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Books with title I Don't Want To Be A Frog

  • I Don't Want to be Small

    Laura Ellen Anderson

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Children's Books, May 2, 2019)
    NO! I do NOT want to be so small!I wish I'd keep growing so I can be tall. This little boy is fed up with being so little. He wants to be as tall as his friends and his big brother. But when he loses his teddy bear up a tree, not even his new tall friend can get it back for him. Maybe with a little bit of help they can reach the bear together .A fun and inspiring tale about learning to love who we are, no matter what size. A perfect picture book for little people who don't want to be so little! From the brilliant Laura Ellen Anderson - the author/illustrator of the brilliantly fun I Don't Want Curly Hair and the bestselling Amelia Fang series
  • I Don't Want to be a Pea!

    Ann Bonwill, Simon Rickerty

    eBook (Oxford University Press, Sept. 6, 2012)
    Hugo is in no doubt as to what he and Bella should go as to the Hippo-Bird Fancy Dress Party. They will go as the princess and the pea and he will be the princess (of course!) leaving poor Bella to be the pea. Indignant, Bella refuses. She has a better suggestion - they will go as a mermaid on a rock and she will be the mermaid (of course!) leaving a huffy Hugo to be the rock. Hugo is not happy. But neither is Bella. They just can't decide on a costume and things reach a crisis when they both flounce off saying they don't want to go to the party at all. After time to consider, both Hugo and Bella calm down and (privately) both choose to dress as a pea as a gesture of making it all up to each other. So when they both arrive at the party as peas, Hugo and Bella announce proudly that they are 'two peas in a pod, just as it should be' underlining the message of the book that friendship is all about give and take. With wonderfully absurd illustrations from new talent Simon Rickerty and a great read-aloud text, this is a made-for-sharing picture book.
  • I Don't Want to be a Princess

    Ms. Christal/C Nakia/N Stevens

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 5, 2018)
    I Dont Want to be a Princess is a story about a young girl that can't decide what to wear to her school's costume bash, but one things for certain.... she doesn't want to be a princess. Azaria decides that being herself is much more rewarding.
  • I Don't Want to Go to Bed!

    Tony Ross

    Paperback (Andersen Press, Feb. 10, 2014)
    Little Tiger doesn't like to go to bed. Every night, Mommy Tiger calls, 'Bedtime!' But every night, Little Tiger refuses. Finally, Mommy Tiger has had enough. 'All right!' she says one night. 'You can stay up all night long!' So Little Tiger sets off into the woods by himself. He sees his friends getting ready for bed, but he's still not ready to settle down. As it becomes night in the jungle Little Tiger begins to worry. Then he meets Bush Baby, who helps him realize that home is where he needs to be.
    J
  • I Don't Want to be a Pig!

    Kenneth Edward Barnes

    language (, Oct. 28, 2016)
    This is a story for children from the ages of three to ten. It is about a little pig that is born somewhat different than any other. Besides not looking like the other pigs, he is made fun of because he does not like to do the things that all the other pigs enjoy doing. He is also smaller than the others and is shoved away from his food. Since he doesn’t like being a pig and doing the things pigs do, he tries to become friends with other animals on the farm. They all reject him, however. Finally he finds a friend and their bond becomes strong. Later, those that rejected him because they thought he was stupid change their mind. The little pig was not so dumb after all, but it is too late for the ones that mocked and teased him. In the end, the pigs that hogged all the food and those that thought they were so smart wish that they, too, were not a pig! When I was ten-years-old, I made a small pen out of several sheets of tin that are normally used for roofing a barn. I held the tin upright and in place by driving wooden stakes on either side. The pen was about twenty long by ten feet wide. In the corner, I laid a couple of sheets of tin on top so it would look like a shelter where pigs could go to get out of the weather. It took a long time for me to build it and when I finally had it finished I was proud of my accomplishment. As I stood there that day, I was wishing I had a pig to put inside. Without a pig in the pen, it didn’t mean much. Soon I myself got in the pen and pretended I was a pig. It was fun, but it wasn’t the same. About this time, my little brother, Bill, who was seven-years-old, came out to see what I had built. As we stood there, I was admiring my great work and thought, “I don’t have a real pig, but perhaps my little brother would pretend he was a pig just for adventure’s sake. Looking over at him as he stood peering into the empty pen, I said, “Get in and pretend you’re a pig. I want to see what my pen looks like with a pig in it.” Bill looked up at me with his big soulful eyes and timidly replied, “I don’t want to be a pig.” This disappointed me and caused me to become angry at him. I had worked so hard on my pen and he didn’t want to even get inside and see how great it was. It was built on the lawn so it had green grass inside. It wasn’t as if I had a mud puddle in it and wanted him to roll and root in the mud or to eat from a feeding trough. I just wanted him to crawl around and maybe grunt a few times to help me enjoy my wish of having a real pig in my new pen. Therefore, because he whined and refused to be a pig, I told him to go back in the house and stay with mommy. My little brothers had no imagination and never seemed to want to do anything adventurous. Recently, as my wife Lilly and I were walking one of our wooded trails, I was telling her about my brother Bill not wanting to pretend he was a pig when we were kids. She thought it was funny. Since that time we sometimes use that line, “I don’t want to be a pig!” Therefore, I decided it might make a good children’s story and that’s why I wrote this book.
  • I Don't Want to Go to Bed!

