child, and how they become a family. The wordless story opens with a crane caring lovingly for an egg. During a storm, a gust of wind blows the egg from its nest. Despite searching far and wide, the crane can’t find the lost egg anywhere. Heartbroken, the crane spots something―an egg! Not its own, but since this egg is also alone, the crane rescues it to safety. When the egg hatches, the little one inside is―unexpectedly―a human baby. No matter their differences, the crane loves and cares for the child, adopting it into an avian life. When they take flight together, this unusual duo encounters other birds with their young ones―the babies all a diverse array of creatures, showing that families come in all shapes and sizes. This whimsical story is open to interpretation and imagination, but above all imparts the message that a loving family can be whatever we make it.
  • Under the Paw

    Tom Cox

    Paperback (Simon & Schuster Ltd, Jan. 30, 2014)
    In 'Under the Paw', there is death, depression, flying fur, the first human sentence spoken by a feline. Tom Cox records the chaos of owning seven of the most charismatic, idiotic and duplicitous cats in the country.
  • Under the Tree

    Alan Pendleton

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 2, 2018)
    When Mallory leaves her backyard to follow a mysterious butterfly, her journey takes her into the hollows of an enchanted tree. Ruled by the enigmatic Fawn, it is a place so marvelous that she just might choose to stay forever.
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  • The Thunder Egg

    Tim J. Myers, Winfield Coleman

    Hardcover (Wisdom Tales, July 7, 2015)
    Stands-by-Herself lives with her grandmother in a buffalo-hide tipi among their Cheyenne people on the Great Plains. Other children make fun of her because she is always by herself dreaming. One day she finds a strange egg-shaped rock and senses there is something special about it. Taking it home, she cares for it as if it were a child, even though the other children mock her. When a terrible drought threatens to wipe out her people, could Stands-by-Herself’s rock hold the key to their survival? The Thunder Egg is the story of a girl’s coming of age, when she realizes that life can require us to think of others before ourselves and to follow what our hearts tell us. Featuring an author’s note, informative notes on the illustrations, and a bibliography, the book is filled with vibrant images of Plains Indian life in the unspoiled West. Carefully crafted text and paintings bring a true authenticity to the time, place, and people of the story.
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