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Books with title Barn Owls

  • Barn Owls

    Melissa Ann Hill, Gail Saunders-Smith

    Paperback (Capstone Press, Aug. 1, 2015)
    Dark, quiet places like barns are these owls' favorite hideouts. Just don't disturb barn owls, or they'll hiss and shriek! Learn more about these pale nighttime hunters with full color photos, range maps, and carefully leveled text.
    J
  • The Barn Owls

    Tony Johnston, Deborah Kogan Ray

    Paperback (Charlesbridge, July 1, 2001)
    Tony Johnston's THE BARN OWLS recalls in quiet tones the memory of a barn that has stood alone in a wheat field for one hundred years at least. The owls have nested there and have hunted in the fields and circled in the night skies as time slowly slipped by. Every night, as the moon rises, a barn owl awakens and flies out to hunt. Feathered against the endless starry night, he swoops and sails to the darkened wheat field below and catches a mouse in his nimble talons. With outstretched wings, this barn owl returns to his barn nest and his hungry family, repeating the ageless ritual his ancestors have practiced here, in this barn, for at least one hundred years. Following the life cycle of the barn owl, this gentle poem evokes a sense of warm sunshine and envelopes readers with the memory of the scent of a wheat field.
    K
  • Barn Owls

    Quinn M. Arnold

    Paperback (Creative Paperbacks, Aug. 20, 2019)
    Illuminating the unique physical features and behaviors of six nocturnal animals, this new series takes a narrative approach toward life-science topics. As we peer into nocturnal forests and skies, from nighttime awakening to sunlight retreat, atmospheric text and images knit together stories of survival, noting the adaptations that enable each creature to carve out its own niche in its particular habitat. A detailed diagram points out such characteristics in-depth, allowing more visual learners to match facts with real images. Peer into the nocturnal forests with this high-interest introduction to the pale, broad-winged birds of prey known as barn owls.
    O
  • The Barn Owls

    Tony Johnston, Deborah Kogan Ray

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, July 1, 2001)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. For at least one hundred years, generations of barn owls have slept, hunted, called, raised their young, and glided silently above the wheat fields around an old barn.
    K
  • Barn Owls

    Patricia Whitehouse, Adrian Vigliano

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Aug. 15, 2009)
    Describes the physical characteristics, behavior, and habitat of barn owls.
    M
  • Barn Owls

    Melissa Ann Hill, Gail Saunders-Smith

    Library Binding (Capstone Press, Aug. 1, 2015)
    Dark, quiet places like barns are these owls' favorite hideouts. Just don't disturb barn owls, or they'll hiss and shriek! Learn more about these pale nighttime hunters with full color photos, range maps, and carefully leveled text.
    J
  • Barn Owls

    Wolfgang Epple

    Library Binding (Carolrhoda Books, Oct. 1, 1992)
    Describes the physical characteristics, habitat, and life cycle of the barn owl
    S
  • Barn Owls

    Patricia Whitehouse

    Paperback (Raintree, )
    None
  • Barn Owls

    Melissa Hill

    Hardcover (Raintree, Aug. 13, 2015)
    Dark, quiet places like barns are these owls' favorite hideouts. Just don't disturb barn owls, or they'll hiss and shriek! Learn more about these pale nighttime hunters with full colour photos, range maps, and carefully levelled text.
  • Barn Owl

    Phyllis Flower, Cherryl Pape

    Hardcover (Harper & Row, Publishers, March 1, 1978)
    Easy-to-read text and illustrations trace the life of a barn owl from his birth until he leaves the nest and finds a mate of his own.
    J
  • Barn Owls

    Patricia Whitehouse

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Aug. 12, 2002)
    Describes the physical characteristics, behavior, and habitat of barn owls.
    I
  • The Barn Owls

    Tony Johnston

    Hardcover (Charlesbridge, Feb. 1, 2000)
    Tony Johnston's THE BARN OWLS recalls in quiet tones the memory of a barn that has stood alone in a wheat field for one hundred years at least. The owls have nested there and have hunted in the fields and circled in the night skies as time slowly slipped by. Every night, as the moon rises, a barn owl awakens and flies out to hunt. Feathered against the endless starry night, he swoops and sails to the darkened wheat field below and catches a mouse in his nimble talons. With outstretched wings, this barn owl returns to his barn nest and his hungry family, repeating the ageless ritual his ancestors have practiced here, in this barn, for at least one hundred years. Following the life cycle of the barn owl, this gentle poem evokes a sense of warm sunshine and envelopes readers with the memory of the scent of a wheat field.
    K