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Books with title Hello Hello

  • Say Hello!

    Linda Davick

    Hardcover (Beach Lane Books, Aug. 4, 2015)
    Howdy! Hi! Hello! This friendly and fun picture book celebrates the greatness of greetings.Say HELLO! It’s lots of fun. And here are ways it can be done. With a hug. With a shake. With a curtsy. With a cake. With a whisper. With a kiss. With a dance of happiness!With zippy, rhyming text and bold, exuberant illustrations, this book celebrates the many wonderful ways to say hello to friends, families, pets—or anyone!
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  • Hello, Zoo!

    Martha Day Zschock

    Board book (Commonwealth Editions, June 26, 2019)
    Welcome to the zoo! Parent and child monkeys tour the zoo in best-selling author-illustrator Martha Day Zschock's Hello! board book series for children. In Hello, Zoo! join the pair as they hear a lion roar, visit the giraffes, watch pandas play, and waddle like penguins. Along the way they also see the kangaroos hop, peek underwater at the polar bears, and visit the petting zoo! For ages 2-5. Made in the USA.
  • Hello You!

    Stephen Barker

    Board book (Campbell Books, March 23, 2017)
    Hello You! is ideal for parents to share with their babies as they develop and grow during their first year. Say hello to familiar faces (mummy, daddy, granny, and grandad), play peekaboo with the peep-through holes, and enjoy a fun guessing game. With high contrast colors, bold patterns, and a mirror to focus the eyes, you can also open up the gatefold ending and stand the book up around your baby for tummy time. Illustrated by Stephen Barker, this is the perfect first board book! Also available: Little Friends
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  • Hello

    Antonia Harlan

    Paperback (BookSurge Publishing, May 7, 2009)
    An enlightening and sociologically important work of childrenÂ’s fiction, Hello (Shalom), My Name Is Sasha Feinstein is the follow-up to Hello, My Name Is Josie Mae Bricker. In this sequel, Antonia Harlan looks at the Jewish culture and makes a powerful impact on how young people consider and approach customs, traditions, ethnicities, and ways of life that are different from their own. Meet Sasha, a seventh grader who is trying very hard to be accepted at a new school for who he is and, ultimately, what he stands for and believes in. As his classmates try to belittle, make fun of, and even rename him, Sasha learns that he is incredibly proud to be Jewish. His familyÂ’s history is one of survival and endurance. As he and his class revisitthe Holocaust through stories from his grandmother, who endured Auschwitz, theyand their teacher are provided an intimate portrait of the atrocities of the Holocaust and what it means to be Jewish. Also available in hardcover at BookSurge.
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  • Hello

    Betsey Chessen, Samantha Berger

    Paperback (Scholastic, Dec. 1, 1998)
    Tells how different children in the United States say hello.
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  • Hello Now

    Jenny Valentine

    Hardcover (Philomel Books, March 31, 2020)
    From Carnegie Medal finalist Jenny Valentine comes a bold new story about the boundlessness of love and second chances, perfect for fans of David Levithan's Every Day.Jude doesn't believe in love, or magic. Life is little more than ordinary. That is, until Jude's mother loses her job and moves them to a little town by the sea to live with Henry Lake--an eccentric old man with rooms to rent. Henry is odd, the town is dull, and worst of all, Jude feels out of place and alone.So when Novo turns up in the house across the street, dressed all in black and looking unbearably handsome, Jude's summer takes an immediate turn for the better. But Novo isn't all that he seems to be--or maybe he's more than Jude can possibly understand. Novo is pure magic--someone who can bend and stretch the bounds of time. Someone who wakes up in different places and at different points in history with utter regularity. He knows that each Now is fleeting, that each moment is only worth the energy it expends on itself, and that each experience he has will be lost to him before long. But Jude and Novo form a bond that shifts reality for both of them. Jude begins to question what forever really means--only to find out that Novo knows that forever isn't real. And when things go horribly wrong, Jude and Novo are faced with an impossible question that may change both of their lives irreparably--what is worth sacrificing for love?A stunningly written, compelling exploration of the universality of love--and what it means to live in the moment--that quite literally defies both logic and time. A love story without borders that reflects the best of our modern world.Praise for Hello Now:* "Babbitt's Tuck Everlasting revisioned as a passionate YA love story, this is an exquisitely told romantic fantasy, golden yet lacerating." --BCCB, STARRED REVIEW
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  • Say Hello

    Jack Foreman, Michael Foreman

    Paperback (Candlewick, Sept. 11, 2012)
    "A beautiful pairing of son’s sparse rhyming text with father’s simple drawings . . . A poignant debut about including others and making friends." — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)A lone dog comes upon a group of kids playing ball and with leaping ease, joins the game. They’re all having so much fun, they don’t see a sad little boy standing off by himself. Who will spy the boy and invite him to play? With arresting images by a master illustrator and a simple, touching text by his son, Say Hello evokes the joy and relief of finding a new friend just when you need one the most.
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  • Hello!

    Janine Amos

    Library Binding (Windmill Books, Jan. 1, 2009)
    Young readers learn about open, friendly greetings. They discover the possibilities that start with a courteous "Hello."
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  • Hello

    Guido Van Genechten

    Board book (Amer Girl Pub, Aug. 1, 2001)
    All the forest animals extend a greeting.
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  • Hello!

    Vincent Andriani

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1996)
    Literacy At Work Book (Grade 1 Unit 6) from the 1996 SCHOLASTIC Literacy Place Reading / Language Arts Program. This is a Teacher's Resource Book that contains activities for: Building Vocabulary, Comprehension, Planning Writing, Building skills and Strategies, Organizing Workshops, and Planning Projects. It also has a Literacy Newsletter to take home, and more additional selections for Strategic Reading and Applying Skills.
  • Say Hello!

    Rachel Isadora

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 2014)
    Carmelita loves to greet everyone in her colorful neighborhood. There are people from so many different cultures! They all like to say hello too, so now Carmelita can say hello in Spanish, English, French, Japanese, and many other languages. And her dog, Manny - well, he seems to understand everyone, and gives a happy "Woof!" wherever he goes. Caldecott Honor winner Rachel Isadora's eyecatching collages are full of kid-friendly details like colorful storefronts, pigeons and an ice cream truck, making Carmelita's neighborhood fun to explore. Emphasizing the rich diversity of America's neighborhoods, this simple portrait of a child's day provides a great introduction to the joy of language.
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  • Hello!

    Lerryn Korda

    Board book (Scholastic, )
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