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Books with title Everything Has a Place

  • Everything Has a Heart

    Sally Huss

    eBook (Huss Publishing, July 31, 2014)
    From cats to dogs to trees and leaves, from artichokes and lettuce to people and plans, from cherry tarts to strawberries, everything has a heart. Whimsical illustrations with musical, rhythmical verse carry along this idea of hearts being everywhere with love included. This is a Valentine message that is good for every day. 25 colorful and happy illustrations dance across the pages to delight the heart of any young child.This children’s picture book is part of the wonderful collection of children’s books by Sally Huss.
  • Everything Has a Place

    Patricia Lillie, Nancy Tafuri

    Hardcover (Greenwillow, April 1, 1993)
    Text and pictures assign a cow to a barn, a dish to a cupboard, a family to a house, and other things to their place
    F
  • A Place for Everything: Habit 3

    Sean Covey, Stacy Curtis

    Paperback (Simon Spotlight, Dec. 17, 2019)
    Discover that organization is the fastest way to fun with the 7 Oaks gang in this Level 2 Ready-to-Read edition of the third book in the 7 Habits of Happy Kids series from Sean Covey and Stacy Curtis.Jumper loves playing basketball, but when he wears the wrong shoes and can’t find anything in his messy room, he misses the game. Can he clean up his act so this doesn’t happen again? Each of the Level 2 Ready-to-Reads in this winning series focuses on one habit.
    K
  • A Place for Everything: Habit 3

    Sean Covey, Stacy Curtis

    Hardcover (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, May 18, 2010)
    Jumper finds out that organization is the fastest way to fun in this third picture book in the 7 Habits of Happy Kids series.Jumper loves playing basketball, but he wore the wrong shoes! When he goes home to change, he can’t find anything in his messy room and misses the game. Can he clean up his act so this doesn’t happen again? Featuring the lovable characters of 7 Oaks, this book addresses the third habit of happy kids: “Put First Things First.” This story tells kids how important it is to keep things organized so they can enjoy all the fun they want to have.
    M
  • A Place for Everything: Habit 3

    Sean Covey, Stacy Curtis

    eBook (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, April 30, 2013)
    Jumper finds out that organization is the fastest way to fun in this third picture book in the 7 Habits of Happy Kids series. Includes audio!Jumper loves playing basketball, but he wore the wrong shoes! When he goes home to change, he can’t find anything in his messy room and misses the game. Can he clean up his act so this doesn’t happen again? Featuring the lovable characters of 7 Oaks, this ebook with audio addresses the third habit of happy kids: “Put First Things First.” This story tells kids how important it is to keep things organized so they can enjoy all the fun they want to have.
  • Everything Has Its Place

    Howard Mize, Nadeem Jones

    Paperback (Headline Books, Dec. 21, 2018)
    They're creepy and they're crawly, mysterious and jolly, they're altogether essential, to the family of Earth! Science teacher and author, Howard Mize, brings the tiniest bugs and the importance of forests together in this beautifully illustrated story about the harmony of our ecology and environment. Everything Has Its Place is a book about life and the connections that all organisms share that will encourage discussion and learning about the world in which we all live.
  • EVERYTHING HAS A HEART

    Sally Huss

    Paperback (Huss Publishing, Jan. 4, 2015)
    From cats to dogs to trees and leaves, from artichokes and lettuce to people and plans, from cherry tarts to strawberries, everything has a heart. Whimsical illustrations with musical, rhythmical verse carry along this idea of hearts being everywhere with love included. This is a Valentine message that is good for every day.Over 30 colorful and happy illustrations dance across the pages to delight the heart of any young child.
  • Everything Has a Place

    Patricia Lillie, Nancy Tafuri

    Hardcover (Greenwillow, April 1, 1993)
    Text and pictures assign a cow to a barn, a dish to a cupboard, a family to a house, and other things to their place
    D
  • A Place for Everything: Habit 3

    Sean Covey, Stacy Curtis

    Paperback (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, April 24, 2018)
    Discover that organization is the fastest way to fun with the 7 Oaks gang in this third picture book of the 7 Habits of Happy Kids series from Sean Covey and Stacy Curtis.Jumper loves playing basketball, but he wore the wrong shoes! When he goes home to change, he can’t find anything in his messy room and misses the game. Can he clean up his act so this doesn’t happen again? With short lyrical text and the same characters that were established in The 7 Habits of Happy Kids, each of the picture books in this winning series focuses on one habit.
    M
  • A Place for Everything

    Larry Burkett, Priscilla Burris

    Board book (David C Cook, Jan. 1, 2002)
    Rhyming text explains the importance of putting things in their proper place.
    M
  • Eunice Has Everything

    Wendy G Grant, Sheryl G Prutsalis

    Paperback (Trafford Publishing, Jan. 3, 2014)
    The authors are sisters who collaborated their talents and worked together to write the book Eunice Has Everything. Their goal is to bring a fresh new approach to the problems and pitfalls facing kids of today through their fun, upbeat rhyming books. Both sisters are married. Wendy is a stay-at-home mom of three who is a former pre-k teacher/music coordinator at the Abbott Center in Wellesley, Massachusetts, and was often asked to write songs and poems for the children's programs. Sheryl is a mother of four and also a former preschool teacher and volunteer storyteller at the public library in LaMaddalena, Italy, where she is resided for three years. As mothers and former teachers themselves, they are very familiar with the types of books that hold children's interest as well as the kind adults will enjoy reading to their children again and again. Both women enjoy being active volunteers in all their children's schools, especially as the storyteller. The illustrator, Brian Gosselin, studied art in college and is the father of two. He also resides in a suburb of Boston.
  • Every Place Has a History

    Andrew Langley

    Library Binding (Heinemann, )
    None