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Books published by publisher Gulliver Books Paperbacks

  • The Real Tooth Fairy

    Marilyn Kaye, Helen Cogancherry

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 15, 1990)
    After Elise loses her first tooth, she lies awake and waits for the tooth fairy’s visit, only to discover the tooth fairy is her own mother! Later, her mother tells her the tooth fairy can disguise herself to look like someone the child knows and trusts. Elise’s wish to see the tooth fairy in her own true form is granted in the climax of this charming story.
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  • A Kid's Guide to Washington, D.C.

    Diane C. Clarke, Richard Brown

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, March 10, 1989)
    Written especially for kids, this guide opens up the exciting world of travel and makes a lasting souvenir that young tourists will treasure long after their trip is over. Loaded with invaluable facts about where to go, how to go, and what to do there, and full of activities, puzzles, information, and more--all a traveling kid needs for a perfect holiday.
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  • AIDA

    Leontyne Price, Leo & Diane Dillon

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 22, 1990)
    With depth and understanding, acclaimed diva Leontyne Price retells this famous opera about the beautiful princess of Ethiopia. “The Dillons magnificently capture the drama with powerful full-page illustrations that resemble stage sets. . . . Ideal for reading aloud during an Egyptian unit, in music classes, to children attending the opera, or for the pure aesthetic experience.”--Booklist
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  • There's a Zoo in Room 22

    Judy Sierra, Barney Saltzberg

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Aug. 1, 2000)
    The kids in Miss Darling's class are very lucky--what other classroom has its own alphabet zoo? There's always an animal adventure unfolding in Room 22, with an Anaconda for lounging, a lunch-stealing Lemur, a Moose to hang coats, a Yak that kisses, and a Zorilla with fumes (pee-ewwww!). From the author of the bestselling Antarctic Antics: A Book of Penguin Poems comes another collection of delightfully playful poems. Every kid will want to join this class!
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  • Black Stars in Orbit: NASA's African American Astronauts

    Khephra Burns, William Miles

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, Jan. 17, 1995)
    Dramatic photographs and vivid text celebrate the history of African Americans’ struggle to participate in America’s space program. “A must purchase for all collections.”-School Library Journal
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  • The Primrose Way

    Jackie French Koller

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, April 18, 1995)
    Living in a rough Puritan missionary settlement that borders an Indian village, sixteen-year-old Rebekah is forced to choose between two cultures when she falls in love with a defiant Pawtucket medicine man. €œIssues about separation of church and state, the scandalous idea of thinking for oneself, etc., are thoughtfully raised here and would provide provocative discussions in the social studies classroom.€--School Library Journal
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  • Red Light, Green Light

    Anastasia Suen, Ken Wilson-Max

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 1, 2005)
    Roll into one little boy's make-believe traffic world, filled with flashing lights, zooming cars, whirring helicopters, and racing fire engines. He's turned records into rotaries, shoe boxes and books into highway ramps, crayons into lane markers, and dandelions into trees. It's a world where imagination rules and creativity abounds. With its bouncy rhyming text and bright illustrations, this book is perfect for every preschooler who loves planes, trains, and automobiles. It's a bold introduction to how vehicles stop . . . and go!
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  • Monarchs

    Kathryn Lasky, Christopher G. Knight

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, Sept. 15, 1993)
    On the leaf of a milkweed plant in Maine, a butterfly lays a minuscule egg. Soon a caterpillar hatches, and before long a new butterfly flutters in the breeze. Within its lifetime, this tiny monarch will fly more than two thousand miles on a mysterious migration to a warm winter haven. “Vibrant description melds with fascinating full-color photographs.”--School Library Journal
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  • Emily and Alice, Best Friends

    Joyce Champion, SuCie Stevenson

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, May 1, 2001)
    When rainy days and sick stuffed animals test Emily and Alice's friendship, the girls learn that being a best friend isn't always as fun as eating cookies. Originally published as Emily and Alice.
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  • Monster Goose: A Magic Shop Book

    Judy Sierra, Jack E. Davis

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Sept. 1, 2001)
    A gruesomely funny parody for ages 4 and up.Old Monster Goose has turned Mother Goose's world of nursery rhymes inside out! Here she presents twenty-five deliciously disgusting new poems, filled with rodents and maggots, zombies and ghouls, spiders and, of course, monsters. Remember King Cole? That terrible troll washes his feet in the toilet bowl. And poor Mistress Mary, her garden's quite scary--its killer potatoes ate all her tomatoes and now are out looking for Mary! From the bestselling author of Antarctic Antics: A Book of Penguin Poems and the popular illustrator of the Zack Files comes a zany book that has everyone talking:
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  • Lullabies: An Illustrated Songbook

    Metropolitan Museum of Art, Richard Kapp, Various Artists

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 15, 1997)
    Words and music for thirty-seven of the most beloved traditional lullabies are gathered in this lavishly illustrated songbook. From the enduring “Rock-a-Bye Baby” to the winsome “Brahms’ Lullaby” to the amusing “Little Boy Blue,” each song is thoughtfully matched with works of art from the Metropolitan Museum’s vast collections. Paintings by Vincent van Gogh and Mary Cassatt, a photograph by Eliot Porter of his infant son, and an Eskimo stone carving of a mother and child are among the many works that grace the pages of this stunning book.
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  • A Break with Charity: A Story about the Salem Witch Trials

    Ann Rinaldi

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, April 29, 1994)
    Susanna English desperately wants to join the circle of girls who meet every week at the parsonage, but she doesn€™t realize the leader of the group, the malicious Ann Putnam, is about to set off a torrent of false accusations that will lead to the imprisonment and execution of countless innocent people-victims of a witch-hunt panic. €œThe author€™s skillful manipulation of the conventions of the young-adult novel-particularly the rich exploration of being an outsider and going against the mainstream-makes this book a superb vehicle for examining the social dynamics of this legendary event.€-The Horn Book
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