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Books published by publisher Fitzhenry and Whiteside

  • The Roses in My Carpets

    Rukhsana Khan, Ronald Himler

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Sept. 30, 2004)
    For a young refugee living with loss and terror-filled memories, time is measured by the next bucket of water, the next portion of bread, and the next call to prayer. Here, where everything - walls, floor, courtyard - is mud, a boy's heart can still long for freedom, independence, and safety. And here, where life is terribly fragile, the strength to endure grows out of need. But the strength to dreams comes from within.
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  • One Watermelon Seed

    Celia Barker Lottridge, Karen Patkau

    Hardcover (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, March 12, 2008)
    On the Toronto Public Library's 10 best books of 2008 list for Children up to 5 years of age On Resource Link's "Best of 2008" List Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice, 2009 First published in 1986 and a staple ever since for parents of preschool children and teachers of primary grades, One Watermelon Seed is presented in a new edition with a bold new cover and interior art.In this deceptively simple counting book, Max and Josephine tend their garden while readers follow along, counting from one to ten as the garden is planted. Then readers can count in groups of tens as the garden is harvested, while they search through the pictures for the many small animals that are hiding throughout. A concise and clever text introduces color and rhythm, and the illustrations are bright and engaging, making this a perfect counting book for children aged four to seven.
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  • Hockey Girl

    Natalie Hyde

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Sept. 20, 2012)
    On Resource Links' Best of 2013 list Tara's softball team has been challenged by the boys to put together a winning girls' hockey team. The bet? Whichever team finishes lower in its respective division will have to wear cheerleading outfits (complete with skirts and pompoms) to the other team's entire next season of home games! Tara and her Roadrunners are determined not to give the Hornets the satisfaction. But winning is going to be an uphill battle for the girls, especially in a hockey-crazed town that cares more about the boys' Junior A team than anything else. So when the boys teams begin screaming for more ice-time, it's the girls teams that get relegated to the graveyard times at the local rinks -- if they're lucky. To make matters worse, Tara discovers that the one boy who seems sympathetic to their cause (and super-cute, to boot) is the son of the ice-rink manager and their most belligerent opponent. What the Roadrunners need is some divine intervention which comes in the shape of Sister Helen, a former women's ice hockey star and their new coach. Inspired to fight for their right to play, the girls launch a campaign to gain fair and equal ice time. Will the town rally behind the girls? And will the Roadrunners pull it together in time to finish ahead of the Hornets and save their dignity?
  • My Friend Gorilla

    Atsuko Morozumi

    Hardcover (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Jan. 1, 1998)
    When the zoo closes down, the zoo keeper brings a gorilla home to stay. His son is anxious at first, but gradually a friendship develops. Suddenly, out of the blue, people come to take the gorilla back to Africa, and the boy is left without his friend. But memories of the friendship remain.
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  • The House in the Meadow

    Shutta Crum, Paige Billin-Frye

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, March 12, 2008)
    Over in the meadow there's a spring wedding, with the couple's 10 best friends to celebrate. What's next? A house! 9 diggers, 8 masons, 7 carpenters, 6 well diggers, 5 roofers, 4 plumbers, 3 electricians, 2 painters, and 1 inspector show up with all their trucks and tools to build a new house. And when the couple and their friends have a house-warming party, a new baby comes, too! Inspired by Olive A. Wadsworth's old counting poem, Shutta Crum's exuberant rhyme celebrates the fun of counting, the excitement of building a house, and the satisfaction of sharing work.
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  • The Money Pit Mystery

    Eric Walters

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, April 29, 2011)
    This is Sam and Beth's first visit to Oak Island since their mother and grandpa had a mysterious fight over three years ago. What occurs when they arrive is more than Sam could have hoped for -- and more surprising than the magic tricks he spends hours perfecting. Something strange seems to be happening to Grandpa, a fact confirmed by his odd behavior and the disgusting state of his once-immaculate home. Apart from losing his memory, he's also spending a lot of time engaged in a bizarre hunt for a 200-year-old treasure. When Sam is bitten by the treasure bug too, not even the discovery of a human skull can keep him and the whole family from plunging into a breakneck-speed mystery, in which the winner will take all.
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  • Do You Know Komodo Dragons?

