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Books with title Blah Blah Black Sheep

  • Baa Baa Black Sheep

    Trace Moroney

    Board book (Gardner Pub, April 1, 2008)
    Trace Moroney brings her inimitable colorful style of illustration to this interpretation of the favorite classic nursery rhyme, in a chunky shaped board book. Several other titles available in same series.
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  • The Black Sheep

    Elizabeth and illustrated by Sita Jucker Heck

    Hardcover (Boston: Little Brown & Co. (1985)., March 15, 1985)
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  • Baa Baa Black Sheep

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    Audio Cassette (Scholastic Inc, Feb. 27, 2002)
    An expanded version of the familiar first verse of a nursery song in which an industrious black sheep is inundated with requests from her neighbors and refuses each but has a surprise for all of them. Cassette playing time of 8:40. Sung by Steve Blane ; music composed by Richard DeRosa ; produced by Blane & DeRosa Productions, Inc.
  • Baa, Baa Black Sheep

    None

    Board book (Igloo Books Ltd, )
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  • Baa Baa Black Sheep

    Annie Kubler

    Hardcover (Childs Play Intl Ltd, June 1, 2007)
    Presents a classic nursery rhyme accompanied by illustrations showing how to form the American Sign Language signs for each word. On board pages.
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  • Baa, Baa Black Sheep: 9

    Moira Kemp

    Board book (Dutton Juvenile, Aug. 30, 1991)
    A sheep shopkeeper answers his cutomer's question about his stock of wool
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  • Baa, Baa, Black Sheep

    Moira Kemp

    Board book (Mathew Price Ltd, Sept. 21, 2001)
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  • Baa, Baa Black Sheep

    None

    Hardcover (Igloo Books Ltd, )
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  • The Black Sheep

    Yvonne Collins, Sandy Rideout

    Paperback (Hyperion Book CH, June 17, 2008)
    Fed up with her parents and all their ridiculous rules (they keep a binder full of them), fifteen-year-old Kendra Bishop writes away to The Black Sheep, a reality TV show that offers the chance to swap families with another teen. But when the camera crew shows up at her Manhattan apartment, Kendra starts to have second thoughts. Too late. Kendra’s whisked away to Monterey, California, to live with the Mulligans. The carefree household that couldn’t be more different that her own--complete with hippy parents, their five kids, and a pet ferret. And falling for Mitch, the Mulligan's seventeen-year-old son, only complicates things further, especially since Mitch despises the TV show and everything it stands for. But given the chance, Kendra might just be able to juggle first love, her new stardom, and a pushy TV producer who will stop at nothing for higher ratings. In this hilarious and touching YA novel, Kendra learns to live under a new roof, but finds true refuge in the unlikeliest of places—her own family.
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  • Baa Baa Black Sheep

    Moira Kemp

    Hardcover (Hodder Wayland, Sept. 30, 1992)
    None
  • The Black Sheep

    Yvonne Collins

    Paperback (Allison & Busby, Aug. 1, 2012)
    Fed up with her parents and all their ridiculous rules, Kendra Bishop writes away to 'The Black Sheep', a reality TV show that offers the chance to swap families with another teen. But when the camera crew, led by brash TV producer Judy Greenberg, shows up at her Manhattan apartment, Kendra starts to have second thoughts.
    Y
  • The Black Sheep

    Honore De Balzac, Katherine Prescott Wormeley

    Paperback (Digireads.com, Jan. 1, 2014)
    Listed by the British newspaper "The Guardian" as number 12 on a list of the 100 greatest novels of all-time, Honore de Balzac's "The Black Sheep" is another installment in his magnum opus "The Human Comedy." Agathe Rouget, who is born in Issoudun, is sent to be raised by her maternal relatives, the Descoings in Paris by her father Doctor Rouget. Agathe has two sons, Philippe and Joseph, with which the story is principally concerned. Philippe becomes a soldier in Napoleon's armies, while Joseph becomes an artist. Philippe, who is ironically his mother's favorite, is a hard drinker with a gambling problem that brings trouble to the family. The differences between the two brothers are brilliantly contrasted by Balzac as their true natures are revealed throughout the course of the work. As in the rest of "The Human Comedy" Balzac criticizes the value that is placed on wealth and beautifully illustrates the conflict that arises out of the ambition to achieve a place in the aristocratic society of France.