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Books with title The Boy Who Loved Bananas

  • The Boy Who Loved Words

    Roni Schotter, Giselle Potter

    Hardcover (Schwartz & Wade, March 28, 2006)
    In this Parents' Choice Gold Award–winning book, Selig collects words, ones that stir his heart (Mama!) and ones that make him laugh (giggle). But what to do with so many luscious words? After helping a poet find the perfect words for his poem (lozenge, lemon, and licorice), he figures it out: His purpose is to spread the word to others. And so he begins to sprinkle, disburse, and broadcast them to people in need.
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  • The Boy Who Loved Broccoli

    Sarah A. Creighton, Gene L. Hamilton

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 12, 2011)
    Everyone knows it's hard to get children to eat their vegetables! "The Boy Who Loved Broccoli" is a humorous tale about Baxter, a boy who enjoys eating broccoli so much that it gives him super powers. After jumping over mountains and splashing through lakes, he goes on to perform superhero good deeds and convinces others to indulge in the delicious green veggie, only to find out that they become filled with super powers as well. Find out what happens next when Baxter finds himself in a bit of trouble!
  • The Boy Who Loved Words

    Roni Schotter, Giselle Potter

    eBook (Schwartz & Wade, June 26, 2013)
    In this Parents' Choice Gold Award–winning book, Selig collects words, ones that stir his heart (Mama!) and ones that make him laugh (giggle). But what to do with so many luscious words? After helping a poet find the perfect words for his poem (lozenge, lemon, and licorice), he figures it out: His purpose is to spread the word to others. And so he begins to sprinkle, disburse, and broadcast them to people in need.
    S
  • Boy Who Loved Bananas, The

    George Elliott, Andrej Krystoforski

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, March 1, 2005)
    Matthew laughs himself silly one day as he watches the banana-crazy monkeys at the Metro Zoo. That evening, bananas become Matthew's favorite food -- and he refuses to eat anything else! Over the next two weeks, he eats so many bananas that he starts to feel funny. He itches and scratches and itches and scratches until ? KABLOOEY! Suddenly, Matthew is swinging from trees and shinnying up flagpoles! His parents try everything to stop his monkey business -- doctors, veterinarians, herbalists, chiropractors, animal trainers, psychiatrists and even a psychic. But nothing seems to work. Has Matthew gone completely bananas?
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  • The Boy Who Loved Bananas

    George Elliott, Andrej Krystoforski

    Paperback (Kids Can Press, Sept. 1, 2006)
    The hilarious tale of what happened to a boy who ate too many bananas.
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  • The Boy Who Loved Broccoli

    Sarah A. Creighton, Dave Thrasher, Gene L. Hamilton

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 6, 2013)
    Everyone knows it's hard to get children to eat their vegetables! "The Boy Who Loved Broccoli" is a humorous tale about Baxter, a boy who enjoys eating broccoli so much that it gives him super powers. After jumping over mountains and splashing through lakes, he goes on to perform superhero good deeds and convinces others to indulge in the delicious green veggie, only to find out that they become filled with super powers as well. Find out what happens next when Baxter finds himself in a bit of trouble!
  • The Boy Who Loved the Moon

    Rino Alaimo

    Hardcover (Familius, May 12, 2015)
    A young boy, desiring to win the love of the Moon, embarks on an adventure, swimming the deepest seas and slaying the mightiest dragons to bring her precious gifts.
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  • The Boy Who Loved Trains

    Jill Kalz, Sahin Erkocak

    Library Binding (Picture Window Books, Sept. 1, 2006)
    Conner is crazy about trains. They are almost all he thinks about. But a present from Aunt Sally might change everything.
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  • The Boy Who Loved Cats

    Dr. Mary A. Flowers

    eBook (Freeze Time Media, June 29, 2020)
    Nat is a fashionable little boy who just loves the difference in his cat friends. He and his cats teach children to embrace diversity. The different cats use their differences to work as a team to solve a common problem. This book embraces the power of diversity, acceptance of differences and how teamwork can be used to benefit everyone.
  • The Boy Who Loved the Sky

    Donna E. Hart, Kyra Landgren, Julie L. Casey

    language (Amazing Things Press, May 13, 2014)
    This beautiful picture book is a favorite of parents and grandparents alike to read to their little ones.Once there was a little boy, fascinated by the stars, the moon, and the sun. But most of all the sky.What could he do to get there? How could he make it happen?
  • The Boy Who Loved Fire

    Julie Musil

    language (, Jan. 9, 2014)
    Manny O’Donnell revels in his status at the top of his high school food chain. He and his friends party in the mountains on a blustery night, sharing liquor and lame ghost stories around a campfire. The next morning, as a wild fire rages in those same mountains, Manny experiences doubt. He was the last of the drunken crew to leave the cave, and he’s uncertain if he extinguished the flames. Within hours, he becomes the number one arson suspect. Santa Ana winds + matches = disaster. You’d think he would've learned that the first time he started a fire. As he evades a determined arson investigator, Manny, a modern-day Scrooge, is visited by ghosts of the past, present, and future. He’s forced to witness the fate of his inadvertent victims, including Abigail, the scarred beauty who softens his heart. Manny must choose between turning around his callous, self-centered attitude, or protecting his own skin at the expense of anyone who gets in his way.
  • The Boy Who Loved a Swan

    L.R. Patton

    eBook (Batlee Press, Sept. 25, 2018)
    Revenge keeps dangerous company.Oscar, one of the lost children of Fairendale, has been transported, by way of a Vanishing spell that saved his life, to the uppity land of Lincastle. Here he watches, from a distance and with a heavy chip on his shoulder, the people of Lincastle strut about their streets in fine clothes and hats and shoes that, unlike his, do not have gaping holes. He watches, mostly, a book shop that reminds him of the one his mother owned in Fairendale.When Oscar steals a book from the shop and is put on display by the law keeper of the land, he is rescued by an unexpected person—Freya, princess of the land. But soon his danger becomes her danger, and men storm the halls of the castle to capture her, deeming her unworthy to inherit the throne because she pardoned a criminal. Oscar and Freya must learn to fly—or lose their precious freedom forever.The Boy Who Loved a Swan is the twelfth book in the Fairendale series, an epic fantasy middle grade series that explores both familiar and unfamiliar fairy tales, legends, myths, and folk tales. The world of Fairendale revolves around villains and heroes—all on a quest for what they believe is right. But one cannot always know, at first glance, who is the villain and who is the hero. Throughout the series, the story of King Willis and his determination to keep the throne of Fairendale (at all costs? Perhaps. Or perhaps not.) is woven into the story of his son, Prince Virgil, heir to the throne and friend to the village children, and the story of fairy tale children fleeing for their lives—children who become what we know as fairy tale villains, for one good reason or another. But, remember, one cannot always know, at first glance, who is the villain and who is the hero.