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Books in Single Titles series

  • Tell Me a Picture

    Quentin Blake

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, Feb. 6, 2003)
    Provides guidance for studying paintings and illustrations from the National Gallery in London to find the story within each.
    K
  • Charley Waters Goes to Gettysburg

    Susan Sinnott

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, March 12, 2003)
    Charley Waters, who with his father belongs to the 69th Pennsylvania, a unit of Civil War reenactors, recounts how he and his family took part in a full-scale reenactment of the Battle of Gettysburg in 1998.
    O
  • Jenny: The Airplane That Taught America to Fly

    David Weitzman

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, Oct. 1, 2002)
    The Curtiss Jenny was the Model T of airplanes: it was the first aircraft to be mass produced, and the one in which nearly every famous early aviator--from Charles Lindbergh to Amelia Earhart--learned to fly. This stunning nonfiction picture bok portrays the building of a Jenny from wood, wire, and cloth, bringing to life the science and art of the early days of flight.
    O
  • The Shadow Place

    Carol M. Tanzman

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, Aug. 1, 2002)
    The Shadow Place brings together school violence, Instant Messaging, and the loyalty of old friends -- in a suspensful page-turner. Lissa's neighbor and best friend, Rodney, has always been strange, but now he's buyihg guns over the Internet. If Rodney acts on his threats of violence, who will be the victim; his abusive father or one of his taunting classmates.
  • Across a Dark and Wild Sea

    Don Brown, Deborah Nadel

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, March 1, 2002)
    Columcille was born in a remote corner of Ireland in the year 521. Legend has it that as a child, he was fed a cake filled with the letters of the alphabet, and so learned to love writing. He grew up to become a monk and a scribe a thousand years before the invention of printing, when books had to be copied by hand.There was one book, a beautiful volume of psalms from distant Rome, that Columcille especially loved, and even though its owner refused him permission, Columcille secretly copied it. The copy was discovered, and a dispute arose over who it belonged to: Columcille, who made it, or the owner of the original. So better was the argument that a battle was fought between the two men's powerful friends; although Columcille's side won, the victory felt hollow to him. To punish himself, he set out in a tiny boat, vowing to leave Ireland forever.A revered figure in Celtic history, Columcille (also known as Columbia) founded the famous monastery on the Scottish island of Iona and left a legacy of learning that illuminated a corner of the Dark Ages. History, drama, and a love of books and reading fill a story--told here in exquisite watercolors and deflty understated prose by noted author and artist Don Brown.
  • Boston Pilgrims Vs Pittsburgh Pirates

    Peter A Campbell

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, March 24, 2003)
    Offers an historical look at the game of baseball as it was developed and played two centuries ago as well as how it has developed throughout the decades to become the American pastime. Original.
    N
  • Mario Lemieux

    Mark Stewart

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, )
    None
    P
  • The True Story of Trapper Jack's Left Big Toe

    Ian Wallace

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, April 1, 2002)
    Trapper Jack has only nine toes. The tenth, according to Josh's new friend, Gabe, is safe inside an empty tobacco tin behind the bar at the Sourdough Saloon. This rollicking tall tale, set in the Yukon, sends two boys and a three-legged dog on an astonishing adventure.
    T
  • Night Train

    Caroline Stutson, Katherine Tillotson

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, April 15, 2002)
    A majestic, streamlined locomotive sweeps into the pages of this striking picture book and a little boy climbs aboard for a nighttime journey. Through the countryside and on to the city, passing farms and houses and trucks on the highway, the journey is seen through the wide-open eyes of a child taking his first train trip.
    N
  • The True Story of Trapper Jack's Left Big Toe

    Ian Wallace

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, April 15, 2002)
    Trapper Jack has only nine toes. The tenth, according to Josh's new friend, Gabe, is safe inside an empty tobacco tin behind the bar at the Sourdough Saloon. This rollicking tall tale, set in the Yukon, sends two boys and a three-legged dog on an astonishing adventure.
    L
  • The Naked Lady

    Ian Wallace

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, Oct. 1, 2002)
    Ian Wallace is one of Canada's most honored picture book artists. His recent work includes Boy of the Deeps, Duncan's Way, and The True Story of Trapper Jack's Left Big Toe. He lives in Toronto.
    M
  • One For Me, One For You

    C. C. Cameron, Grace Lin

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, April 9, 2003)
    "Cookie jar. Stool./Cookies? Cool./One for me. One for you./That makes two." So begins an adventure in simple math--the conceptual adding of numbers--beyond standard counting books. As the child brings more cookies and toy cars, and takes some away, the value of sharing becomes meaningful even to the youngest members of the family. Playfully making points about both math and sharing, Grace Lin's dynamic patterns and vibrant colors leap off the page.
    G