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Books with title The Library Card

  • At the Library

    Spencer Brinker

    Paperback (Bearcub Books, Jan. 1, 2019)
    Look around the library! What do you spy? This title uses a repetitive sentence pattern and strong visual cues to help young readers discover wonderful things at the library. This book features repetitive and predictable text and incorporates high-frequency and familiar sight words. Children just learning how to read will love these colorful and engaging nonfiction books.
    H
  • The Library

    Sarah Stewart, David Small

    Paperback (Square Fish, Sept. 10, 1999)
    Meet an unforgettable bibliophileElizabeth Brown doesn't like to play with dolls and she doesnt like to skate. What she does like to do is read books. Lots of books. The only problem is that her library has gotten so big she can't even use her front door anymore. What should Elizabeth Brown do? Start her own public library, of course! With charming verse and watercolors Sarah Stewart and David Small celebrate one of America's oldest and finest institutions.
  • Come to the Library

    Pam Holden

    Paperback (Flying Start Books, Aug. 30, 2006)
    Do you go to the library? What do you do there? Which books do you choose? Do you take some books home? What do you like to read about?
    B
  • D.W.'s Library Card

    Marc Brown

    Hardcover (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, Sept. 1, 2001)
    D. W. can't wait to get a library card, but she has to learn how to write her full name first. After a lot of practice, she finally gets a library card of her very own. But when she tries to find the book that she wants, it's gone! One week later, D. W.'s book is returned, but now she's told that she can't damage the book or her library card will be taken away--forever! Full-color illustrations.
    K
  • The Library

    Sarah Stewart, David Small

    Paperback (Frances Lincoln Childrens Books, Sept. 4, 2008)
    Elizabeth Brown doesn't like to play with dolls, and she doesn't like to skate. What she does like to do is read books. Now that she's grown up, her collection is so big all the shelves are collapsing. Her front door has disappeared entirely. What in the world will she do? The reclusive Elizabeth Brown surprises everyone with her splendid solution.
    K
  • D.W.'s Library Card

    Marc Tolon Brown

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, July 1, 2003)
    D.W. can't wait to get a library card, but first she has to learn how to write her name. She practices and practices, and is finally rewarded with a library card of her very own.
    J
  • The Library

    Simon Hartwell

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 30, 2017)
    8yrs +Middle Grade Adventure for boys and girlsDr Who meets the Goonies. Where the strength of friendship is championed as they face the challenges and dangers of time travel.Every small town in America has a house that is, well, creepy, spooky, scary even and Alex Powell inherited such a house in the small town of Danville USA.Oh and it's haunted. It even has its own rhyme.'Once you go in, you never come out.' 'Never a scream, never a shout.''Never heard again or seen about.'Alex and his new friends find The Library within the old house and discover, trapped within the books, are the missing Mountfield family, ghost hunters, and treasure seekers, whilst their ghosts haunt the house. But Alex is not the only stranger in town..........An Unsolved murder in Australia, The Titanic, and London, during the Blitz await Alex and his friends as they seek to find and return those trapped within.
    W
  • The Library War

    Cecily Wolfe

    (Independently published, July 3, 2019)
    Best friends with SECRET CRUSHES - on each other!Connor and Maya have volunteered at the neighborhood library together since middle school, but when a grant makes a paid summer position available, their relationship crumbles as they compete to prove which of them is more worthy of the job. The third YA novel from award-winning, best-selling author Cecily Wolfe looks at friendship under pressure, with humor, drama, and misunderstandings that ultimately don't stand a chance against true love.
  • D.W.'s Library Card

    Marc Brown

    Hardcover (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, March 15, 1788)
    None
    K
  • The Library

    Jacqueline Laks Gorman

    Library Binding (Weekly Reader/Gareth Stevens Pub, Jan. 1, 2005)
    Describes some of the things to see and do on a visit to the library, including reading, consulting a librarian, listening to stories, using a computer, and borrowing books.
    I
  • Library, the

    Sarah Stewart, David Small, Randye Kaye

    Paperback (Live Oak Media, May 1, 2005)
    Other editions published without accompanying disc.
    L
  • The Library Bus

    Bahram Rahman, Gabrielle Grimard

    Hardcover (Pajama Press, Oct. 27, 2020)
    It is still dark in Kabul, Afghanistan when the library bus rumbles out of the city. There are no bus seats―instead there are chairs and tables and shelves of books. And there are no passengers―instead there is Pari, who is nervously starting her first day as Mama’s library helper. Pari stands tall to hand out notebooks and pencils at the villages and the refugee camp, but she feels intimidated. The girls they visit are learning to write English from Mama. Pari can’t even read or write in Farsi yet. But next year she will go to school and learn all there is to know. And she is so lucky. Not long ago, Mama tells her, girls were not allowed to read at all. Author Bahram Rahman grew up in Afghanistan during years of civil war and the restrictive Taliban regime. He wrote The Library Bus to tell new generations about the struggles of women who, like his own sister, were forbidden to learn. Brought to life by the pensive and captivating art of award-winning illustrator Gabrielle Grimard, The Library Bus is a celebration of literacy, ingenuity, and the strength of women and girls demanding a future for themselves.