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Books published by publisher First Avenue Editions TM

  • Wilma Rudolph

    Victoria Sherrow, Larry Johnson

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Jan. 1, 2000)
    In 1946, six-year-old Wilma Rudolph dreamed of walking and playing like other children, but a sickness called polio had damaged her left leg. Wilma spent hours each week doing painful exercises at a hospital for African American patients. The rest of the time, she was forced to wear a heavy and cumbersome leg-brace. Still, Wilma never gave up. She knew she could walk again, and if she could walk, maybe she could run. Author Victoria Sherrow tells how Wilma Rudolph's determination led her to the 1956 and 1960 Olympics where she gained fame as a champion runner. Larry Johnson's rich illustrations help to capture this true story of heroic strength and fearlessness.
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  • Written Anything Good Lately?

    Susan Allen, Jane Lindaman, Vicky Enright

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Jan. 1, 2010)
    Have you ever thought about all the different types of writing you can do? You may write papers for school and e-mails to your friends. Some of you might enjoy writing stories and poems. Communicating through writing can take many forms. This book will show you twenty-six of them – one for each letter of the alphabet. In school you could write to answer Questions on a Quiz, prepare a Report on the Rainforest, or create a Sensational Speech for Social Studies. After school you might write a Long Letter to a pen pal in London, a Newsletter for the Nature club, or a Play to Put on for your Parents. You could even write a book like this one, making up your own list of 26 more ways to communicate with words!
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  • Read Anything Good Lately?

    Susan Allen, Jane Lindaman, Vicky Enright

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Aug. 1, 2006)
    "A child's question prompts another's alphabetic reveries in this invitation to consider the many things and places to read: an atlas at the airport, a biography in bed. . . . In page-sized cartoons, Enright follows her smiling young bookworm from place to place, showing her reading alone and with company; indoors and out, up a tree, even in a Jacuzzi. Serving as a reminder to parents too, that reading opportunities are all around, this presents an engaging literary game likely to continue well beyond one pass through the ABCs."―Kirkus Reviews
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  • Aunt Clara Brown: Official Pioneer

    Linda Lowery, Janice Lee Porter

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Jan. 1, 2000)
    As a successful former slave, Clara Brown used her money to help other freed slaves get a new start in life. In 1859 Clara bought her own freedom and headed west to Colorado to find her daughter, who was sold when she was just a little girl. Clara didn't find her daughter there, but she did get rich. The people she helped became her family, and she became known as "Aunt" Clara Brown.
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  • Cell Wars

    Frances R. Balkwill, Mic Rolph

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions, March 1, 1994)
    Explains how cells fight off diseases and viruses in the human body
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  • The Aesop for Children

    Aesop,, Milo Winter

    eBook (First Avenue Editions â„¢, Aug. 1, 2014)
    Aesop's famous collection of fables are intended to teach a variety of moral lessons. But instead of being long-winded and serious, these lighthearted tales are full of talking animals and often silly situations. Featuring such popular fables as "The Lion and the Mouse" and "The Fox and the Grapes," this collection is sure to entertain readers of any age. While the existence of Aesop's fables dates back to 6th century BCE, this version is taken from a 1919 copyright edition, with original illustrations by Milo Winter.
  • Nathan Hale: Patriot Spy

    Shannon Zemlicka, Shannon Knudsen, Craig Orback

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions â„¢, Aug. 1, 2002)
    As the Revolutionary War began, Nathan Hale immediately joined up on the side of the Patriots. When General Washington needed a spy, Hale was the only man to volunteer for the job. In the end, Hale lost his life for his beliefs and became a true American hero.
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  • Cesar Chavez

    Ginger Wadsworth, Mark Schroder

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Jan. 1, 2005)
    During the Great Depression, many people had to work long hours and were barely paid enough to survive. Cesar Chavez felt this treatment was unfair and worked to secure more rights. He formed a Union and led strikes and marches that forced landowners to increase wages and improve working conditions. This account shows how Chavez inspired others, proving that it was not necessary to resort to violence to produce change.
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  • The Kids' Invention Book

    Arlene Erlbach

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Jan. 1, 1999)
    Turning dreams into inventions can be a challenge, but lots of kids do it every day. The Kids' Invention Book takes kids step-by-step through the creative process, from finding the inspiration to building a model. The book also includes information on applying for a patent, entering invention contests, and starting an inventors' club.
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  • Songs from the Loom: A Navajo Girl Learns to Weave

    Monty Roessel

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions â„¢, Aug. 1, 1995)
    Jaclyn Roessel live in Kayenta, Arizona, on the Navajo reservation. Like most young girls, Jaclyn has many interests. She likes her math class, she plays basketball and volleyball, and she loves in-line skating. She is also interested in rug weaving, and she has asked her grandmother to teach her how to weave. For the Navajos, weaving is more than a craft or hobby. It is an important part of the culture and history of the Dine--the people. Jaclyn's grandmother has explained that she wants Jaclyn to learn not just the technique of weaving but the stories and songs that go along with it. These stories about Spider Woman and Changing Woman have been passed down from generation to generation. In Songs from the Loom, photographer and writer Monty Roessel accompanies Jaclyn and her grandmother as they shear sheep, gather plants to dye wool, and weave a rug. Navajo rugs are highly valued and hang in museums around the world. This book looks at what the beautiful rugs mean to the Navajos.
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  • A Tiger Cub Grows Up

    Joan Hewett, Richard Hewett

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Aug. 1, 2001)
    Tara is a tiger cub. What is it like to grow up in a wild animal park? If you look closely, you will discover how Tara grows from a tiny newborn cub to a pouncing, full-grown tiger there. Beginning readers will delight in watching Tara as she gets her first tooth, takes her first swim, and plays with other tigers.
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  • Shipwreck Search: Discovery of the H. L. Hunley

    Sally M. Walker, Elaine Verstraete

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions TM, Jan. 1, 2007)
    What a discovery! Deep under the Atlantic Ocean, divers found a shipwreck like no other. It was the H. L. Hunley, a submarine that had sunk during the Civil War! A team of scientists from all over the world came to work on the discovery. How would they raise the Hunley from the ocean floor? How would they open the submarine? And what would they find inside?
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