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Books published by publisher Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books

  • New York is English, Chattanooga is Creek

    Chris Raschka

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Oct. 1, 2005)
    Suppose you are a CITY. Yes, you, looking at this book. Who named you SANTA FE, or PORTLAND, or TOMBSTONE, or whatever your name is? This book invites you to a big party with lots and lots of relatives, near and far, from all over tha nation. These relatives will be glad to meet YOU!
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  • Death of the Iron Horse

    Goble

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, March 31, 1987)
    In an act of bravery and defiance against the white men encroaching on their territory in 1867, a group of young Cheyenne braves derail and raid a freight train.
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  • Penguin and Little Blue

    Megan McDonald, Katherine Tillotson

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Sept. 1, 2003)
    Despite their success as performers, Penguin and Little Blue long to return home to Antarctica to once again revel in the joys of white ice, blue ice, pancake ice, pencil ice, ice cakes, and ice falls, and set into motion a clever plan to get there!
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  • Baya, Baya, Lulla-by-a

    Megan McDonald, Vera Rosenberry

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, July 1, 2003)
    From the IRA Picture Book Award winning author of Is This a House for Hermit Crab? comes a sweet bedtime tale about a mother who tells her young about the wonderful baya bird of India that carefully weaves grasses and flowers together to make her family nest.
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  • Little Black Crow

    Chris Raschka

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Aug. 31, 2010)
    Picture a sky as big as all outdoors, a fence disappearing over a hill, a crow then appearing, a boy looking up, watching, wondering. Not much more than a moment but the meetinglofts a rush of childhood questions—27 in all—inspiring answers as big as all outdoors. Caldecott medalist Chris Raschka, himself the boy perhaps,has created a book in the sparest language against the simplest setting, to inspire in any young listener the wonder of wondering.
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  • The Great Good Thing

    Roderick Townley

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, May 1, 2001)
    As a princess trapped in a tale, twelve-year-old Sylvie makes her escape one day by going inside a young reader's head where she rescues other characters and saves kingdoms for years and years. A first children's book. 10,000 first printing.
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  • Some Friend

    Marie Bradby

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Jan. 6, 2004)
    00 Finding a friend isn't easy. Especially when there aren't many kids age eleven in your neighborhood. Being a friend is even harder. In Pearl's neighborhood, Lenore is anyone's first choice. She gets her hair straightened and curled at a real beauty shop. Pearl's is still in braids. Lenore has her own pink phone and a frilly canopy bed. Pearl has to share a room with her teenage sister, "Princess" Diana, and a shaggy old bed with her sassy little sister, Angela. Lenore has followers -- Nadine and Ce-Ce. She hardly needs Pearl. But Pearl still hopes -- until Artemesia comes along. She is everything Pearl herself dreams of being -- a modern dancer, a gifted artist. She is also a mystery. "That old stanky girl," Lenore snorts, mocking with the others Artemesia's ill-fitting yellow dress. Pearl, meaning the best, does the worst thing possible. And still she hasn't a friend. Or has she? Finding a friend isn't easy. Especially when there aren't many kids age eleven in your neighborhood. Being a friend is even harder. In Pearl's neighborhood, Lenore is anyone's first choice. She gets her hair straightened and curled at a real beauty shop. Pearl's is still in braids. Lenore has her own pink phone and a frilly canopy bed. Pearl has to share a room with her teenage sister, "Princess" Diana, and a shaggy old bed with her sassy little sister, Angela. Lenore has followers -- Nadine and Ce-Ce. She hardly needs Pearl. But Pearl still hopes -- until Artemesia comes along. She is everything Pearl herself dreams of being -- a modern dancer, a gifted artist. She is also a mystery. "That old stanky girl," Lenore snorts, mocking with the others Artemesia's ill-fitting yellow dress. Pearl, meaning the best, does the worst thing possible. And still she hasn't a friend. Or has she?
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  • My Friend, the Starfinder

    George Ella Lyon, Stephen Gammell

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Feb. 5, 2008)
    Dazzled, a little girl listens to her old neighbor's story of following a falling star when he was a boy. He found it, too. He put it in her hands. But that's not all the starfinder has to tell. One day something found him. It's a story too good to keep. See for yourself.
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  • The STONE FACED BOY

    Fox

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Dec. 1, 1982)
    Gus Oliver finds himself locked behind a face that did not smile or even frown, as a result of the mysterious visit of his Great Aunt Hattie
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  • Snail and Slug

    Denys Cazet

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, May 3, 2016)
    From the critically acclaimed author of The Perfect Pumpkin Pie comes a picture book about the friendship between a snail and a slug that teaches readers how good friends can help you do anything, including finding the courage to make a difference.It’s a hot, hot day and Snail invites her new friend Slug into her home for some iced tea—who knew that a snail’s shell is so roomy! When the two decide to have a picnic outside in the shade, a big mean ol’ banana slug demands that they fork over their lettuce! But with a little bit of courage, friendship, and a dash of salt, the pair will find the strength they need to stand up to him.
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  • This Year's Garden

    Cynthia Rylant, Mary Szilagyi

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Sept. 1, 1984)
    Follows the seasons of the year as reflected in the growth, life, and death of the garden of a large rural family.
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  • More of Monkey & Robot

    Peter Catalanotto

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, March 18, 2014)
    Monkey and Robot are the best of friends—and they have the best of adventures! This chapter book includes four (more!) playful stories.Monkey always gets in the wildest of messes. And Robot is always there to help him out. After all, what are best friends for? “Readers looking for funny friendship stories but who think that Frog and Toad and other early readers are a tad too easy will find this unlikely duo just right,” says Horn Book Magazine about the Monkey and Robot series.
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