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Books with title Snip, Snip...Snow!

  • Snow

    Marion Dane Bauer, John Wallace

    eBook (Simon Spotlight, June 18, 2013)
    Level 1: Starting to Read • Simple stories • Increased vocabulary • Longer sentences Everyone loves snow! It's fun to play in and makes wonderful snowmen. But where does snow come from? The answer is at your fingertips. Just open this book and read about the wonders of snow....
    H
  • Snow

    Grace Hansen

    Hardcover (Capstone Classroom, Aug. 1, 2016)
    Readers will learn about how snow is made and why it and the water cycle are so important to life on Earth. This title is informative yet simple. Big text and simple sentences combined with vibrant photographs will entertain readers, teach them scientific facts, and strengthen their reading skills. Aligned to Common Core Standards and correlated to state standards. Abdo Kids is a division of ABDO.
    K
  • Snow

    Sam Usher

    Hardcover (Templar Publishing, )
    None
    J
  • Snow

    Ondine Sherman

    eBook (Pantera Press, July 15, 2019)
    Sometimes you have to leave everything behind to find yourself.Sky is travelling to Alaska to meet her father for the first time.Far away from her friends back in Australia, she navigates the new relationship with her father and meets Jaxon, a local boy struggling with his own problems. In a cold, vast and beautiful place, they are isolated except for the wild animals who live there.As Sky gets to know her father, she finally feels she has a chance of having a real family again. But her father has a secret that threatens everything Sky holds dear. Will she have to choose between family and her love of animals?This is a heart-warming story in the coldest of places.
  • Snow

    Cocoretto

    Board book (Childs Play Intl Ltd, July 15, 2019)
    Run little fingers along these chunky, die-cut shapes and guess what created the tracks! Lift the flap to find out if you are right! Develop observation and prediction skills by exploring tracks that can be found in a variety of settings. Did a tractor leave this trail? Or a duck? A rewarding and tactile experience, full of surprises.
    J
  • Snow

    Isao Sasaki

    Hardcover (Viking Juvenile, Oct. 11, 1982)
    Trains come and go at a small train station on a snowy day.
    I
  • Snow

    ROY MCKIE

    Paperback (Random House BFYR, Nov. 21, 1993)
    Book by MCKIE, ROY
  • Snow

    Cassie Mayer

    Paperback (Heinemann, Aug. 30, 2006)
    How is snow formed? Readers will find the answer and learn more about snow including what it is made of, and why snow is an important part of our weather.
    G
  • Snow

    Andy Owen, Miranda Ashwell

    Library Binding (Rigby Interactive Library, Feb. 1, 1999)
    Briefly discusses aspects of cold weather, including such topics as snow, frost, icebergs, blizzards, effects on plants and animals, and more.
    B
  • Snow

    Catherine Farnes

    eBook (BJU Press/JourneyForth, April 14, 2011)
    In Snow, teen fiction by Catherine Farnes, Stephanie Teale is new in a school that isn’t her familiar school for the blind. As an albino teen, she knows all too well that she will be teased about her handicaps. But when an adventure in a cave turns dangerous, her keen hearing could save her and her new friends Nathan, Rebekah, and Judah . . . if they are willing.
  • Snow

    Cynthia Rylant

    Paperback (Scholastic, Aug. 16, 2009)
    None
  • Snow

    Criss Raven, Psycodic Crow

    language (, July 13, 2018)
    Ever wonder what where the patterns of weather got their names? What if I told you that there is a real form of origin. Would you believe me? How about if I told you that all the science books and history books were wrong? How about then? Probably not right. Well, let me tell you something. They all have a real back story. How do I know this? Well let me tell you something. I know because I have thee only legendary scripts left behind by time. You may think I’m crazy for saying this, but it happened long ago. Way before the creation of man. Long before the bible was written, and even before the dinosaurs lived. You might know them as a mythological creature called Dragons. However even that is false. Not the Dragon part but the myth. Myth (derived from the word “mythos” which translates from Greek) means a story or set of stories with significant truth. This, my friend is the story (or series of stories) from hence dragons lived. They lived in a time known as the Dragastic time period.