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Books with title Doll Hospital

  • The Doll Hospital

    Kallie George, Sara Gillingham

    Hardcover (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, June 5, 2018)
    When toys need a little (or a lot of!) TLC, they head to the Doll Hospital in this endearing picture book in the tradition of Doc McStuffins. Don’t worry, toys, Dr. Pegs will have you feeling better in no time!It’s a quiet morning at the Doll Hospital until… DING-A-LING-A-LING! The emergency bells ring! Here comes a patient who needs Dr. Pegs’s help. Dr. Pegs is about to get to work when… DING-A-LING-A-LING! Here comes another patient! And another! How will Dr. Pegs take care of them all? Looks like the doctor needs some help herself!
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  • Doll Hospital #05

    Joan Holub, Ann Iosa

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Oct. 1, 2003)
    The fifth book in the Doll Hospital series tells the dual stories of a Parisian dollhouse family from the 1890s and modern-day sisters Rose and Lila.Sisters Rose and Lila, ages 10 and 8, are spending the year with their grandmother (who runs a doll hospital) while their parents are working overseas. Their grandmother has a special power to communicate with dolls and to tell their stories.In this book, the girls' grandmother is restoring a Parisian dollhouse from the 1890s which will be placed in a dollhouse museum. In the process of helping their grandmother with the restoration, Rose and Lila learn the story of the special relationship between the dollhouse people and a student at the boarding school where the house was kept.
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  • Hospital

    Jess Stockham

    Paperback (Child's Play International, Sept. 1, 2011)
    How long will I be there? Will I stay the night? Who will look after me? Reading Hospital with your child is the perfect opportunity to talk about these questions, and many more! Young children's lives are full of new experiences and these books help make them less scary. The simple conversational text and lively illustrations are carefully designed to encourage further dialogue between reader and child. Use these books as a starting point to talk to your child and help them to understand and prepare for these events, and to share any worries they may have.
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  • The Doll Hospital School

    Pamela Wolf

    In 1964 Lifetime Career Schools offered a course to become a doll doctor through a home study course. This is that course rewritten and updated for the modern reader. It has been expanded with some new chapters and additional material. The book has been organized so that the doll doctor can easily find what he or she is looking for and learn the skills that are needed to repair and make dolls of all kinds. The book has a wealth of information for anyone about dolls even if you do not plan on becoming a doll doctor.
  • Karen's Doll Hospital

    Ann M. Martin, Susan Tang

    language (Scholastic Paperbacks, April 26, 2016)
    When Hyacinthia, Karen's favorite baby doll, has to go to the toy shop for repairs, Karen decides to found her own hospital for dolls.
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  • The Doll Hospital

    James Duffy

    Hardcover (Scholastic, Incorporated, March 15, 1990)
    Book by Duffy, James
  • Doll hospital

    Joshua Horwitz

    Hardcover (Pantheon Books, March 15, 1983)
    Text and photographs describe a "hospital" in mid-town Manhattan where a "doctor" restores dolls from all over the world.
  • Doll Hospital #06

    Joan Holub, Ann Iosa

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Jan. 1, 2004)
    The sixth book in the Doll Hospital series tells the dual stories of Charlotte--a doll owned by an orphan taken in by the Shakers in 1832, and modern-day sisters Rose and Lila.Sisters Rose and Lila, ages 10 and 8, are spending the year with their grandmother (who runs a doll hospital) while their parents are working out of the country. Their grandmother has a special power to communicate with dolls, and to tell their stories.In this book, the girls visit a Shaker village and their grandmother tells them the story of Charlotte, a doll owned by a girl named Daisy. In 1832, Daisy's family died in a cholera epidemic that hit New York. Daisy and Charlotte were sent to live with the Shakers, who often took in orphans, until Daisy was retrieved by an old family friend.
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  • The Doll Hospital

    Kallie George, Sara Gillingham

    eBook (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, June 5, 2018)
    When toys need a little (or a lot of!) TLC, they head to the Doll Hospital in this endearing picture book in the tradition of Doc McStuffins. Don’t worry, toys, Dr. Pegs will have you feeling better in no time!It’s a quiet morning at the Doll Hospital until… DING-A-LING-A-LING! The emergency bells ring! Here comes a patient who needs Dr. Pegs’s help. Dr. Pegs is about to get to work when… DING-A-LING-A-LING! Here comes another patient! And another! How will Dr. Pegs take care of them all? Looks like the doctor needs some help herself!
  • Doll Hospital

    Joshua Horwitz

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, April 12, 1983)
    A photojournalistic account of the New York Doll Hospital and its renowned "doll doctors" shows how dolls, ranging from valuable antiques to beloved toys, are painstakingly restored
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  • Karen's Doll Hospital

    Ann M. Martin, Susan Tang

    Paperback (Little Apple, Feb. 1, 1993)
    When Hyacinthia, Karen's favorite baby doll, has to go to the toy shop for repairs, Karen decides to found her own hospital for dolls. Original.
    O
  • The Doll Hospital

    James Duffy

    Library Binding (Scholastic, March 1, 1989)
    Alison, an invalid girl, and her dolls and "furries" who come to life, create a hospital for dolls less fortunate than themselves and with the support of the Doll Hospital patients, Alison musters enough courage to try an experimental drug treatment
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