    Alain Bergeron, Michel Quitin, Sampar

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, May 28, 2014)
    Do you know? The Komodo dragon is the largest lizard in the world. The Komodo dragon has such a large appetite that it can eat up to 80% of its weight in a single meal. In 15 minutes, a Komodo dragon can attack, kill and devour a 30-kilogram (66-pound) boar. On the Children's Literature Roundtables of Canada's 2015 Information Book Award Shortlist.
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  • Jocelyn and The Ballerina

    Nancy Hartry, Linda Hendry

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, March 18, 2003)
    Jocelyn loves her ballerina. She never takes it off despite her mother's attempts to put it into the laundry. When Jocelyn is wearing her ballerina she can twirl and dance up to the sky. It hugs her legs and keeps her warm.
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  • Fire!: The Renewal of a Forest

    Celia Godkin

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Oct. 24, 2007)
    Norma Fleck Award for Canadian Children's Non-Fiction Honour Book, 2007 Silver Birch Express shortlist, 2008 Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice 2007 finalist Canadian Science Writers' Association's Science in Society Journalism Award nominee, Youth Book category, 2007 It hasn't rained in the forest for many weeks. And in the sunny clearing, everything is dry and scorched. Then, late one afternoon, a hot wind begins to blow and storm clouds gather. But instead of rain, lightning fills the sky and strikes a tall tree beside the clearing. The lightning strike shoots down the tree and ignites the dry vegetation below. In no time, the forest is engulfed in flame. Soon there is nothing left but the charred ruins of the forest, devoid of life. But the story is not over. Slowly and gradually, life returns to the forest - from the seeds that blow in on the wind and germinate, to the small creatures that have survived in their burrows below the ground. It will take many years; but eventually the forest will return, filled with life once more.
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  • If I Just Had Two Wings

    Virginia Frances Schwartz

    eBook (Fitzhenry & Whiteside, July 16, 2015)
    In her dreams, Phoebe twirls through rows of sea island cotton as a white dress blows around her knees like a breeze. As she dances, she loses all memory of being born a slave on an Alabama plantation. She lifts up her feet and flies high above the fields, as light as air. Before her a single white star shines. Thirteen-year-old Phoebe has always dreamed of leaving her life as a slave behind. She has heard whispers about a secret path to freedom, and she has seen what can happen to those who take it and fail. But freedom means more to Phoebe than anything, and when she meets Liney, a strong young woman who picks cotton next to her, they form a plan to escape together. One night, Poebe, Liney, and Liney's two small children flee under cover of darkness. Following clues from the songs and stories they have heard, the runaways elude slave catchers and reach the first stop on the Underground Railroad. It is only one safe house in a chain that leads all the way north to Canada. But between them and freedom, lie miles and miles of unfriendly country and dangers too horrible to imagine.
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  • Bifocal

    Deborah Ellis, Eric Walters

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Sept. 18, 2007)
    On the White Ravens' Outstanding New International Books for Children and Young Adults list, 2008 ForeWord Magazine's Book of the Year Awards Bronze Medal Winner (YA Fiction category), 2007 Snow Willow Award nominee, 2008 CCBC's Best Books for Kids and Teens, 2008 Two bestselling authors join forces to write a powerful novel about racism. A student arrested on suspicions of terrorism. A high school torn apart by racism. Two boys from two different sets of circumstances forced to choose sides. These are the issues at the heart of Bifocal, a ground-breaking new novel for young-adults. The story is told from two different points of view. Haroon is a serious student devoted to his family. His grandparents emigrated from Afghanistan. Jay is a football star devoted to his team. He is white. One day their high school is put on lockdown, and the police arrest a Muslim student on suspicion of terrorist affiliations. He might be guilty. Or is he singled out because of his race? The entire student body fragments along racial lines and both Haroon and Jay find that their differences initially put them at odds. The Muslim students become targets and a smoke-bomb is set off near their lockers while Jay and his teammates believe they've been set-up to look like racists. Bifocal is, by no stretch, an easy book. Award-winning authors Deborah Ellis and Eric Walters deliver a serious, hard-hitting book about racism that does not talk down to young people.
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  • We'll All Go Exploring

    Maggie Spicer, Richard Thompson, Kim LaFave

    Hardcover (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, April 15, 2003)
    Following their highly successful trips by sea and through the air, our three intrepid friends set off on a new adventure through the world's forests. And this time, they visit very different landscapes, pine and deciduous forests, the gum trees of Australia, mangrove swamps, tropical jungles and many more. And what will they see in the trees? A wide array of lively and colorful animals perfectly suited to each unique environment.
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