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Books with title Math For All Seasons

  • A Bear for All Seasons

    Dianne Marcial Fuchs, Kathryn Brown

    Hardcover (Henry Holt and Co. (BYR), Oct. 15, 1995)
    Which is your favorite season?Spring when you can sniff the fress, green woods?Summer when the balckberries are ripe? Falll when leaves crunch underfoot?or Winter when you can catch snowflakes on your toungue?Pull up a chair, pour a mugh of hot cocoa and enter the debate between easygoing Bear, who delights in each season, and his good friend Fox, who sees only the mud, the mosquitoes, or the cold winds.Live Frog and Toad, Rat and Mole form The Wind in the Willows, these woodland friends will warm the hearts of readers everywhere while they introduce us to the mixed pleasures of all the seasons.
    K
  • A Friend for All Seasons

    Julia Hubery, Mei Matsuoka

    Hardcover (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Aug. 21, 2007)
    When Robbie Raccoon awakens to find that Old Father Oak, his favorite tree, is losing its leaves, he worries that his dear friend may be ill, but when he and his friends find out that Old Father Oak is simply adapting to the change of seasons, Robbie's mind is put at ease as he patiently awaits the new bloom in spring.
    L
  • A Manatee for All Seasons

    Johnny Dicks

    Paperback (Independently published, April 6, 2019)
    Toddlers have no sense of time. They are sure that their next birthday is coming next week, even though it is months away, and they can get so focused on an upcoming event that they miss all of the fun holidays in between! “A Manatee for All Seasons” attempts to explain the calendar to young children, with the help of Florida’s favorite marine mammal. Each month has a silly picture and a simple poem designed to spark a conversation between reader and child. With this book, you'll soon be talking about how New Years comes before Valentine’s Day and Halloween comes before Thanksgiving.A portion of all sales will support the “Save the Manatee Club,” to make sure that our children will be able to enjoy healthy wild manatees just like we do.
  • A Tree For All Seasons

    Robin Bernard

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback, Sept. 1, 2001)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Observing a maple tree over time, children get a clear picture of what trees do and how seasons change. Simple text accompanied by beautiful photographs.
    L
  • A Tree For All Seasons

    Maryse Guittet

    Board book (Twirl, March 18, 2014)
    This uniquely shaped board book celebrates the cycle of the year with a tree that blossoms in spring, bears fruit in summer, sheds its leaves in fall, and cradles snow in winter. Young readers follow the passage of seasons in a succession of spreads, each filled with simple text and intriguing lift-the-flaps that reveal the many creatures—from owls to bumblebees—who all find shelter in the tree's boughs.
    H
  • Crafts For All Seasons

    Kathy Ross

    Spiral-bound (Millbrook Press, July 14, 2000)
    This comprehensive craft book with wipe-clean cover provides simple instructions for making an array of crafts for every season, holiday, and major event of the year, from Thanksgiving place cards in the fall to sun puppets in the summer.
    N
  • Words for all Seasons

    Malcolm Saville, Elsie Wrigley, Paul Wrigley

    Hardcover (Lutterworth Press, )
    None
    S
  • A Manatee for All Seasons

    Johnny Dicks

    language (, April 5, 2019)
    Toddlers have no sense of time. They are sure that their next birthday is coming next week, even though it is months away, and they can get so focused on an upcoming event that they miss all of the fun holidays in between! ​“A Manatee for All Seasons” attempts to explain the calendar to young children, with the help of Florida’s favorite marine mammal. Each month has a silly picture and a simple poem designed to spark a conversation between reader and child. With this book, you'll soon be talking about how New Years comes before Valentine’s Day and Halloween comes before Thanksgiving.A portion of all sales will support the “Save the Manatee Club,” to make sure that our children will be able to enjoy healthy wild manatees just like we do.
  • A Shoe for All Seasons

    Jeff MacNelly

    Paperback (Henry Holt & Co, Sept. 1, 1983)
    A collection of Shoe comic strips, in which the staff of the Treetop Tattler-Tribune struggles with cranky word processors and an unreliable delivery bird.
  • A Bunny for All Seasons

    Janet Schulman, Meilo So

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Jan. 14, 2003)
    One summer day a bunny hops out of the woods and into a garden. “What a wonderful garden someone has made just for me,” she thinks. All summer she feasts there. In the fall, she hides from the mean old cat behind big orange pumpkins. Then, just before the snows of winter, another bunny hops into her garden. Now during the cold winter, she has a friend. And when the first flowers of spring pop up in the garden, the two bunnies are there–and so are their three little baby bunnies!This gentle story with vibrant watercolor paintings captures the essence of the four seasons.
    L
  • Stories for All Seasons

    Eric Carle

    Hardcover (Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing, Oct. 1, 1998)
    Three stories of travel and adventure by a master of children's books teach counting, seasons, and the days of the week as they entertain little ones with simple text and distinctive paper-cut collages.
    A
  • Superman for All Seasons

    Jeph Loeb

    (DC Comics, Oct. 1, 1999)
    Recounts some of Superman's earliest adventures including leaving Smallville for Metropolis and battling his enemy, Lex Luthor