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Books with title Tell Me Why?

  • Tell Me Why 5

    Arkady Leokum

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, May 20, 1988)
    Answers questions about our world, how things began, how things are made, how other creatures live, the human body, and love, families, and babies
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  • Tell Me Why

    C. S. Depew, Ricky Pope, Tate Out Loud

    Audible Audiobook (Tate Out Loud, Aug. 30, 2013)
    What parent or grandparent hasn't been bombarded with questions from a child? Their curious minds, marveling at the world God has created, search for answers around every corner. They innocently turn to us for those answers because, well - we've been around longer. The wonderful minds of our children are a gift from God. Their questions are opportunities he has provided in our otherwise ordinary lives to stop and look at the world again, with awe and amazement and admit that we don't have all the answers. But we can certainly point those beautiful faces in the right direction and show them who does have all the answers. After all, he's been around longer. May this audiobook bring a smile to your face and glory to his name.
  • Tell Me Why?

    Isabelle Fougere

    Spiral-bound (B.E.S., Sept. 1, 2015)
    This fun-filled Q&A book is packed with answers to questions that curious children want to know--and parents are only too happy to give them the means to discover on their own. It contains more than 180 answers to questions about history, nature, the human body, animals, plants, the Earth, and more. In Tell Me Why?, kids can find the answers to questions such as: "Why were some pirates abandoned on a desert island?", "Why are there mummies?", and "Why do we go to school?" Organized according to different topics and tabbed for easy reference, this book also features a hidden spiral binding that makes it easy to flip back and forth. Entertaining illustrations, cool stickers, and activity sections make learning more fun than ever.
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  • Tell Me

    Joan Bauer, Cassandra Morris, Listening Library

    Audiobook (Listening Library, Sept. 16, 2014)
    The unofficial town motto is "Nothing bad ever happens in Rosemont", where 12-year-old Anna has come to stay with her grandmother, Mim, hoping to forget her worries about her parents' troubled marriage. She'll be busy with the town's annual Flower Festival, a celebration with floats and bands that requires weeks of preparations. But before long, Anna finds herself involved in a very big problem. When she observes a girl her own age who seems to be being held against her will, Anna can't forget the girl's frightened eyes and she is determined to investigate. "When you see something, say something" she's been told - but what good does it do to speak if no one will listen? Luckily, a take-charge girl like Anna is not going to give up. Told with Joan Bauer's trademark mixture of humor and heart, Tell Me will enthrall her many fans and win her new ones.
  • Tell Me Why

    Arkady Leokum

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, Oct. 1, 1965)
    A guide for parents who want to be able to answer their children's endless questions
  • Why Me?

    Darren Cox, Al Remington, Revival Waves of Glory Books & Publishing

    Audible Audiobook (Revival Waves of Glory Books & Publishing, Aug. 10, 2015)
    Once upon a time, there was a cow named Joe who had everything: a nice barn and all the food he could eat. A snake who didn't like Joe tried to turn his happy life upside down. Joe met a dove named Jemimah who helped him get back on his feet.
  • Tell Me

    Joan Bauer

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Sept. 15, 2015)
    Award-winning author Joan Bauer latest novel is full of warmth, humor, hope, and a healthy dose of suspenseThe unofficial town motto is "Nothing bad ever happens in Rosemont" where twelve-year-old Anna has come to stay with her grandmother, Mim, hoping to forget her worries about her parents' troubled marriage. She'll be busy with the town's annual Flower Festival, a celebration with floats and bands that requires weeks of preparations.But before long, Anna finds herself involved in a very big problem. When she observes a girl her own age who seems to be being held against her will, Anna can't forget the girl's frightened eyes and she is determined to investigate. "When you see something, say something" she's been told—but what good does it do to speak if no one will listen? Luckily, a take-charge girl like Anna is not going to give up.Told with Joan Bauer's trademark mixture of humor and heart, Tell Me will enthrall her many fans and win her new ones.“Bauer establishes a multi-faceted plot combining crime drama with a modern coming-of-age story.”—School Library Journal “Skillfully weaves subplots together as Rosemont citizens (and Anna’s parents) rise to the challenge of solving the mystery.”—Publishers Weekly
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  • Tell Me Why

