-
(0 reviews)
There’s a Monster in Your Book
1,200 LBestselling author of the Dinosaur that Pooped series and The Christmasaurus, Tom Fletcher, has written a brand new picture book perfect for bedtime, where a mischievous monster has invaded the pages of your child’s book!
-
(0 reviews)
Revolting Rhymes
1,000 LRevolting Rhymes is a 1982 collection of Roald Dahl poems first published in 1982 originally under the title Roald Dahl’s Revolting Rhymes
-
(0 reviews)
Puffin Rock: Goodnight Beautiful Moon
1,200 LA beautifully illustrated story based on the critically acclaimed animation.
-
(0 reviews)
Enormous Crocodile
1,450 LThe Enormous Crocodile is a horrid greedy grumptious brute who loves to guzzle up little boys and girls. But the other animals have had enough of his cunning tricks, so they scheme to get the better of this foul fiend, once and for all.
-
(0 reviews)
Very Hungry Caterpillar
1,450 LThis is the classic edition of the bestselling story written for the very young. A newly hatched caterpillar eats his way through all kinds of food.
-
(0 reviews)
Pete the Cat: Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star
1,400 LNew York Times bestselling author and artist James Dean brings us a groovy rendition of the classic children’s bedtime song “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star,” sung by cool cat Pete—now available in sturdy board book format.
-
(0 reviews)
The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins
960 LThe plot centers on Bartholomew Cubbins’s mysterious reappearing hats and the attempts of King Derwin’s courts to rid them from his head once and for all, centering on themes of vanity, punishment, and magic.
-
(0 reviews)
Daisy Head Mayzie
960 LThe book is about a warmhearted schoolgirl named Mayzie McGrew who one day suddenly sprouts a bright white daisy from her head. It causes alarm in her classroom, family, and town, until an agent makes her a celebrity. Mayzie becomes overwhelmed and distraught over the situation and runs away.
-
(0 reviews)
Oh say can you say?
1,000 LOh Say Can You Say? is a children’s book written and illustrated by Theodor Geisel under the pen name Dr. Seuss, and published in 1979 by Random House. It is a collection of 22 tongue-twisters. It was Dr. Seuss’s last beginner book.
-
(0 reviews)
Marvin K Mooney will you please go now!
1,000 LIt concerns the titular character, Marvin K. Mooney (an anthropomorphic dog-person) who is being told that it is time to go by unseen individual, possibly his father. Exactly where he is to go is never specified, though it maybe to bed, given that he is wearing a pajama jumpsuit.
-
(0 reviews)
Horton hatches the egg
1,000 LHorton Hatches the Egg is a children’s book written and illustrated by Theodor Geisel under the pen name Dr. Seuss and published in 1940 by Random House. The book tells the story of Horton the Elephant, who is tricked into sitting on a bird’s egg while its mother, Mayzie, takes a permanent vacation to Palm Beach.
-
(0 reviews)
Oh thinks you can Dr. Seuss
1,000 LOh the Thinks you Can Think introduces various questions about the nature of thought, imagination, reality, art, and representation. Full of puns and silly rhymes, this classic Dr. Seuss book will challenge young readers to puzzle through philosophical questions of imagination, reality and art.
-
(0 reviews)
And to think that i saw it on Mulberry Street
1,000 LFirst published by Vanguard Press in 1937, the story follows a boy named Marco, who describes a parade of imaginary people and vehicles traveling along a road, Mulberry Street, in an elaborate fantasy story he dreams up to tell his father at the end of his walk.
-
(0 reviews)
If i ran circus
1,000 L‘If i ran the circus” is a children’s book by Dr. Seuss, published in 1956 by Random House.
Like The Cat in the Hat, or the more political Yertle the Turtle, If I Ran the Circus develops a theme of cumulative fantasy leading to excess. The overt social commentary found in the Sneetches and the Zax demonstrates that Dr. Seuss was fascinated by the errors and excesses to which humans are prone,and If I Ran the Circus also examines this interest, though more subtly and comically, given its earlier genesis. -
(0 reviews)
Seuss Isms Ex
1,100 LFrom there to here, from here to there, funny things are everywhere.
-
(0 reviews)
What was i scared of
1,000 L“What Was I Scared Of?” tells the tale of a character who repeatedly meets up with an empty pair of pale-green pants. The character, who is the narrator, is initially afraid of the pants, which are able to stand on their own despite the lack of a wearer.















