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Books with title Lost Skeleton

  • Lost Skeleton

    Michael Dahl

    Library Binding (Stone Arch Books, Aug. 1, 2016)
    Jason wishes he were taller. He wishes his arms were longer. He wishes his nose were shorter. So when Jason discovers a bottle of so-called Skeleton Lotion in a strange shop, he buys it in the hopes that it’ll give him a killer bod. Sure enough the stuff works! But after a few days of using it, Jason begins to wonder about the side effects of this killer cure. This series of Hi-Lo books is sure to chill any reluctant reader to the bone―from the first page until the last. Each book includes discussion and writing questions, a glossary, and educational back matter.
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  • Lost Skeleton

    Michael Dahl

    Paperback (Raintree, Nov. 3, 2016)
    Jason wishes he were taller. He wishes his arms were longer. He wishes his nose were shorter. So when Jason discovers a bottle of so-called Skeleton Lotion in a strange shop, he buys it in the hopes that it ll give him a killer bod. Sure enough the stuff works! But after a few days of using it, Jason begins to wonder about the side effects of this killer cure. This series of hi-lo books is sure to chill any reluctant reader to the bone from the first page until the last. Each book includes discussion and writing questions, a glossary, and educational back matter."
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  • Skeleton

    Steve Parker

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, April 12, 1988)
    Full-color photos. "An arresting introduction to skeletons. Each spread has an introductory paragraph plus captioned drawings and spectacular photos. Topics include exoskeletons, fish, birds, mammals, arms, skulls, and teeth. The look at the human skeleton also gives discussions of skull, spine, ribs, arms, and legs, plus front and rear views. A wealth of information, beautifully presented."--Kirkus.
  • Skeleton

    J. Johnson

    Paperback (Watts Pub Group, July 31, 2001)
    None
  • Skeleton

    Steve Parker

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, June 12, 1988)
    Full-color photos. "An arresting introduction to skeletons. Each spread has an introductory paragraph plus captioned drawings and spectacular photos. Topics include exoskeletons, fish, birds, mammals, arms, skulls, and teeth. The look at the human skeleton also gives discussions of skull, spine, ribs, arms, and legs, plus front and rear views. A wealth of information, beautifully presented."--Kirkus.
  • Skeleton

    Jen Green

    Library Binding (Creative Co, July 30, 2005)
    Green, Jen
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  • Skeleton

    Steve Parker, Philip Dowell

    Paperback (Gardners Books, July 31, 2002)
    "Eyewitness Guides" are best-selling, high-quality visual information books. This title is a valuable resource to students whether you want to learn how many toes a horse has or what is the smallest bone in a human body.
  • SKELETON

    Steve Parker

    Hardcover (DK Children, March 22, 2000)
    Book by Parker, Steven
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  • Skeleton

    DK Publishing

    VHS Tape (DK Children, May 1, 1995)
    Eyewitness -- bringing the natural world into your living room. The skeleton- it is essential to life, yet the sight of one can fill us with fear. As we learn in the Dorling Kindersley Eyewitness Video: Skeleton, fish, birds, reptiles and amphibians all have one. Defined as the internal frame of bones on which the soft body hangs, the skeleton supports the body, anchors the muscles and protects vital organs. The spine supports the human frame, limbs give us movement, the ribcage surrounds the soft organs and the skull protects the information center for the entire body. Of the over 300 we are born with to the 206 they fuse to become in adults, every bone has an important and complex job. With incredible computer animation and stunning graphics, the video uses an animated human skeleton as our "host" through the structure itself. Skeletons also serve as the body's permanent record, as fossils they taught us everything we know about evolution, the skull, being a blueprint of lifestyle, telling more than any other bone. In addition to structure and composition, this half-hour video compares and contrasts the human skeleton with those of other animals and explains how the differences correlate in their individual movement (swimming, flying, running on twos or fours). A broken bone is one of the few components in the body that can mend itself and we are shown up-close how this occurs over time. Although a skeleton is defined as internal, the vast majority of living things on Earth have an exoskeleton, or their correlative structure on the outside. Some examples disgust us (insects), but others are beautiful; we collect shells, coral reefs are nothing but masses of dead exoskeletons clumped together. The skeleton will probably always stand as a reminder of our mortality (interestingly, the elephant is the only other creature afraid of its own skeleton), after watching this amazing addition to the Eyewitness Video Series viewers should also be in awe of the massive job it performs for us. Without the strength of our skeleton, life would be far more fragile-if it existed at all.
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  • Skeleton

    None

    Paperback (Dorling Kindersley Publishers Ltd, )
    None
  • Skeleton

    Steve Parker

    Hardcover (Gardners Books, March 31, 1988)
    This reference book gives detailed information on the skeleton. It has been structured so that the individual themes of each spread make up a complete visual story and a self-contained module of information. It is part of the "Eyewitness Guides" series.
  • Skeleton

    Martin Sheen

    Hardcover (Dk Pub, Nov. 20, 2006)
    None