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Books with title Unplugged

  • Fun Unplugged

    Peter Cosgrove

    Paperback (Penguin Ireland, Sept. 1, 2020)
    Packed with puzzles, brainteasers, tricks and riddles, Fun Unplugged will keep your friends scratching their heads for hours on end! Fool your family, fascinate your friends and bend your brain with more than 150 pages of fun. You'll learn how to surprise, astonish and befuddle those around you until they are wide-eyed with amazement. You don't need a screen to have fun—these code-breakers, fortune-telling challengers and tricks of the mind and much more will make you the center of attention. Fully illustrated throughout, the tricks and challenges are easy to follow and guaranteed to impress any audience.
    V
  • Dot Unplugged

    Candlewick Press, The Jim Henson Company

    Hardcover (Candlewick Entertainment, Feb. 11, 2020)
    Can Dot and her family make it through a rainy day without any tech?It’s pouring rain, and the power’s gone out at Dot’s house. Should they take it as a challenge to honor the National Day of Unplugging? Playing outside is out of the question, and so is using the many devices Dot is accustomed to. But what might the basement hold? Dot, her friend Hal, Mom, Dad, and Scratch find lots of exciting stuff, including an old spinner game. It turns out it’s super fun to watch Dad do charades, Mom speed-sculpt from clay, Hal tweet-sing a song, and Dot hunt for something surprising. Their improvised game keeps them so entertained, they just might decide to stay unplugged a bit longer!
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  • Doug Unplugged

    Dan Yaccarino

    Hardcover (Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers, Aug. 16, 2013)
    Doug is a robot. His parents want him to be smart, so each morning they plug him in and start the information download. After a morning spent learning facts about the city, Doug suspects he could learn even more about the city by going outside and exploring it. And so Doug . . . unplugs. What follows is an exciting day of adventure and discovery. Doug learns amazing things by doing and seeing and touching and listening and above all, by interacting with a new friend. Dan Yaccarino's funny story of robot rebellion is a great reminder that sometimes the best way to learn about the world is to go out and be in it."