Browse all books

Books with title Looking at Animals

  • Look at the Animals

    Peter Linenthal

    Board book (Dutton Books for Young Readers, Feb. 2, 2006)
    Birds sing, zebras run, and whales spout in this delightful follow-up to Look Look!, which has sold nearly 50,000 copies. Bold, black-and-white illustrations offer the clean shapes and strong contrasts best suited to young babies’ developing minds.The warm, simple text makes this a perfect first book for sharing with a little one who’s just beginning to look and learn. An ideal shower gift that’s sure to become a favorite with baby.
    E
  • Looking at Animals

    Mary Hurt

    Hardcover (Ladybird Books, June 1, 1986)
    Book by Hurt, Mary
  • Look at the Animals!

    Peter Linenthal

    Hardcover (E P Dutton andamp, Aug. 16, 2006)
    In this delightful follow-up to "Look Look!," bold black-and-white illustrations offer the clean shapes and strong contrasts best suited to young babies' developing minds.
  • Look at the Animals

    Peter Linenthal

    eBook (Dutton Books for Young Readers, Feb. 2, 2006)
    Birds sing, zebras run, and whales spout in this delightful follow-up to Look Look!, which has sold nearly 50,000 copies. Bold, black-and-white illustrations offer the clean shapes and strong contrasts best suited to young babies’ developing minds.The warm, simple text makes this a perfect first book for sharing with a little one who’s just beginning to look and learn. An ideal shower gift that’s sure to become a favorite with baby.
  • Looking for Animals

    Lawrence F. Lowery

    eBook (NSTA Kids, July 11, 2016)
    Now you see them, now you don’t! By showing the same creatures in two different settings, this book brings out the detective in young readers. They can investigate the role of protective coloration— nature’s own camouflage—for katydids, crickets, bumblebees, beavers, spiders, and spotted green frogs. The vivid examples encourage children to closely examine the characteristics of hidden creatures that may be looking back at them, whether from the pages of this book or in their own backyards.Looking for Animals is part of the I Wonder Why book series, written to ignite the curiosity of children in grades K–3 while encouraging them to become avid readers. These books explore the marvels of animals, plants, and other phenomena related to biology. Included in each volume is a Parent/Teacher Handbook with coordinating activities. The I Wonder Why series is written by an award-winning science educator and published by NSTA Kids, a division of NSTA Press.Lexile Framework: 570LVisit www.Lexile.com for more information about Lexile Measures.
  • Looking for Animals

    Betsy Franco, Kees de Kiefte

    eBook (HMH, Jan. 1, 2002)
    Children discover many animals on their hike.
    E
  • Looking at Photos: Animals

    Jacques Lowe Visual Arts

    Hardcover (Chronicle Books, June 1, 1995)
    A collection of stunning photographs of animals--by some of the greatest photographers of all time--help children appreciate photography and understand how photographs are made. By the author of the Looking at Paintings series.
    R
  • Look at the Animals! Look at the Animals!

    Peter Linenthal

    Hardcover (Dutton Childrens Books, Feb. 2, 2006)
    Rare Book
  • Zoo Animals Are Looking At You!

    Nancy Simms Taylor

    Paperback (Independently published, May 17, 2020)
    Turning the pages of this book is like a VISIT TO THE ZOO! Full page watercolor illustrations of a Zebra, Gorilla, Lion, Flamingo, Tiger, Monkey, Elephant, Giraffe, and Hippopotamus take you to the zoo with rhyming stanzas about each animal. "Ginny Giraffe makes a path around the tall, tall trees. She reaches up with her long, long neck and eats the shiny leaves." Animal exercises for kids and color pages for each animal will make this book a treat for super engaged story times in the classroom and library.
  • Looking at Animals in Hot Places

    Moira Butterfield

    Paperback (Chrysalis Books, June 16, 2000)
    None
    N
  • Looking for animals,

    Lawrence F Lowery

    Hardcover (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, March 15, 1969)
    Illustrations demonstrate such examples of natural protective camouflage as a frog swimming in a pond, a walking stick standing on a twig, or a lizard resting on the sand.
  • Looking at Animals in Hot Places

    Moira Butterfield

    Hardcover (Chrysalis Books, July 2, 1999)
    None
    N