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Other editions of book The Little Penguin

  • The Little Penguin

    A. J. Wood, Stephanie Boey

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 2005)
    Little Penguin looked up at the big penguins with their sleek, shiny feathers and their long, strong beaks. He wished more than anything for the day when he could look like them.
  • The Little Penguin

    A. J. Wood, Stephanie Boey

    Hardcover (Penguin, Sept. 23, 2002)
    As a fluffy and furry baby Emperor penguin, he doesn't understand why he doesn't look like his father, but with some reassuring words from his mother and a little bit of time, the feathers fall off and he soon transforms into the magnificent creature he always wanted to be.
    E
  • The Little Penguin by A. J. Wood

    A. J. Wood

    Hardcover (Penguin, March 15, 1786)
    None
  • The Little Penguin

    A. J. Wood

    Hardcover (H. B. Fenn & Company, Limited, March 15, 2001)
    None
  • The Little Penguin

    A. J. Wood, Stephanie Boey

    Hardcover (Penguin, Sept. 23, 2002)
    None
  • The Little Penguin

    A.J. Wood, Stephanie Boey

    Hardcover (Templar Pub, Aug. 31, 2001)
    None
  • The Little Penguin

    A. J. Wood, Stephanie Boey

    Audio Cassette (Scholastic, March 15, 2005)
    Scholastic read-along cassette with turn-the-page signals to accompany The Little Penguin. Written by A. J. Wood. Illustrated by Stephanie Boey. Read by Larry Robinson. Directed by Steve Blane. Music by Richard DeRosa. Produced by Blane & DeRosa Productions. Playing Time 7:46.
  • The Little Penguin Book and Audiocassette Tape Set

    A. J. Wood, Stephanie Boey, Larry Robinson

    Accessory (Scholastic Book Clubs Softcover Book and Audiocassette Tape, March 15, 2005)
    When Little Penguin hatches, he is covered with downy gray feathers, but his father assures him that, "One day you will be an Emperor of the Ice like me." On their long journey across the big ice plain, Little Penguin forgets his father's warnings to stay close and soon gets lost. Not only that, but he also realizes that he is losing his feathers and is afraid he will freeze. All's well in the end, however, when the little animal is reunited with his parents. Wood weaves some information about the life and habits of Emperor penguins into this short tale. Boey's finely detailed pen-and-ink and pastel illustrations are done primarily in grays, blues, and yellows. This charming and gently informative story works nicely as an introduction to Antarctic life.