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Books with title Crop Circles

  • Circles

    Marilyn Sachs

    eBook (Belgrave House, Jan. 8, 2012)
    Beebe Clarke and Mark Driscoll both live with single parents in San Francisco. They even go to the same high school—but they’ve never met. Beebe is earnestly interested in Shakespeare and acting, and Mark is deeply involved with astronomy. Both of them would like to find someone of the opposite sex who views life as seriously as they do—but they keep missing one another. Juvenile/middle grade fiction by Marilyn Sachs; originally published by Puffin
  • Circles

    Mary Elizabeth Salzmann

    Library Binding (Sandcastle, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Simple text and pictures of common, everyday objects introduce the shape of the circle.
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  • Circles

    Diyan Leake

    Hardcover (Heinemann-Raintree, Sept. 15, 2005)
    Read and Learn is our extensive collection that helps young readers discover and understand the world around them. These books are packed full of fascinating facts and intriguing, labelled photographs that will really grab their attention. Using questions to focus learning, each title will prompt discussion, encourage information gathering and truly involve children in the topics they are studying. "Finding Shapes" investigates the shapes that can be found at home, in school, in the park and those that can be found in nature. It develops simple mathematical skills as readers are invited to count the number of shapes they can spot, and includes a quiz to help with classifying objects in terms of their shape.
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  • Circles

    Sandy Riggs, Richard Maccabe

    Library Binding (Benchmark Books, Jan. 1, 1997)
    Identifies different kinds of circles and discusses how they can be drawn and measured
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  • Circles

    Bari Weissman

    Board book (Dial, March 30, 1992)
    A book that opens up to the shape of a circle introduces young readers to other objects with the same shape, including a wheel, a clock, and the moon
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  • Circles

    Teddy Borth

    Library Binding (Abdo Kids, Jan. 1, 2016)
    Look around you! You can find circles everywhere. They are on the wheels of cars. They are on the coins in our pockets. Easy text and large pictures help early readers discover that circles are fun!
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  • Circles

    Marybeth Lorbiecki, Sharon Lane Holm

    Library Binding (Magic Wagon (Looking Glass Library), July 1, 2007)
    The Shapes illustrated nonfiction books provide the first lessons on common shapes. Rhyming text and creative illustrations draw attention to circles are found in the world around us.
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  • Circles

    Jan Kottke

    Library Binding (Childrens Pr, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Simple text and pictures explore the different kinds of circles that can be found in the city.
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  • Circles

    Marilyn Sachs

    Mass Market Paperback (Puffin, Nov. 1, 1992)
    Two high school classmates, an aspiring actress and a young astronomer, struggle with the changes in their lives, unaware that these changes are leading them to each other.
  • Circles

    Jan Kottke

    Paperback (Childrens Pr, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Simple text and pictures explore the different kinds of circles that can be found in the city.
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  • Are Crop Circles Real?

    Allison Lassieur

    Paperback (Amicus Ink, Feb. 2, 2016)
    Four new titles in this best-selling series examine the evidence—or lack thereof—for these supernatural legends. Reviews of the first six books called the series "solid stuff for teaching high-interest critical thinking," (Booklist) and said, "These books will spark classroom debate," (School Library Journal). Curious minds want to know: are these things real? Read and decide for yourself! Presents stories of crop circles, designs that appear in crop fields, often overnight. Examines the evidence of various explanations.
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  • Circles

    Ruby Standing Deer

    Paperback (Evolved Publishing, May 18, 2012)
    NEW COVER (2nd Edition) ~~~~~~~~~~ Evolved Publishing brings you a rare glimpse into ancient Native American culture, in the Historical Novel, "Circles," by Ruby Standing Deer. ~~~~~~~~~~ With much of the world still undiscovered, a small band of people live a peaceful life, until the dream vision of a young boy, Feather Floating In Water, changes everything. Only nine winters old, Feather's dreams turn his seemingly ordinary childhood into the journey of a lifetime. He must help his people face a terrifying destiny from which they cannot turn away. He must find a way to make his people listen. Bright Sun Flower, the boy's grandmother, guides his beginnings, teaching him about the Circle of Life, and how without it, no life can exist. But he needs a bigger push, and gets it from a grey wolf and a Great Elder. The boy's journey leads him to discover that the Circle of Life involves all people, all living things, and not just the world he knows. In the end, an ancient People guide the boy in his visions, toward an unexpected place hidden from outsiders. This story is steeped in American Indian life, in their beliefs and humor, and in their love of family. It shows how we might benefit from the old ways today.