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Books with title Mouse House Hunter

  • Mouse House

    Alana Bograd

    eBook
    None
  • Mouse House

    Michelle Cartlidge

    Hardcover (Dutton Children's Books, Sept. 30, 1990)
    The reader finds the tiny mouse hiding in a house in such places as a teapot, a book bag, and a cookie box
    L
  • Haunted House, Haunted Mouse

    Judy Cox, Kirby Heyborne

    Audio CD (Dreamscape Media, Sept. 15, 2015)
    Sour balls! Gumdrops! Chocolate! Mouse is stunned as he watches goblins and skeletons and ghosts collect candy. He wants to go trick-or-treating too, so when the little bitty ghost drops her sack, Mouse scrambles inside. Now he’s in for a harrowing Halloween adventure! Includes page turn track: 9 minutes.
    K
  • Mouse House

    Rumer Godden

    Hardcover (Viking Books for Young Readers, Aug. 19, 1957)
    There is never any room for Bonnie, the baby mouse, in the flower pot, so she goes looking for a new mouse house.
  • Haunted House, Haunted Mouse

    Judy Cox

    Hardcover (Holiday House, March 15, 1789)
    None
  • House Mouse

    Geraldine Dobbie

    Board book (New Line Books, March 1, 1999)
    Book by
    D
  • Mouse House

    None

    Hardcover (Little Simon, )
    None
  • House Mouse

    Barrie Watts

    Library Binding (Silver Burdett Pr, Feb. 1, 1997)
    Brilliant photographs capture the growth rate of a litter of house mice, from tiny, blind, furless newborns to full-grown mice.
    N
  • MOUSE HOUSE

    Rumer Godden, Adrienne Adams

    Paperback (Young Readers Press, Aug. 16, 1972)
    There is never any room for Bonnie, the baby mouse, in the flower pot, so she goes looking for a new mouse house.
  • Mouse House

    Rumer Godden

    Paperback (Viking Books for Young Readers, Nov. 19, 1968)
    A little baby mouse helps his family find a new home
  • Mouse House

    Rumer Godden, Adrienne Adams

    Hardcover (Viking Press, Jan. 1, 1957)
    None
  • Mouse House

    Rumer Godden

    Unknown Binding (Macmillan, March 15, 1958)
    Once upon a time there was a little mouse house. It was like a doll's house, but not for dolls, for mice." Not proper mice, but a flannel He-Mouse and She-Mouse with beady eyes and bristle whiskers who stand quite still, propped on their hind legs in the sitting room. Mary knows real mice run and scamper, and disappointed with her new gift, she puts the mouse house away in her room. Meanwhile, down in the basement, a real mouse named Bonnie has been jostled out of her woefully inadequate flowerpot home by her older brothers and sisters. Overlooked by her harried parents and desperate for shelter, Bonnie ventures upstairs and finds the mouse house. And before too long what was a miniature make-believe house becomes a marvelously messy home for proper mice who know how to play, much to everyone's delight.