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Books with title Children'S Literature

  • A Treasury of Children's Literature

    Armand Eisen

    Hardcover (HMH Books for Young Readers, Oct. 26, 1992)
    This one-volume library of classic children's literature contains nursery rhymes, poems, fables, and stories, and is lavishly illustrated with more than two hundred full-color drawings by sixteen different artists.
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  • Essentials of Children's Literature

    Kathy G. Short, Carol M. Lynch-Brown, Carl M. Tomlinson

    Paperback (Pearson, April 3, 2017)
    For survey courses in children’s literature. Also suitable as a companion text in an integrated reading/language arts course. From a well-known, well-respected author team–a comprehensive, yet concise resource about children's literature and engaging children as readers. This widely popular text focuses on engaging pre-service teachers and librarians in experiencing the joy of reading, selecting, and sharing excellent children's books with students and engaging them as readers. Clear, concise, and direct, the book uses recommended book lists, examples, figures, and tables in combination with narrative and prose, freeing class time for involvement with literature. Through newly added connections to classrooms and libraries, in addition to expanded content related to standards and trends in literacy, Essentials of Children's Literature is an indispensable guide for future teachers and librarians. From reviews of this book: “The overall strengths of this textbook are the empirical research cited, the charts and diagrams used, the variety of books covered, and the pragmatic approach to selecting and enjoying literature for children. I think students would find it accessible, interesting, and practical. The authors’ passion for children’s literacy and education is clearly expressed in the text.” - Erika J. Travis, California Baptist University “Understanding how to select books for and with children is a key component of success as a teacher–so I was happy to see in-depth coverage of that, including the Age Level information as well as the Reading Interest questions [Chapter 2]. . . . The use of the color illustrations and then the chart with the “Guide to Illustrations”–very helpful [Chapter 4].” - Roxanne Owens, DePaul University “. . .[S]trengths in each of the chapters [include] notable authors, recommended books, read alouds, investigation for further study, and the references. . . . I also use the award winners for our literature circles in class.” - Judith Ann Stechly, West Liberty University
  • Children's Literature, Briefly

    Michael O. Tunnell, James S. Jacobs, Terrell A. Young, Gregory Bryan

    Paperback (Pearson, March 11, 2011)
    Are you looking for a brief introduction to children’s literature genres that leaves time to actually read children’s books? This new edition of Children’s Literature, Briefly introduces the reader to the essentials of each genre, supported by criteria to make good judgments about books and activities to advance literacy in the classroom. Part 1 provides foundational information on literature, Part 2 addresses each genre individually, and Part 3 covers the classroom information that makes literature an integral part of teaching. As new teachers build their classroom library, the brevity of this affordable new edition ensures readers have the resources to purchase and time to read actual children’s literature.
  • Children's Literature

    Carrie Hintz

    Paperback (Routledge, Nov. 6, 2019)
    Children’s Literature is an accessible introduction to this engaging field. Carrie Hintz offers a defining conceptual overview of children’s literature that presents its competing histories, its cultural contexts, and the theoretical debates it has instigated. Positioned within the wider field of adult literary, film, and television culture, this book also covers: Ideological and political movements Children’s literature in the age of globalization Postcolonial literature, ecocriticism, and animal studies Each chapter includes a case study featuring well-known authors and titles, including Charlotte’s Web, Edward Lear, and Laura Ingalls Wilder. With a comprehensive glossary and further reading, this book is invaluable reading for anyone studying Children’s Literature.
  • Children's Literature

    Carrie Hintz

    eBook (Routledge, Oct. 18, 2019)
    Children’s Literature is an accessible introduction to this engaging field. Carrie Hintz offers a defining conceptual overview of children’s literature that presents its competing histories, its cultural contexts, and the theoretical debates it has instigated.Positioned within the wider field of adult literary, film, and television culture, this book also covers: Ideological and political movementsChildren’s literature in the age of globalizationPostcolonial literature, ecocriticism, and animal studiesEach chapter includes a case study featuring well-known authors and titles, including Charlotte’s Web, Edward Lear, and Laura Ingalls Wilder. With a comprehensive glossary and further reading, this book is invaluable reading for anyone studying Children’s Literature.
  • Children's Literature, Briefly

