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Books with title Friends

  • Friends

    Meg Greve

    Paperback (Rourke Educational Media, Aug. 1, 2012)
    Sharing Is Sometimes Hard For Young Students. This Book Talks About Different Things And Ways You Can Share To Get Along Better With Your Classmates And Friends. Complete K-5 Social Skills Collection. Paired With A Fiction Social Skills Title.
    J
  • Friends

    Gloria Whelan, Jenifer Thomas

    Paperback (Thunder Bay Press, Nov. 5, 1997)
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  • No Friends

    James Stevenson

    Hardcover (Greenwillow Books, Oct. 1, 1986)
    Worried that they won't make friends in their new neighborhood, Mary Ann and Louie listen to Grandpa reminisce about the new friends he and his brother made when he moved to another neighborhood.
    K
  • Among Friends

    Caroline B. Cooney

    eBook (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, Aug. 29, 2012)
    In this fast-paced novel about the bonds of friendship, Jenny, Emily, and Hillary, known as the Awesome Threesome, thought they’d be a threesome forever. But with Jennie’s relentless ambition, Emily’s jealousy, and Hillary’s building resentment, it seems the Awesome Threesome is destined to be a thing of the past. Assigned to write in diaries for English class, the three girls, along with three other classmates, find themselves admitting things so terrible that even they are shocked. All are left wondering: What price does a person have to pay for being successful? The pursuit of the truth is compellingly chronicled and the resolution satisfies.
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  • Friends

    Helen Oxenbury

    Paperback (Little Simon, )
    None
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  • Best Friends

    Jocelyn Stevenson, Sue Venning

    Hardcover (Henry Holt & Company, Oct. 1, 1984)
    Mokey, a quiet Fraggle, and her best friend Red, a noisy Fraggle, have very different experiences along the way to Brushplant Cave.
    K
  • Friends

    Barbara M. Joosse, Tomaso Milian

    Hardcover (Greenwillow Books, Sept. 21, 2010)
    Henry and Ruby. Ruby and Henry. Best friends. (Most of the time.) They give the best gifts and know the best games and are the best at keeping secrets. (Most of the time.) But even when Henry and Ruby don't get along, they know one thing: nothing is the same without your best friend. Henry and Ruby. Ruby and Henry. They belong together. All of the time.
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  • Hello, Friends!

    Bola Williams

    (Pears Lane Publishing, Feb. 3, 2020)
    Today is a great day for a walk so a young boy named Daniel is heading to the park for a summer picnic. Along the way, he encounters his neighborhood friends. Not only does he find out that everyone has a different way of saying hello, they each have a special surprise to share. A charming story about diversity. Children’s early introduction to various languages, cultures and acceptance. Young children will learn how to greet in a few languages and also learn the names of some favorite foods in these languages. The message is that people are all the same even if we have different ways of expressing ourselves. Age 3-6Review"The message of friendship across cultures resonates. Children surrounded by diversity will find this book relatable; others may use it as a window into unfamiliar cultures." -Kirkus Reviews
  • Best Friends

    Erin Downing

    Paperback (Aladdin, April 8, 2014)
    In this M!X original, Izzy is used to being queen bee--but will she ditch her mean girl status for a chance at true friendship?Isabella Caravelli is dreading summer. She doesn't want to spend a month at a lakeside resort with her parents and the families of her dad's coworkers, especially when she discovers that two of the kids go to her school. She thinks Bailey and Ava are beyond weird--and they're not exactly thrilled to see Izzy, either. Izzy has been their tormentor, the leader of the pack of girls who made their first year of middle school so unpleasant. Once Izzy discovers that the other kids have been spending their summers together for years and she's the outsider, she realizes she's going to have to change her bossy, stubborn ways if she wants to fit in. Bailey and Ava turn out to be kind and welcoming, and Izzy actually wishes she were more like them. Back home, Izzy knows that things are probably going to be different. Ava and Bailey were great summer friends--but are they really forever friends? Can Izzy prove that she really does have the potential to be a true friend? Or is she stuck playing the mean girl forever?
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  • Friends

    Helme Heine

    Hardcover (Atheneum, Dec. 16, 1982)
    None
    K
  • Friends

    Barbara M. Joosse, Tomaso Milian

    Library Binding (Greenwillow Books, Sept. 21, 2010)
    Henry and Ruby. Ruby and Henry. Best friends. (Most of the time.) They give the best gifts and know the best games and are the best at keeping secrets. (Most of the time.) But even when Henry and Ruby don't get along, they know one thing: nothing is the same without your best friend. Henry and Ruby. Ruby and Henry. They belong together. All of the time.
    C
  • Best Friends

    Ann M. Martin

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, April 1, 2008)
    Friendship is forever in the fourth book of Ann M. Martin's heartwarming new series, Main StreetSpring has arrived in Camden Falls, and with it have come many joys and challenges. As Flora and Ruby near the first anniversary of their arrival in town, Flora prepares for a visit from her old best friend. She's excited . . . but her new best friend, Olivia, isn't. Olivia's afraid she won't measure up, and that Flora will regret ever coming to Camden Falls. It's a very big reunion set for a very big day -- Camden Falls's 350th birthday celebration. Does one best friend truly have to be the best . . . or can they find a way to get along?
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