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Books published by publisher T.Y. Crowell

  • The Christmas Cat

    Efner Tudor Holmes, Tasha Tudor

    Hardcover (Crowell, Oct. 3, 2000)
    It is Christmas Eve. An abandoned gray cat shivers alone in the cold, snowy forest. Not far away in a warm and cozy farmhouse, Jason anxiously asks his brother Nate if Santa Claus will be able to come in such bad weather. But soon the bitter wind stops howling and the sound of sleigh bells rings clearly through the woods. Neither the cat nor the boys know it, but a small Christmas miracle is about to occur....Tasha Tudor's radiant illustrations illuminate this story, perfectly expressing the loving spirit that shines through the simple text. Efner Tudor Holmes skillfully combines down-to-earth reality with just a hint of seasonal magic.
    M
  • How to build a robot

    Steven Lindblom

    Hardcover (T.Y. Crowell, March 15, 1985)
    Discusses the nature and history of robots and the technological requirements of making them move, sense, and "think."
  • Danger-- Icebergs!

    Roma Gans, Richard Rosenblum

    Hardcover (Crowell, )
    None
  • Pizza man

    Marjorie Pillar

    Hardcover (T.Y. Crowell, March 15, 1990)
    Black and white photographs highlight the steps in making a pizza pie, from the moment the pizza man starts mixing the dough until he serves a slice to a hungry customer.
  • Yours till Niagara Falls: A book of autograph verses

    Lillian Morrison

    Hardcover (T.Y. Crowell, Jan. 1, 1990)
    An illustrated collection of funny, sentimental, insulting, and witty verses traditionally used for signing autograph books.
  • The three bears & 15 other stories

    Anne F Rockwell

    Hardcover (Crowell, March 15, 1975)
    Sixteen famous children's stories including "Lazy Jack," "Three Little Pigs," "The Gingerbread Man," and "The Shoemaker and the Elves."
  • Ladybug, ladybug, fly away home

    Judy Hawes

    Hardcover (T.Y. Crowell, March 15, 1973)
    A detailed view of the small black and red ladybug that unobtrusively eats its weight in aphids and other crop-injuring insects.
  • Betsy and Tacy go over the big hill

    Maud Hart Lovelace

    Hardcover (Crowell, Jan. 1, 1942)
    Betsy, Tacy, and Tib can't wait to be ten. After all, getting two numbers in your age is the beginning of growing up—exciting things are bound to happen. And they do! The girls fall in love with the King of Spain, perform in the School Entertainment, and for the first time, go all the way over the Big Hill to Little Syria by themselves. There Betsy, Tacy, and Tib make new friends and learn a thing or two. They learn that new Americans are sometimes the best Americans. And they learn that they themselves wouldn't want to be anything else. Ever since their first publication in the 1940s, the Betsy-Tacy stories have been loved by each generation of young readers.
    Q
  • Base five,

    David A Adler

    Hardcover (T. Y. Crowell, Jan. 1, 1975)
    Explains in simple terms the principles of a base five number system.
  • Don't tell the whole world!

    Joanna Cole

    Hardcover (T.Y. Crowell, March 15, 1990)
    Knowing that his talkative wife will reveal to the world that he has found a fortune buried on their farm, John arranges an elaborate scheme to insure that she will not be believed.
    L
  • Bunny Rabbit Rebus

    David A Adler

    Hardcover (T.Y. Crowell, March 15, 1983)
    After hungry Little Rabbit eats all the food in the house, Mother Rabbit trades favors to friends for lettuce and carrots. Pictures are substituted for words or parts of words in a rebus version of the story.
  • John Greenleaf Whittier: fighting Quaker

    Ruth Langland Holberg

    Hardcover (Crowell, March 15, 1958)
    A biography of the shy Quaker farm boy who became one of America's best-known and best-loved nineteenth-century poets.