    Michael O. Tunnell, James S. Jacobs

    Paperback (Pearson, April 27, 2007)
    Are you looking for a brief introduction to children’s literature genres that leaves time to read actual works of children’s literature? This new, significantly revised and streamlined edition of Children’s Literature, Briefly introduces the reader to the essential foundations of each children’s literature genre, supported by practical features and tools to suggest quality books and activities to advance literacy in the classroom. As new teachers build their classroom library, the brevity of this affordable new edition ensures readers have the resources to purchase and time to read actual children’s literature. The goal of this text, then, is to provide a practical overview of children's books, offering a framework and background information while keeping the spotlight on the books themselves.
  • Classics of Children's Literature

    John W. Griffith, Charles H. Frey

    Paperback (Longman, Nov. 27, 2004)
    This anthology providesÂżin a convenient, readable and economical formatÂżthe most celebrated and enduring children's literary works. Unlike other surveys of children's literature that present a large number of samples, excerpts and synopses of many kinds and genres in the field, Classic of Children's Literature provides novels, stories, and fairy tales in their entirety. Featured selections include: E. B. White's modern masterpiece, Charlotte's Web; Margery William Bianco's classic fantasy, The Velveteen Rabbit; the Mowgli stories from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Books; and an array of children's verses: John Newbery's Mother Goose's Melody, Heinrich Hoffman's Struwwelpeter, nonsense verse by Edward Lear, and sixteen poems from Robert Louis Stevenson's A Child's Garden of Verses. For literature enthusiasts.
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  • Mysteries of Life in Children's Literature

    Dr. Mitchell Kalpakgian

    Paperback (Neumann Press, June 1, 2000)
    The wonders found in fairy tales and myths have enriched childhoods for centuries. In between "Once upon a time" and "happily ever after" we embark on adventures that seem an eternity away from our everyday lives, and yet through these adventures we are brought back to the innocence and beauty of the truth. In The Mysteries of Children's Literature, journey through a treasury of well-known fables and folk tales, as well as others not so well known, and discover the wisdom hiding within them. In an age that rejects the moral absolutes and repudiates the whole idea of intrinsic evils, children's literature restores the meaning of good and evil, beautiful and ugly, and normal and abnormal. "Fairy tales clear the way for sanctity. They are the child's first morality play, clear-cut, no-nonsense black and white, good and evil, life and death - with a bit of fun thrown in to alleviate the pain." -Ethel Pochocki
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  • The Pleasures of Children's Literature

    Perry Nodelman

    Paperback (Longman Pub Group, Oct. 11, 1995)
    Overviews the issue of children's literature by discussing literary techniques and characteristics of the genre, examining the changing historical context of childhood, and evaluating specific types of literature
  • Essentials of Children's Literature

    Carol Lynch-Brown, Carl M. Tomlinson

    Paperback (Allyn & Bacon, June 29, 2007)
    <>The sixth edition Essentials of Children's Literature offers a concise, straightforward presentation of children's literature that engages students and motivates them to share literature with children. Written with a comprehensive, “facts-only” approach, this lucid resource offers an abundance of examples to illustrate how to use children's literature in the classroom.
  • Children's Literature

    Carrie Hintz

    Hardcover (Routledge, Nov. 6, 2019)
    Children’s Literature is an accessible introduction to this engaging field. Carrie Hintz offers a defining conceptual overview of children’s literature that presents its competing histories, its cultural contexts, and the theoretical debates it has instigated. Positioned within the wider field of adult literary, film, and television culture, this book also covers: Ideological and political movements Children’s literature in the age of globalization Postcolonial literature, ecocriticism, and animal studies Each chapter includes a case study featuring well-known authors and titles, including Charlotte’s Web, Edward Lear, and Laura Ingalls Wilder. With a comprehensive glossary and further reading, this book is invaluable reading for anyone studying Children’s Literature.
  • anthology of children's literature

    Edna Johnson; Evelyn R. Sickels; Frances Clarke Sayers, Fritz Eichenberg

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin, March 15, 1959)
    Little Black Sambo