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Books with title The Real Tooth Fairy

  • The Tooth Fairy

    Scholastic

    Paperback (Scholastic Inc., Aug. 28, 2018)
    Peppa Pig has lost her first tooth! If she tucks it under her pillow, will the Tooth Fairy come for a special visit? Includes stickers!
    K
  • The Real Tooth Fairy

    Marilyn Kaye, Helen Cogancherry

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 15, 1990)
    After Elise loses her first tooth, she lies awake and waits for the tooth fairy’s visit, only to discover the tooth fairy is her own mother! Later, her mother tells her the tooth fairy can disguise herself to look like someone the child knows and trusts. Elise’s wish to see the tooth fairy in her own true form is granted in the climax of this charming story.
    M
  • Anna and the Tooth Fairy

    Maureen Wright, Anna Chernyshova

    language (Two Lions, June 6, 2017)
    Anna has a loose tooth—and the Tooth Fairy will be coming to visit soon! As Anna’s excitement grows, she realizes that Sophie, her baby sister, must be a Tooth Fairy in training. Sophie is always up at night, her rattle looks just like a magic wand, and she’s even learning to fly! So Anna begins to teach her little sister all the skills she’ll need to be the best Tooth Fairy ever. But what will happen when Sophie is no longer in training? Will she go away? It’s up to the big sister to make sure that never happens!Maureen Wright’s charming text and Anna Chernyshova’s adorable artwork combine in this sweet story of sibling friendship.
    L
  • The Tooth Fairy

    Catherine Chambers, Loic Billiau

    language (Raintree, Dec. 21, 2015)
    Each book in this series presents a fun "autobiography" of a popular mythical character. Amusingly illustrated and with simple levelled text, the books will be sure to hook in reluctant readers. The autobiographical style and text in the first person will also make the books work well as example of Common Core genres and text types. In this book, the Tooth Fairy tells her story.
    N
  • Tooth Fairy

    Audrey Wood

    Paperback (Childs Play Intl Ltd, Sept. 1, 2003)
    When Matthew loses a tooth, Jessica decides to make the Tooth Fairy's visit doubly worthwhile. Fantastic for encouraging children to keep their teeth clean enough to warrant a place in the 'hall of perfect teeth'.
    L
  • The Tooth Fairy

    Scholastic

    Paperback (Scholastic Inc., Jan. 7, 2014)
    Peppa Pig has lost her first tooth! If she tucks it under her pillow, will the Tooth Fairy come for a special visit?
    K
  • The Tooth Fairy

    Shirley Barber

    Paperback (Brolly Books, June 1, 2017)
    Here, in this wondrous and beautifully illustrated fairytale, the magic and secrets if the Tooth Fairy are revealed at last.
    N
  • The Real Tooth Fairy

    Marilyn Kaye, Helen Cogancherry

    Paperback (Voyager Books, Oct. 31, 1994)
    After Elise loses her first tooth, she lies awake and waits for the tooth fairy€™s visit, only to discover the tooth fairy is her own mother! Later, her mother tells her the tooth fairy can disguise herself to look like someone the child knows and trusts. Elise€™s wish to see the tooth fairy in her own true form is granted in the climax of this charming story.
    N
  • The Tooth Fairy

    Adam James

    eBook
    The Tooth Fairy is a magical rhyming bedtime story that explains who the Tooth Fairy is, and what she does with your children's teeth. Has your child or grandchild ever asked who the Tooth Fairy is, or what she does with their teeth? This story is an imaginative answer to that question. The perfect children's book to read to your kids when they start losing their teeth, and the night they put their tooth under their pillow. Your child will be excited to pull out that tooth, and put it under the pillow where it's magical journey begins. Great for the following: Children 2-10 years old, beginner readers, intermediate readers. You'll most likely enjoy this book if you enjoy one of the following: - Nursery Rhymes - Poetry - Short stories for kids - Bedtime and Dreaming books - Imagination and Play books - Magic and Fairies - Beautiful Illustrations - Modern kid's books - Children's books about losing teeth
  • The Tooth Fairy

    Graham Joyce

    eBook (G&Sbooks, Sept. 6, 2011)
    This classic award-winning novel tells the story of young Sam who wakes one night to find the Tooth Fairy in his room. She is not the gentle figure of childhood legend, but a frightening and malevolent presence. As Sam grows from a boy to a teenager he and his friends seem like any normal group of boys. They roam wild around the outskirts of their car factory city having fun, daring adults to challenge their freedom. But Sam continues to be visited by the fairy. Is the fairy real or is she just some part of his tortured imagination and if she is, how far is she to blame for the terrible events that are to follow? Contains a 3,000-word Afterword by the author.
  • The Tooth Fairy

    Kirsten Hall, Dawn Apperley

    Paperback (Children's Press, March 1, 2004)
    My First Readers series is perfect for children who are learning to read.Easy-to-read text, a short-story format, and full-color artwork on every page, these books will boost reading confidence and fluency. When he loses a tooth, a young boy excitedly awaits a visit from the tooth fairy.
    D
  • The Toothless Fairy

    Phd Ronza R Nash

    Hardcover (Rosedog Books, April 12, 2018)
    The Toothless Fairy (How She Lost Her Teeth) is a whimsical account of the adventures of Lady Kady on her tooth fairy duties. About the Author Ronza R. Nash, PhD served 15 years as a U.S. Marine. Her many duty stations took her across the county, as well as overseas. In Okinawa she worked as a TV motion picture documentation specialist at FEN (The Far East Network) with her boss Dale Dye. When she worked in Puerto Rico she had a late night radio show at Roosevelt Roads. As a civilian, Nash worked for WTTE Channel 28 before it was a Fox affiliate, where she got satellite feeds and bought the station on air before stations were 24 hours. She also worked at Chanel 21, an independent channel in Columbus, Ohio. She worked for the Department of Defense as a video production specialist, where her work on the video A Link in the Chain won acclaim at the DLA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. Also, she owned a small video production in Columbus, Ohio. She earned a Masters and PhD in broadcast communications and is retired and now living out west.
    R