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Books with title Good Night Owl

  • Good Night Ohio

    Adam Gamble, Mark Jasper

    eBook (Good Night Books, Nov. 14, 2011)
    Highlighting many of Ohio’s most interesting places and features, the rhythmic language of this colorful board book soothes children before bedtime while exploring the Buckeye State. This special tour includes the University of Ohio, Columbus Museum of Art, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cincinnati Reds, Cleveland Cavaliers, Ohio River Way, and Cedar Point Amusement Park.
  • Good Night Love

    Adam Gamble, Mark Jasper, Katherine Blackmore

    Board book (Good Night Books, Dec. 24, 2018)
    Good Night Love features marital love, friendship love, love for a sibling, love for one's baby, love for grandparents, love for teachers, love of nature, self-love, Valentine's Day, love for a pet, love of the stars and moon, and more! This adorable board book teaches the joys of everyday love while sending little ones off to a peaceful night's sleep.This book is part of the Good Night Our World Series, which includes hundred of titles exploring iconic locations and exciting themes.Young readers are sure to fall in love with this charming board book that explores themes of everyone's favorite feeling... love!
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  • Good-night, Owl!

    Pat Hutchins

    Hardcover (Jonathan Cape, Aug. 16, 1993)
    None
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  • Good Night, Good Knight

    Shelley Moore Thomas, Jennifer Plecas

    Hardcover (Dutton Books for Young Readers, Jan. 1, 2000)
    Three little dragons in a far-off cave can't sleep. Someone needs to tuck them in! Luckily a Good Knight keeps watch and hears their lonely ROAR. The Good Knight (because he is a good knight) helps by bringing glasses of water, reading stories, singing songs, and dispensing kisses in multiple trips down his tower and through the dark forest. Young readers will fall in love with the agreeable Good Knight and the dragons with their sweet but repetitive requests. The repetition--though it tires the Good Knight--will help beginning readers build confidence. With pictures by Jennifer Plecas, whose unforgettably adorable dragons will win every heart, Good Night, Good Knight is sure to become a new bedtime classic.
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  • Good night, Owl!

    Pat Hutchins

    Paperback (Harcourt Brace, Aug. 16, 1995)
    None
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  • Good Night God

    Kathleen Long Bostrom

    Board book (WorthyKids, Sept. 1, 2014)
    A delightful look at a child's bedtime rituals. This sweet little board book follows a child throughout his evening from the first hint of bedtime to those sleepy moments as his head hits the pillow. The author provides relatable examples of a child saying good night to God during his evening routine. Little ones will enjoy the engaging verse and bright illustrations as they learn that God is with us throughout the night. Ages 2-5.
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  • Good Night

    Jane E. Gerver, Gillian Flint

    Board book (Highlights Press, Aug. 1, 2013)
    These engaging books introduce children to the fun and challenge of finding familiar objects tucked into unexpected places.
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  • Good Night Farm

    Adam Gamble, Cooper Kelly

    language (Good Night Books, Nov. 4, 2011)
    Double Tap to Zoom.Taking place during the passage of both a single day and the four seasons of the year, this soothing bedtime story celebrates life on a traditional family farm. In this educational boardbook, children will follow a multicultural family through a day on a farm while they learn about how a farm works; what types of crops are grown on a farm, including corn, wheat, cotton, apples, and peaches; and about farm animals, such as horses, cows, goats, sheep, geese, ducks, and chickens. Take a tractor ride, feed the chickens, visit a barnyard, and play in a pumpkin patch in this charming and engaging keepsake.
  • Good Night, Blue

    Angela C. Santomero

    Hardcover (Simon Spotlight, Jan. 1, 1997)
    Steve and Blue invite you to spend the night...see what Blue does when he gets ready for bed.
  • Good-night, Owl!

    Pat Hutchins

    Hardcover (Bodley Head Children's Books, July 6, 1973)
    Owl couldn't sleep -- not while the bees were buzzing, the crows croaking, the starlings chittering, and the jays creaming. Every time there seemed to be some peace and quite, someone else landed in the hollow tree and woke Owl up again. Would Owl ever get any rest? Pat Hutchins's simple, cumulative story ends with a surprising twist that will send children off to sleep laughing.
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  • Good Night Zoo

    Adam Gamble, Cooper Kelly

    eBook (Good Night Books, Nov. 14, 2011)
    Double Tap to Zoom.One of the first books in the series to focus on a general environment rather than a specific geographic location, this vividly illustrated boardbook follows a multicultural group of people during a trip to the zoo. Designed to soothe children before bedtime with rhythmic language while instilling an early appreciation for the wonders of the natural world, this book features adults and children experiencing all that the zoo has to offer and guides readers through both the passage of a single day and the four seasons.
  • Good Night, Ella

    Paige Wilson, W. S. Wilson

    Hardcover (W SCOTT WILSON, Aug. 1, 2016)
    Another day is over and it’s time for Ella, the Bull Terrier, to go to bed. That’s what Ella’s mommy thinks, but Ella isn’t quite ready to sleep. Ella wants to squeeze more play time into her day. In this colorfully illustrated book, you will sneak out of bed with Ella and watch her play with her favorite toy, dig a giant hole, wake up her best friend and have a late night snack.