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Books in Young Yearling Book series

  • Helen Keller

    Stewart Graff, Polly Anne Graff

    Paperback (Yearling, March 1, 1991)
    From the age of a year and a half, Helen Keller could not hear. She could not see, and she did not speak. She lived in a dark and lonely world--until Annie Sullivan came to teach her. Annie traced letters and words in Helen's hand, and made Helen realize she could "talk" to people. Eager to make up for lost time, Helen threw herself into her studies. She decided to teach others about the special training deaf and blind children need. Helen traveled all over the globe and raised money to start up schools for deaf and blind children. Her courage and her determination to help others conquer the odds against them earned her the respect and admiration of the world.
    P
  • GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER

    Sam Epstein

    Paperback (Yearling, Dec. 2, 1990)
    A biography of the Afro-American whose scientific research revolutionized the economy of the South.
    Y
  • POLLY'S OATS

    Marc Simont

    Paperback (Yearling, July 1, 1994)
    Wanting to keep his three prize horses, Prince, Prance, and Ponce, in the best condition, the farmer is too busy to remember to feed oats to poor workhorse Polly, until one rainy day when he forgets to close the hayloft door. Reprint.
    P
  • The Lucky Stone

    Lucille Clifton

    Paperback (Yearling, May 1, 1986)
    There is nothing Tee enjoys more than sitting out on the porch with her great-greatmother, listening to the fascinating stories about the lucky stone.Shiny and black as night, it brought good fortune to each of its owners for over one hundred years. First it helped Mandy, a runaway slave, win her freedom. Then it saved Vashti from death by lightning at a prayer meeting. And it even saved Tee's great-grandmother from the ferocious dancing dog and helped her meet her husband.Now Tee can't help wondering what the old stone has in store for her. She certainly could use some luck on Valentine's Day. But the lucky stone doesn't belong to Tee. How can her wish come true?
    Q
  • Beetles, Lightly Toasted

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Yearling, Feb. 1, 1989)
    Fifth-grader Andy Moller will do anything to win the Roger B. Sudermann essay contest so that he can win fifty dollars and get his picture in the local newspaper. His cousin and rival, Jack, feels exactly the same way. But how can Andy be inventive and imaginative in an essay contest on conservation?Bugs and beetles, that's how. Leave it to Andy to think of people eating insects as a way of conserving their food budgets. Before long he's preparing toasted beetles in brownies, mealworm-filled egg salad sandwiches, and batter-fried earthworms for his friends and family. They don't know what they're in for, and neither does Andy. Will he win the contest and lose his friends and family?
    Q
  • Helen Keller: Crusader for the Blind and Deaf

    Stewart Graff, Polly Anne Graff, Wayne Alfano

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, March 1, 1991)
    From the age of a year and a half, Helen Keller could not hear. She could not see, and she did not speak. She lived in a dark and lonely world--until Annie Sullivan came to teach her. Annie traced letters and words in Helen's hand, and made Helen realize she could " talk" to people. Eager to make up for lost time, Helen threw herself into her studies. She decided to teach others about the special training deaf and blind children need. Helen traveled all over the globe and raised money to start up schools for deaf and blind children. Her courage and her determination to help others conquer the odds against them earned her the respect and admiration of the world.
    P
  • SOMETHING QUEER AT THE HAUNTED SCHOOL

    Elizabeth Levy, Mordicai Gerstein

    Paperback (Dell Yearling, May 1, 1983)
    When the words Werewolf Power mysteriously appear on the school blackboard, all the children are frightened. Only days before Halloween there are terrifying screams and haunting sounds surrounding the classroom. Jill and Gwen know there's something queer happening. This is their spookiest case ever. What will the detectives discover?
    N
  • NIGHT NOISES & OTHER MOLE & TROLL STORIE

    Tony Johnston

    Paperback (Yearling, Sept. 1, 1989)
    Four episodes in which Mole makes four wishes, Troll visits Mole, Troll loses a tooth, and night noises scare the pair of friends.
    J
  • Soup

    Robert Newton Peck

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Nov. 17, 1998)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. This newly released paperback edition of the classic bestseller follows the adventures of mischievous Soup and his best friend, whose big adventures mean big trouble.
    Q
  • 100 Cupboards

    N. D. Wilson

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Dec. 23, 2008)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Waking one night to discover plaster in his hair that has fallen from a wall above his bed, Henry York pulls down the wall coverings and discovers cupboards of various shapes and sizes--each holding a world of its own.
    W
  • BULLFROG & GERTRUDE GO CAMPING

    Rosamond Dauer

    Paperback (Yearling, July 1, 1988)
    When Bullfrog and Gertrude go camping, they meet up with lonely, harmless Itsa Snake who joins the family
    J
  • The Winter Room

    Gary Paulsen

    Paperback (Yearling, April 1, 1991)
    The winter room is where Eldon, his brother Wayne, old Uncle David, and the rest of the family gather on icy cold nights, sitting in front of the stove. There the boys listen eagerly to all of Uncle David's tales of superheroes.Then one night Uncle David tells the story, "The Woodcutter," and what happens next is terrible--then wonderful.
    U