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Books with title Playgrounds

  • Playground

    50 Cent, Lizzi Akana

    Paperback (Razorbill, Nov. 13, 2012)
    A hard-hitting and inspirational novel about the redemption of a bully from international icon 50 Cent Thirteen-year-old Butterball takes readers on a journey through the moments that made him into the playground bully he is today. Loosely inspired by 50 Cent's own adolescence and written with his teenage son in mind, Playground received wide critical praise--and is now poised to become a perennial classic.
    Z+
  • Playgrounds

    Gail Gibbons

    Hardcover (Holiday House, March 1, 1985)
    Introduces the various types of playground equipment, including swings, slides, and sandboxes, as well as games and toys that may be enjoyed at the playground.
    G
  • Playground

    50 Cent, Lizzi Akana

    eBook (Razorbill, Nov. 1, 2011)
    Thirteen-year-old Butterball doesn't have much going for him. He's teased mercilessly about his weight. He hates the Long Island suburb his mom moved them to and wishes he still lived with his dad in the city. And now he's stuck talking to a totally out-of-touch therapist named Liz. Liz tries to uncover what happened that day on the playground - a day that landed one kid in the hospital and Butterball in detention. Butterball refuses to let her in on the truth, and while he evades her questions, he takes readers on a journey through the moments that made him into the playground bully he is today. This devastating yet ultimately redemptive story is told in voice-driven prose and accented with drawings and photographs, making it a natural successor to The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Loosely inspired by 50 Cent's own adolescence, and written with his fourteen-year-old son in mind, Playground is sure to captivate wide attention - and spark intense discussion.
  • Playground

    Mies van Hout

    Hardcover (Lemniscaat USA, April 1, 2016)
    Two friends take a fun, fantastical trip to the playground through Mies van Hout's amazing art. Join them as they climb through the trees, find the way across the crocodile-infested river, bushwhack through blackberries, feel their way through the dark cave, escape from a monster, and slide into safety at the jungle gym. Note a special treat: a new creature joins the children from each landscape, contributing to an ever-lengthening parade to the playground in this fun and interactive book. Sometimes the journey is even more fun than the destination!
    L
  • Playground

    50 Cent, Lizzi Akana

    Hardcover (Razorbill, Nov. 1, 2011)
    Thirteen-year-old Butterball doesn't have much going for him. He's teased mercilessly about his weight. He hates the Long Island suburb his mom moved them to and wishes he still lived with his dad in the city. And now he's stuck talking to a totally out-of-touch therapist named Liz. Liz tries to uncover what happened that day on the playground - a day that landed one kid in the hospital and Butterball in detention. Butterball refuses to let her in on the truth, and while he evades her questions, he takes readers on a journey through the moments that made him into the playground bully he is today. This devastating yet ultimately redemptive story is told in voice-driven prose and accented with drawings and photographs, making it a natural successor to The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Loosely inspired by 50 Cent's own adolescence, and written with his fourteen-year-old son in mind, Playground is sure to captivate wide attention - and spark intense discussion.
    Z+
  • Playground

    50 Cent

    eBook (Quercus Children's Books, Nov. 3, 2011)
    'I wonder what she would've said if I'd told her all the parts the report left out, like how I'd woken up that morning and pulled that sock out of my draw and filled it, one after the other, with the D batteries I'd bought the last time I visited my dad in the city. But there was no way. There was just no way I'd ever tell anyone what really went down that day...' Thirteen-year-old Butterball doesn't have that much going for him. He's teased about his weight. He hates the suburb his mum moved them to so she could go to nursing school and start her life over. He wishes he still lived with his dad in New York City - where there's always something happening, even if his dad doesn't have much time for him. Still that's not why he beat up Maurice in the playground. Now his school is forcing him to talk to some out-of-touch lady therapist, as though she could ever fix him - as though she could ever figure out the truth. No, Butterball's lips are sealed about what happened that day. But some tales can't help being told. And this is one of them.
  • Playgrounds

    Wendy Sadler

    Paperback (Heinemann, April 26, 2005)
    Why are slides made of metal and plastic? How do swings work? What playground toy uses a spring? Read this book to find out about playgrounds!
    M
  • Playgrounds

    Joanne Mattern

    Library Binding (Smart Apple Media, )
    None
    R
  • Playground

    Nadia Wheatley

    Hardcover (Allen & Unwin, May 1, 2010)
    With stunning photographs and illustrations, this book is a fascinating insight, from earliest times to today, into the experiences of Indigenous children, whose land was, and is, their playgroundThere are things which Indigenous children have been doing for thousands upon thousands of years. In traditional times, kids didn't have to go to school. The land was their school, and their playground. Since European people have come to Australia, Aboriginal children have taken on some new games and toys, but they have continued to practice their culture. Whether they live on a remote outstation or in a busy city, Indigenous kids are still learning from country, and from their community.
    Y
  • Playground Day

    Jennifer Merz

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, Sept. 17, 2007)
    Intricate and charming collage illustrations crafted from torn and cut paper and found materials shine in this exuberant celebration of imagination and play. When a young girl packs her stuffed animals into her wagon and heads off to the park, she is inspired by both her toys and the playground equipment, and soon she is hiding like a squirrel, climbing like a monkey, sliding like a penguin, and so on--all relayed in catchy rhymed couplets. Each page offers clues to a friendly preschool guessing game and captures the unique pleasures of a day spent at the playground.
    K
  • Lost Playground

    Geoff North

    language (, Aug. 12, 2019)
    Start over and burn the world.Fifteen-year-old Brinn Addam can bring make-believe characters to life. It was a power once possessed by her uncle, Neal Stauch. The little boy died more than three decades earlier, but the world he created carried on. It’s a dying land populated with troubled characters desperately searching for a new creator—a modern-day keeper with the same incredible genes to start their world over again.A rag-tag bunch of Neal’s washed up heroes reunite to set things right. Brinn sets out to help, aided by her own band of imaginary twenty-first-century friends.But Neal’s imaginary world is populated with other survivors. They’ve changed even more drastically, and they want what the little boy had—what his present-day niece still has—and they’ll kill to get it.Lost Playground is Book 3 of the Out of Time series,
  • Playgrounds

    Wendy Sadler

    Hardcover (Heinemann-Raintree, Sept. 15, 2005)
    Ever wonder how something works? Satisfies children's curiosity about the inner workings of their favourite toys, focussing both on their mechanisms and the scientific principles behind them. Ages 5-10 years.
    P