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Books with title Good Night Texas

  • Good Night God

    Holly bea, Kim Howard

    eBook (HJ Kramer/New World Library, Dec. 20, 2011)
    Beautifully illustrated with jewel-tone paintings, Good Night God is a restful story sure to soothe a tired child to sleep. Starting with the setting of the sun and the ending of a day, a young boy starts his nighttime rituals that include bidding good night to all his favorite and familiar animal friends and his parents. Ending with a child's anticipation of another day filled with adventure, the young boy shares a special goodnight prayer with his Creator.Good Night God is the third collaborative effort from best-selling author and illustrator duo, Holly Bea and Kim Howard. Their first project Where Does God Live? has sold more than 125,000 copies. Sure to be a successful companion title, Good Night God is a warm and comforting story filled with nighttime rituals and bedtime preparations that children can relate to.
  • Good Night, Knight

    Betsy Lewin

    Paperback (Holiday House, Jan. 15, 2015)
    I Like to Read® Books for Beginning Readers• More than 70 fun-to-read books for new readers• Guided reading levels A through G, based upon Fountas and Pinnell standards• Award-winning easy reader series, created by acclaimed author-illustrators including winners of Caldecott, Theodor Seuss Geisel, and Coretta Scott King honors• Levels A though D for kindergarten readers; levels D through G for early first grade readers Knight and Horse are drifting off to sleep when Knight has a magical dream. In his vision, he sees the most scrumptious soft golden cookies he has ever laid his eyes on. The delicious treats call to him: Go and find the golden cookies. When Knight wakes up, he gets Horse ready for their journey, and they go trotting along in search of the golden goods. But the cookies are nowhere to be found! Knight and Horse finally return home to the castle, where a surprise in the kitchen rewards their valiant quest. This kid-friendly Don Quixote-like knight's tale with a simple text and delightful illustrations by Caldecott Honor-winner Betsy Lewin is a mouthwatering treat for emerging readers.
    K
  • Good Night

    Gireesh Haridas

    language (, Aug. 20, 2015)
    It is night. Mr. Sun has gone and Mr. Moon has arrived. However, Ms. Bird is still not ready to sleep and wants to fly some more. In order to persuade her to get some rest, Mr. Moon shows her various animals sleeping peacefully and encourages her to fall asleep too. Consisting of rhyming verses and white-on-black illustrations, 'Good Night' is a soothing bedtime-book for children.
  • Good Night!

    Ethan Long

    language (Abrams Appleseed, Sept. 1, 2015)
    A string of comically stylized parent-and-child animal pairs say “good night” and “sleep tight” to each other in masterful couplets—a chick’s “cheep cheep” is answered by a chicken’s “cluck cluck”; a puppy’s “ruff ruff” is returned with a dog’s “woof woof”—all leading up to a human toddler and her dad at bedtime! The second title in a brand-new board book series on animal (and human) first words by award-winning author/illustrator Ethan Long is sure to make tucking in a lot more fun!
  • Good Night, Good Knight

    Shelley Moore Thomas, Jennifer Plecas

    Hardcover (Dutton Books for Young Readers, Jan. 1, 2000)
    Three little dragons in a far-off cave can't sleep. Someone needs to tuck them in! Luckily a Good Knight keeps watch and hears their lonely ROAR. The Good Knight (because he is a good knight) helps by bringing glasses of water, reading stories, singing songs, and dispensing kisses in multiple trips down his tower and through the dark forest. Young readers will fall in love with the agreeable Good Knight and the dragons with their sweet but repetitive requests. The repetition--though it tires the Good Knight--will help beginning readers build confidence. With pictures by Jennifer Plecas, whose unforgettably adorable dragons will win every heart, Good Night, Good Knight is sure to become a new bedtime classic.
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  • Good Night!

    Az Books

    Board book (Az Books Llc, Jan. 13, 2015)
    The Twinkling Lights series is a perfect present for any kid! It combines lights, melodies and beautiful illustrations and magic - after blowing on the lights they fade like real ones.
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  • Good Night Little Texan

    Glenn Dromgoole, Barbra Clack

    Hardcover (Bright Sky Publishing, Sept. 1, 2012)
    A lullaby story for children all over Texas A companion to the author's popular Goodnight Cowgirl and Goodnight Cowboy, Goodnight Little Texan lets children all over the Lone Star State know that they are safe and beloved as they lay their head down to sleep. As they think about their home state with its wonders small and great, images of heroes of long ago, wildlife, pumping jacks, and tall skyscrapers fill their sleepy heads. Tejas means friend, and now every little Texan has a special friend to lull them to dreamland.
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  • The Good Night

    Terri Wilson, Ricci Fitzpatrick

    language (, April 16, 2018)
    Some children just don't like the night. They're afraid of the dark or they don't want to stop playing and go to bed. The Good Night introduces children to a nurturing and necessary night that helps owls, flowers – and children! This rhyming bedtime story, illustrated in rich colors, charms children and their parents alike.
  • Good Night God

    Kathleen Long Bostrom

    Board book (WorthyKids, Sept. 1, 2014)
    A delightful look at a child's bedtime rituals. This sweet little board book follows a child throughout his evening from the first hint of bedtime to those sleepy moments as his head hits the pillow. The author provides relatable examples of a child saying good night to God during his evening routine. Little ones will enjoy the engaging verse and bright illustrations as they learn that God is with us throughout the night. Ages 2-5.
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  • Good Night

    Jane E. Gerver, Gillian Flint

    Board book (Highlights Press, Aug. 1, 2013)
    These engaging books introduce children to the fun and challenge of finding familiar objects tucked into unexpected places.
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  • Good Night

    Barbara Gregorich, Krystyna Stasiak

    language (School Zone Publishing, Dec. 4, 2014)
    Good Night is the story of two young children who have trouble falling asleep while on a camping trip.School Zone’s Start to Read! series helps children learn to read by presenting interesting stories with easy vocabularies. Words are repeated. Sentences are short. Rhyming words help children increase their vocabularies. Meaningful clues in the illustrations are abundant. After several readings with a partner, the child should be able to read alone. Most of all, the reading experience should be enjoyable.Most of the vocabulary words in Good Night are typically introduced in first grade. The words roll, turn, hot, lot, listen, tent, dry, wolf and wind are second-grade words. You may need to help your child sound out these words.www.schoolzone.com
  • Good-Night

    Eleanor Gates, Arthur Rackham

    language (Pook Press, April 16, 2013)
    Pook Press celebrates the great Golden Age of Illustration in children's literature. Many of the earliest children's books, particularly those dating back to the 1850s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. Pook Press are working to republish these classic works in affordable, high quality, colour editions, using the original text and artwork so these works can delight another generation of children. Arthur Rackham (1867-1939) was one of the premier illustrators of the early 20th Century. He illustrated many books, the first of which was published in 1893. Throughout his career he had developed a very individual style that is was to influence a whole generation of children, artists and other illustrators. His haunting humour and dreamlike romance adds to the enchantment and fantasy of children's literature.