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Search Results - (Material:"Book" AND grade:"5" AND jlg-selection:"Yes" AND grade:"2") AND publication:"Horn Book Guide"
40 results
Orangutan TongsPoems to Tangle Your Tongueby Agee, JonHave you ever gotten tripped up trying to say a silly succession of similar syllables? Of course--everyone has! It can be sometimes frustrating, but it's alway... |
Reviewed In:Horn Book Magazine |
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Fun with Roman numeralsby Adler, David A. & Miller, EdwardIntroduces the seven symbols and their values, shows how to add and subtract to make numbers. Teaches how the symbols interact and about the bar across the top... |
Reviewed In:School Library Journal |
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Way Up and Over Everythingby McGill, Alice |
Reviewed In:Horn Book Magazine |
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Greater Estimationsby Goldstone, Bruce |
Reviewed In:School Library Journal |
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Silent MusicA Story of Baghdadby Rumford, JamesWHEN BOMBS BEGIN TO FALL, Ali drowns out the sould of war with a pen. Like other children living in Baghdad, Ali loves soccer, music and dancing, but most of a... |
Reviewed In:Horn Book Magazine |
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A Boy Named BeckoningThe True Story of Dr. Carlos Montezuma, Native American Heroby Capaldi, GinaThis story reveals the life of a Native American boy named Wassaja, who was kidnapped from his tribe and sold as a slave. Adopted and renamed Carlos Montezuma,... |
Reviewed In:School Library Journal |
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My Dog May Be a Geniusby Prelutsky, JackHave you ever encountered an underwater marching band, a pig in a bathing suit, a pet orangutan, or a witch in a hardware store? Have you ever sat with a skunk... |
Reviewed In:Horn Book Magazine |
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Maybelle in the Soupby Speck, KatieWhen Mr. and Mrs. Peabody invite a guest to dinner, Maybelle the cockroach, who lives under their refrigerator, ignores the warnings of Henry the flea to be se... |
Reviewed In:Horn Book Magazine |
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Tap Dancing on the RoofSijo (Poems)by Park, Linda SueSijo is a traditional Korean form of poetry. Sijo is syllabic, like Japanese haiku, with three lines of 14 to 16 syllables each: the first two introduce the to... |
Reviewed In:Horn Book Magazine |
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Trolls, Go Home!by MacDonald, Alan & Beech, MarkWhen a family of Trolls moves into the quiet suburb of Biddlesden, it’s likely that things are going to get ugly (and possibly hairy and smelly) very soon, s... |
Reviewed In:School Library Journal |