Browse all books

Books with title A Place to live

  • A Place to Live

    Linda Staniford

    Paperback (Heinemann, Jan. 1, 2015)
    This title takes a simple look at the difference between wants and needs with relation to the places where we live. Shelter and warmth are basic needs but we want a lot more from our homes - how many of our wants are really needs?
    K
  • Place to Live, A

    Jean-Philippe Blondel, Melanie Little

    eBook (Annick Press, Feb. 1, 2010)
    Some people might think it’s odd when a teenage boy starts making movies of his classmates kissing. But in A PLACE TO LIVE, the aspiring filmmaker’s project turns into a compelling protest against authoritarianism that could get him kicked out of school, and expose his surprising feelings for his best friend.
  • A Place to Live

    Kyla Ryman, Case Jernigan

    Board book (Home Grown Books, Aug. 1, 2014)
    From a house in a tree to a castle in a cloud, children will marvel at the many places they can call home. As the book progresses, the places to live get more and more fantastical. Anything is possible in the pages of this charming book!
    K
  • A Place to live

    None

    Paperback (World Book International, Children's Book Division, Feb. 18, 1990)
    None
  • A Place to Live

    Linda Staniford

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Jan. 1, 2015)
    This title takes a simple look at the difference between wants and needs with relation to the places where we live. Shelter and warmth are basic needs but we want a lot more from our homes - how many of our wants are really needs?
    K
  • A place to live

    Jeanne Bendick

    Hardcover (Parents' Magazine Press, March 15, 1970)
    None
  • Place to Live

    Jennifer Cochrane

    Paperback (Macdonald Educ., June 19, 1975)
    None
  • A funny place to live

    Robert Burch

    Hardcover (Viking Press, March 15, 1962)
    Children's fiction-about homes.
  • Place to Live

    Helen. Hoover

    Library Binding (Parents' Magazine Press, June 15, 1970)
    None
  • A Place to Talk

    Dinah van Altena

    eBook (Olympia Publishers, Jan. 31, 2018)
    Dinah van Altena has written A Place to Talk as a way to encourage children to talk to the adult who read the story to them. After each chapter there is a series of questions the reader can ask the child, to encourage discussion of the story.This story is written in the context of animals in the jungle, struggling to find a leader; in the process they create a lot of conflict, destruction, violence and displacement. The Parrot is used as a symbol of talking that encourages the animals to talk about their feelings and to give and receive forgiveness. They finally find peace amongst themselves through talking.It is hoped the story will foster a healing and support mechanism while reading the story, which needs to be told or read in a safe and caring environment.
  • Places to Live

    Richard Reid, Mike Tregenza

    Paperback (Mills & Boon, )
    None
  • A Place to Land

    Andrea Noles

    (Inspiring Voices, Aug. 11, 2014)
    Everyone needs a place to land. Fly up high in the sky and back down to the ground, as a paper airplane explores the world and lands in the ocean, on mountains, and even on a peach. With catchy rhymes and whimsical illustrations that are dreamlike and memorable, A Place to Land offers educational and spiritual teaching opportunities. Author Andrea Noles introduces young readers to the idea of finding places to land on the journey through life and reminds them that there is a plan for all of us. Offering wisdom to young and old minds alike, A Place to Land shares a magical journey for all.