    Trista Hendren, Elisabeth Slettnes

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 22, 2014)
    Tell Me Why is a feminist twist of the creation story told with love from a mother to her son, in hopes of crafting a different world for them both.This is the third (newly revised) book in The Girl God series, written specifically with boys in mind. “Men, too, need the feminine divine in order to reconcile with, recover, and honor the repressed and denied feminine aspects of their own being and becoming.” –Jane CaputiPraise for Tell Me Why “Tell Me Why uses a reimagined version of the Genesis story of Adam and Eve as an opening to begin discussing the loss of Mother God with children, especially with boys. The book does a beautiful job of describing the loss that boys feel when they are denied the companionship of the feminine side of God and, consequently, a healthy relationship with women in their lives. It is not a book that bashes men or masculinity; instead, it exposes the wounds caused by gender stereotyping and patriarchal religion, while leaving readers full of hope for reclaiming an Edenesque harmony between men and women. This is an ideal companion to the earlier books in this series, The Girl God and Mother Earth.” –Monette Chilson, Author of Sophia Rising “Another gem from Trista Hendren and Elisabeth Slettnes. A beautiful and important message to all children, told here in the re-telling and re-writing of the Creation story, to Joey, by his mother. With Slettnes’ stunning artwork and inspirational quotes from other writers, it takes its place alongside The Girl God and Mother Earth as a future classic.” –Ruth Calder Murphy, Author of Spirit Song “Tell Me Why is a wonderful book for a boy to read with his mother, grandmother, aunt, sister, babysitter, friend. The conversation between mother and son at the beginning of the book, and the quotes and artwork throughout, provide a wonderful context for explaining to boys that the story of “why things are the way they are” isn’t about blaming boys or men, but about recognizing history and healing it, for the good of all.” –Liz Hall Magill, Author of Defining Sexism in the U.S.“Trista Hendren and Elisabeth Slettnes have created another significant book that is a piece of art as well as a good story. The message, important for both boys and girls: treat each other with kindess and respect, as equals. I love the surprise, several pages in, when after the mother has given her son all kinds of worthy advice, the boy becomes exasperated. He knows all this, he says; he just wants a story about why the world is the way it is. And she shifts into telling the tale. The colorful, dramatic illustrations are intriguing and once again the quotations from noted names add richness.” –Marilyn McFarlane, Author of Sacred Stories: Wisdom from World Religions “Trista Hendren has done it again. Incorporating beautiful pictures, meaningful quotes, and a story line that resonates she has created a wonderful book that will, hopefully, inspire hugely needed conversations between every boy, girl, man, and woman throughout the world.” –Peter Wilkes, Author of A Woman Called God
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  • Tell Me Why

    Larry Webb

    language (, Nov. 8, 2018)
    Reading the obituary, naming his father as a dead man’s estranged son, left Ryan speechless. Who was this man, and why hadn’t he and his brother Rayden ever even heard of him? Because of this incident, the boys come to realize they know nothing of their father’s childhood. Why? Therein lies the title, Tell Me Why.When growing up in a happy, stable home, sometimes one never thinks of oddities. For the Miller boys, the fact that their last names and those of their grandmother and dad’s brother were different never occurred to them. That’s just the way it always had been. Sometimes, a jarring episode changes things.On Monday morning, one of Ryan’s friends walked up to him before school and offered condolences over the loss of his grandfather. Ryan had no idea what the boy was talking about. Their family had eaten dinner with his grandpa the night before. His friend said his mother had showed him the obituary that morning, and he should check it out with the school counselor who always carried the daily paper in his pocket. Ryan raced to the front of the school and found the man leaning against the wall chatting with other teachers as the kids entered the building. Mr. Martin took him to his office and showed him the obituary. The questions started there.
  • Tell Me Why 1

    Arkady Leokum

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, May 20, 1986)
    A four-volume set containing questions and answers about such things as the world around us and how it began, the human body, how other creatures live, and how things are made.
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  • Tell Me

    Joan Bauer

    eBook (Viking Books for Young Readers, Sept. 16, 2014)
    The unofficial town motto is "Nothing bad ever happens in Rosemont" where twelve-year-old Anna has come to stay with her grandmother, Mim, hoping to forget her worries about her parents' troubled marriage. She'll be busy with the town's annual Flower Festival, a celebration with floats and bands that requires weeks of preparations.But before long, Anna finds herself involved in a very big problem. When she observes a girl her own age who seems to be being held against her will, Anna can't forget the girl's frightened eyes and she is determined to investigate. "When you see something, say something" she's been told—but what good does it do to speak if no one will listen? Luckily, a take-charge girl like Anna is not going to give up.Told with Joan Bauer's trademark mixture of humor and heart, Tell Me will enthrall her many fans and win her new ones.
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  • Tell Me

    Aidan Chambers

    Paperback (Thimble Press, March 1, 2011)
    overall good condition