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Books with title The Sign on Rosie's Door

  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Oct. 16, 2002)
    Fans of Maurice Sendak's Caldecott Medal-winning Where the Wild Things Are will love The Sign on Rosie's Door—the book that inspired the Broadway musical Really Rosie, with music by Carole King! There was a sign on Rosie's door that said, "If you want to know a secret, knock three times." One day, Kathy, Rosie's good friend, knocks three times and learns the secret—that Rosie is no longer Rosie, but Alinda, the lovely lady singer. What follows is the story of real children, playing as only children know how. In a starred review, Kirkus praised The Sign on Rosie’s Door, saying, “Maurice Sendak, through both text and illustrations, fuses the appealingly familiar with the magical in a book of outstanding charm.” First published in 1960, The Sign on Rosie’s Door portrays children in their very real world of imagination as only Maurice Sendak can.
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  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Paperback (Random House Childrens Books, Dec. 31, 2001)
    "If you want to know a secret, knock three times"Join the imaginative Rosie and her friends in this humourous and insightful celebration of the power of the imagination by the creator of WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE.
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  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, June 1, 1960)
    Rosie loves to pretend so while playing with her friends, she becomes a lovely lady singer, a lost girl, a red firecracker, and a sleepy cat.
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  • The sign on Rosie's door;

    Maurice Sendak

    Unknown Binding (Trumpet Club, March 15, 1988)
    There was a sign on Rosie's door that said, "If you want to know a secret, knock three times." Kathy, Rosie's good friend, knocked three times and learned the secret-that Rosie was no longer Rosie, but Alinda, the lovely lady singer.Adventures with Alinda were fun for Kathy and Sal and Pudgy and Dolly. Even Lenny, who occasionally didn't believe in Alinda, was delighted by the Fourth of July celebration that Alinda, with the help of the Magic Man, held. At the end of the celebration, Alinda was gone forever, and Rosie had returned, but she soon found something else nice to be.Maurice Sendak, the well-known artist and author-illustrator of Kenny's Window and Very Far Away, has written a story of real children, playing as only children know how. Young readers will wish that Alinda lived next door to them.
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  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Paperback (HarperCollins Publishers, Nov. 16, 1995)
    There was a sign on Rosie's door that said, "If you want to know a secret, knock three times." Kathy, Rosie's good friend, knocked three times and learned the secret-that Rosie was no longer Rosie, but Alinda, the lovely lady singer.Adventures with Alinda were fun for Kathy and Sal and Pudgy and Dolly. Even Lenny, who occasionally didn't believe in Alinda, was delighted by the Fourth of July celebration that Alinda, with the help of the Magic Man, held. At the end of the celebration, Alinda was gone forever, and Rosie had returned, but she soon found something else nice to be.Maurice Sendak, the well-known artist and author-illustrator of Kenny's Window and Very Far Away, has written a story of real children, playing as only children know how. Young readers will wish that Alinda lived next door to them.
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  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Aug. 16, 1988)
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  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Hardcover (Harper & Row, Aug. 16, 1960)
    None
  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Hardcover (Harper & Row, Aug. 16, 1960)
    The sign on Rosie's door reads: "If you want to know a secret, knock three times." When Rosie's friend Kathy knocks three times she discovers that Rosie is no longer Rosie, but Alinda--a lovely lady singer. Soon Rosie/Alinda and Kathy are putting on a show for their neighborhood friends. Other chapters depict the further adventures of Rosie/Alinda. Colorful pen-and-ink illustrations accompany the text. This picture book was the inspiration for the Maurice Sendak/Carole King musical REALLY ROSIE.
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  • The sign on Rosie's door

    Maurice SENDAK

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Aug. 16, 1976)
    The sign on Rosie's door read "If you want to know a secret, knock three times" - and that was just the beginning of Rosie's secrets for entertaining her friends one hot summer. Rosie is a singer; Rosie is a dancer; Rosie is a magician; Rosie makes things happen.
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  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Hardcover (The Bodley Head, Aug. 16, 1969)
    The sign on Rosie's door read "If you want to know a secret, knock three times" - and that was just the beginning of Rosie's secrets for entertaining her friends one hot summer. Rosie is a singer; Rosie is a dancer; Rosie is a magician; Rosie makes things happen.
  • The Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Library Binding (HarperCollins, Oct. 15, 2002)
    There was a sign on Rosie's door that said, "If you want to know a secret, knock three times." Kathy, Rosie's good friend, knocked three times and learned the secret-that Rosie was no longer Rosie, but Alinda, the lovely lady singer.Adventures with Alinda were fun for Kathy and Sal and Pudgy and Dolly. Even Lenny, who occasionally didn't believe in Alinda, was delighted by the Fourth of July celebration that Alinda, with the help of the Magic Man, held. At the end of the celebration, Alinda was gone forever, and Rosie had returned, but she soon found something else nice to be.Maurice Sendak, the well-known artist and author-illustrator of Kenny's Window and Very Far Away, has written a story of real children, playing as only children know how. Young readers will wish that Alinda lived next door to them.
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  • Sign on Rosie's Door

    Maurice Sendak

    Library Binding (Harpercollins, June 16, 1960)
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