    Tony Ross

    eBook (Andersen Digital, Jan. 2, 2014)
    The incorrigible toddler is now asking the infamous question: 'Why do I have to go to bed when I'm not tired?', and she uses every stratagem she can think of to avoid her fate: monsters in the cupboard, hairy spiders, thirst, even outright escape! But when she finally does go to sleep, her bed is empty. Wherever has she gone now?
  • I Don't Want to Be a Pea!

    Ann Bonwill; Simon Rickerty

    Paperback (Oxford University Press, March 15, 2001)
    None
  • I Don’T Want to Be Me

    Judith Capes, Leanza Reyes

    eBook (Archway Publishing, Feb. 2, 2018)
    Frank is a really big dog. Although he loves to lie on the couch with his boy, Bobby, Bobbys mother doesnt want him up there; she says hes too big.Frank feels sad and decides to run away, to go and find a place where people like big dogs. As he goes around the neighborhood, he meets several other dogs. Theres Jessie, who is quite little, and Murphy, who is a medium-sized dog with big ears. And theres Gibby, whose tail is long and whose fur is thin. Frank wishes he could be like any of these other dogs, but he soon learns hes not the only one with problems. When Bobby comes looking for him, Frank learns an important lesson about being himself.In this childrens book, a big dog named Frank discovers that his uniqueness is a blessing and that its best to be himselfno matter what!
  • "But I Don't Want to Be a Dragon!"

    Jan Bray

    eBook (AuthorHouse UK, Oct. 8, 2013)
    George is just a normal boy. He likes playing with his friends and finds it difficult to concentrate in school. Then one day, his life is turned upside down when his parents tell him the family secret and George discovers a whole new world that he never knew existed!
  • I Don't Want to Be Quiet!

    Laura Ellen Anderson

    Hardcover (Bloomsbury Children's Books, March 5, 2020)
    From the excellent Laura Ellen Anderson, this is a very funny picture book about taking notice of the quieter things in life. Stairs are for STOMPING,spoons are for DRUMMING,and when my mum's working,I help her by HUMMING.Making noise is a LOT of fun . but what happens when you take the time to really listen to your world around you? Perfect for little people who love banging and popping, and whizzing and fizzing. Laura Ellen Anderson is the author/illustrator of the internationally successful I Don't Want Curly Hair and the bestselling Amelia Fang series.
  • I Don't Want to Go to Bed!

    Tony Ross

    eBook (Andersen Digital, Jan. 2, 2014)
    The Little Princess doesn’t want to go to bed. And why should she when she isn’t even tired? But the King and Queen are firm and she does eventually go to bed. But when the King goes in to kiss her goodnight, her bed is empty again! Where can she be?'Hilarious and a godsend to parents.' Guardian
  • I Don't Want to Go to Bed!

    Julie Sykes

    Paperback (Little Tiger Press Group, June 1, 2017)
    Little Tiger did not like going to bed, but will he like staying up all night in the jungle?
    J