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Books with title Building

  • Buildings

    Caroline Grimshaw, Iqbal Hussain, Nick Duffy, Spike Gerrell, Jo Moore

    Paperback (World Book Inc, Jan. 1, 1997)
    Questions and answers explore such topics as "What is a building?" "Who were the first architects?" and "How does the use of a building affect what it ends up looking like?"
  • Buildings

    Caroline Grimshaw, Iqbal Hussain, Nick Duffy, Spike Gerrell, Jo Moore

    Hardcover (World Book Inc, Aug. 15, 1995)
    Great book! The cover has shelf wear and some of the pages are wavy.
  • Building Blocks

    Cynthia Voigt

    Paperback (Aladdin, Aug. 1, 2002)
    Having traveled back in time more than three decades to his father's childhood home, Brann Connell gets to meet his father as a child and learn what life was like for him when he was once his young age. Reprint.
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  • Building Site

    Jo Litchfield

    Board book (Usborne Pub Ltd, June 1, 2003)
    Book by Litchfield, Jo
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  • Building a Car

    Danielle S. Hammelef, Wade D. Bartlett

    Library Binding (Capstone Press, Jan. 1, 2014)
    For more than a hundred years, humans have depended on cars to get them where they need to go. How are these amazing machines built? Get ready to find out!
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  • Buildings

    Vicki Yates

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Sept. 5, 2007)
    Books in this series offer a window into life in the past, showing how things have changed over time. In 'Buildings,' children compare buildings in the past to buildings today. Books include primary sources as well photographs of modern buildings.
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  • Buildings

    Vicki Yates

    Paperback (Heinemann Library, Aug. 7, 2008)
    This series makes history accessible to even the youngest readers.The left-hand page of each book looks at what something was like in the past, and the right-hand page looks at what it is like today.It features fascinating photos of the past to bring history to life for young readers. It contains a quiz at the end where readers have to guess what an object from the past was for. It is written for new readers making core curriculum topics accessible to them.
  • Building Blocks

    Patricia Macnair

    Hardcover (Kingfisher, June 16, 2005)
    Take a grand tour of the components that work together to power the human body. Beginning with the simplest unit of all- the cell- this eye-opening journey guides the reader through the different levels of organization, from blood and tissues to organs and finally, the entire body systems that are vital for life.
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  • Building Blocks

    A.C. Sterling

    Paperback (Six Year Press, Aug. 3, 2012)
    At first, the pile of blocks that Blue finds appear to be rubbish! But with a little imagination amazing things start to happen. Blue soon realizes just how precious the blocks are, and with anything special it seems there is someone who wonโ€™t share! Building blocks is the story of Blue, Yellow, Green, and Red, four characters who navigate the complexities of sharing, fairness, and forgiveness. Just like the houses, towers, and cages they build from the blocks, the characters are also learning how to build friendships along the way. The metaphor of building blocks can be extended further, addressing issues of inequality and access to resources. Although the story is appropriate for toddlers through elementary aged children, the themes of friendship and fairness speak to all ages.
  • Building Buddies

    Golden Books

    Board book (Golden Books, March 11, 2003)
    Itโ€™s a busy day at the building yard! Can you help Bob find the best buddy for each job? Yes, you can! Slide the pointer to help Bob find the best friend to lift a sign, pave the road, and mix the cement. Great job, team!
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  • Building a Road

    Henry Arthur Pluckrose, Teri Gower

    Library Binding (Franklin Watts, March 1, 1999)
    Photographs, drawings, and brief text describe the machines and process that are involved in building a road
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  • Building It Up

    Kat Rose

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Sept. 26, 2015)
    It was supposed to be the start of their lives, not the end. After a tragic accident as teenagers, Jensen Owens and Autumn Miller found themselves miles apart but fate would soon have other ideas. Jensen returns to the place he ran away from, but he is not the man he once was. He struggles with something that no one can see, a secret that could forever take him under. Autumn Miller was at a crossroads in her life. She had long since faced the past, or so she thought. That is until Jensen comes back. As their lives begin to intertwine, something, or someone, comes back from the past. Someone who should no longer be there. Jensen and Autumn will be faced with a hard decision. They each might find, that sometimes, you have to go back in order to move forward.