Browse all books

Books with title Animal Families

  • Families

    Peggy Roalf

    Paperback (Hyperion, April 1, 1992)
    Presents 2000 years of art history through a series of family portraits and paintings of family scenes
    S
  • Families

    Gail Saunders-Smith

    Paperback (Capstone Press, Sept. 1, 1998)
    Describes the relationships among members of a family, including grandparents, aunts and uncles, sisters, brothers, and cousins.
    D
  • Families, Families, Families!

    Suzanne Lang

    Library Binding (Random House Books for Young Readers, March 24, 2015)
    No matter your size, shape, or pedigree--if you love each other, you are a family!Moms, dads, sisters, brothers — and even Great Aunt Sue — appear in dozens of combinations, demonstrating all kinds of nontraditional families! Silly animals are cleverly depicted in framed portraits, and offer a warm celebration of family love.From School Library Journal PreS-Gr 1—Imagine a house with many rooms, whose walls each have a different color or wallpaper, accenting a family portrait hanging there. On a rustic wooden wall hangs the first portrait—a large family of ducks posing beside a still pond. The next spread shows three pandas in pink vests, much like the pink oriental wallpaper behind them. Each portrait features a gently rhyming line: "Some children live with their grandparents…/and some live with an aunt./Some children have many pets…/and some just have a plant." All of these appealing images demonstrate different ways of being a family. "Some children live with their father./ Some children have two mothers./Some children are adopted./Some have stepsisters and—brothers." The cartoon-style critters contrast pleasantly with more realistic elements—a bamboo plant, a slender ceramic dog, a fat ceramic cat. Families of hippos, tigers, lions, ostriches, and whales join the other family groups in the final spread. The loud-and-clear message is that "if you love each other, then you are a family." And imagine the many children who will be reassured because they have found a portrait of a family they will recognize as their own. A solid choice for most libraries.—Mary Jean Smith, formerly at Southside Elementary School, Lebanon, TNFrom the Hardcover edition.
    J
  • Families

    Gail Saunders-Smith

    Library Binding (Capstone Press, Sept. 1, 1997)
    Describes the relationships among members of a family, including grandparents, aunts and uncles, sisters, brothers, and cousins.
    D
  • Families

    Star Bright Books

    Board book (Star Bright Books, March 15, 1768)
    None
  • Families

    Teacher Created Materials

    Paperback (Teacher Created Materials, )
    None
    J
  • An Animal Family

    Emilia Hendrix

    Library Binding (Gareth Stevens Pub, Jan. 15, 2016)
    None
    L
  • Families

    Allan Ahlberg

    Paperback (HarperCollins Publishers, May 24, 1984)
    None
  • Animal Family

    Randall Jarrell

    Paperback (Dell Pub Co, June 1, 1971)
    None
  • Animal Families Chimpanzees

    Tim Harris

    Library Binding (Brown Bear Books, Aug. 1, 2012)
    In this attractive volume, students will learn how chimpanzees thrive by living as a family. Stunning photography and graphics and accessible text explain how individuals depend on their family for food, shelter, raising young, and security.
    R
  • My Favorite Animal Families

    David Henry Wilson, Steve Bloom

    Hardcover (Thames & Hudson, Sept. 15, 2010)
    A specially-photographed celebration of animal families, sure to capture the imagination of any child.In his new book for children, Steve Bloom has focused his camera on fourteen species of wild animal families: bears, cheetahs, chimpanzees, elephants, giraffes, gorillas, hippos, lions, orangutans, pandas, penguins, rhinos, seals, and zebras. Each family is featured over four pages, and the broad array of subjects is guaranteed to entice and amuse young readers. The photographs explore every facet of family life, from feeding and grooming to playing and hunting. Entertaining and lively texts by children’s author David Henry Wilson accompany the entries and explain anything and everything of interest: why hippo families like to wallow in mud, what noises baby giraffes make, and why you should always look at a zebra’s ears. 70 color photographs
    J
  • Families

    Ms. Sunshine

    Paperback (Page Publishing, Inc, )
    None