Browse Results

Showing 12,551 through 12,575 of 30,699 results

Houseboat Mystery (The Boxcar Children Mysteries #12)

by Gertrude Chandler Warner

Four brave siblings were searching for a home – and found a life of adventure! Join the Boxcar Children as they investigate a mystery while vacationing on a houseboat in this illustrated chapter book series beloved by generations of readers.The Aldens spend their summer traveling in a houseboat! But when a black car shows up at every place they dock, the children begin to think someone is after something on the boat. Can the Boxcar Children figure out what the pursuer could be after?What started as a single story about the Alden Children has delighted readers for generations and sold more than 80 million books worldwide. Featuring timeless adventures, mystery, and suspense, The Boxcar Children® series continues to inspire children to learn, question, imagine, and grow.

Houseboat Mystery (Boxcar Children #12)

by Gertrude Chandler Warner David Cunningham

Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny used to live alone in a boxcar. Now they have a home with their grandfather and are spending a vacation traveling down the river on a houseboat. Throughout their journey, the Boxcar Children have the feeling they're being watched. Little do they know, someone is looking for something on their houseboat-and he'll stop at nothing until he gets it!

Housecat Trouble: (A Graphic Novel) (Housecat Trouble #1)

by Mason Dickerson

When a scaredy-housecat is home alone for the first time, he and his furry friends are forced to face monsters and their fears on a quest to save the day. This middle-grade graphic novel series is filled with silly jokes, adventure, and a whole lot of fun.One house, three cats, and a lot of trouble! Buster has only one job: keep the house safe. Too bad he is a massive scaredy-cat. When his owner goes away and he suddenly finds his home filled with monsters, Buster has the biggest challenge he&’s ever faced. Can he learn to be brave before his owner gets back?In the first volume of a hijinks-filled graphic novel series, the colorful artwork and hilarious characters will keep you laughing until the very end.

Housecat Trouble: (A Graphic Novel) (Housecat Trouble #2)

by Mason Dickerson

Your favorite housecat is back and braver than ever! But when a lost kitten turns up, can Buster and his friends help it find its way home? This funny chapter-book graphic-novel series returns with more hijinks and even more cats!Buster has been around the block--literally!After an adventure outside his home to help his owner, Buster now finds himself in the position of helping a lost little cat. Buster, Nova, and Chauncey take to the streets to find the cat's owner. But this strange stray turns out to be a ghost, and a reunion with its owner is going to be a lot harder than they thought! Will Buster and his friends have what it takes to reunite this lost cat and its owner?

Household Stories by the Brothers Grimm (Dover Children's Classics)

by Brothers Grimm

Fifty-three classic stories include "Rumpelstiltskin," "Rapunzel," "Hansel and Gretel," "The Fisherman and his Wife," "Snow White," "Tom Thumb," "Sleeping Beauty," "Cinderella," and so many more. Lavishly illustrated with original 19th-century drawings by Walter Crane. 114 illustrations.

Houston, Is There A Problem?: Teen Astronauts #1 (Teen Astronauts #1)

by Eric Walters

Key Selling Points A young teen earns a scholarship to go to space camp. The first in the Teen Astronauts series featuring Houston at space camp. Examines themes of perseverance, leadership and growth mindset. This is an adventure story with an exciting setting: astronaut training camp. Eric Walters is very well known to librarians and booksellers.

Houston, We Have a Klutz!

by Nicholas O. Time

Grace sneaks onto Apollo 11 with a little help from some surprising allies in this fourth wacky novel, part of the all-new In Due Time series."Graceless Grace" is the smartest seventh grader at Sands Middle School, but she's constantly being teased for stumbling over doorjambs and knocking over lunch trays. And lately, the name-calling has been even worse. So when Ms. Tremt offers to lend The Book of Memories to Grace for an extended trip, she decides to go completely out of this world. She travels back to 1969 to stow away on Apollo 11 and become the first kid, the first female, and maybe even the first person to walk on the moon. Take that, teasers! Sneaking onboard Apollo 11 without messing up the mission requires some serious brainpower. Luckily, Grace has something NASA doesn't--a time portal. She opens up The Book of Memories and assembles her dream team: Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, and Hypatia of Alexandria, and works with them to reduce the cargo just enough to safely board the rocket. Apollo 11 leaves the atmosphere with 6,099,920 pounds of space ship and eighty pounds of middle school girl. Grace impresses Neil Armstrong with her smarts and dazzles the world with her spacewalk. After all, you can't face-plant in zero gravity! But when Grace returns to the present, she's dismayed to discover NASA has covered up her historic achievement. There is no mention of her in history books, no record of her spacewalk. Some things in history can't be changed, explains Ms. Tremt, but people can change. And now, "Graceless Grace" has the confidence to redefine her reputation!

Houston, We've Had a Problem: The Story of the Apollo 13 Disaster (Tangled History)

by Rebecca Rissman

In an immersive, exciting narrative nonfiction format, this powerful book follows a selection of people who experienced the events surrounding the Apollo 13 disaster.

How America Grew: 1775-1914

by Nextext Staff Mcdougal-Littell Staff

A collection of stories based on historical events in the history of the United States from 1775-1914, including the Lewis and Clark expedition, the Civil War, and the building of the Panama Canal.

How Angel Peterson Got His Name: And Other Outrageous Tales about Extreme Sports

by Gary Paulsen

Gary Paulsen's slapstick tales capture the "wonderful madness" of growing up in a small town in northern Minnesota, when high spirits, showing off for girls, and general idiocy led Gary and his pals to attempt some amazing stunts, including: <P> * Shooting a waterfall in a barrel<P> * Breaking the world speed record on skis <P> * Hang gliding with an army surplus target kite <P> * Inventing the skateboard <P> * Jumping a bike through a hoop of fire <P> * Wrestling with a bear. <P> Wacky, daring, just plain nuts -- extreme sports lead to extreme fun in these stories from Gary's boyhood.

How Benjamin Franklin Became a Revolutionary in Seven (Not-So-Easy) Steps

by Gretchen Woelfle

How did Ben Franklin become an outspoken leader of the American Revolution? Learn all about it in seven (not-so-easy) steps in this humorous, accessible middle-grade chapter book that focuses on Ben&’s political awakening.Famous founding father Benjamin Franklin was a proud subject of the British Empire—until he wasn&’t. It took nearly seventy years and seven not-so-easy steps to turn Benjamin Franklin from a loyal British subject to a British traitor—and a fired-up American revolutionary. In this light, whimsical narrative, young readers learn how Franklin came to be a rebel, beginning with his childhood lesson in street smarts when he buys a whistle at an inflated price. Franklin is a defiant boy who runs away from his apprenticeship, and while he becomes a deep thinker, a brilliant scientist, and a persuasive writer when he grows up, he never loses that spark. As a community leader who tries his best to promote peace and unity both between the colonies and with Great Britain, he becomes more and more convinced that independence for the American colonies is the way forward.Illustrated throughout with art by noted New Yorker cartoonist and illustrator John O&’Brien and sprinkled with quotations from Franklin, this unfamiliar story of a familiar figure in American history will surprise and delight young readers.

How Big Is Big? How Far Is Far? (SEEDS Book Reader)

by Carolyn Jaynes John Erickson Mick Coulas

NIMAC-sourced textbook

How Bodies Work: Animal Physiology

by Bridget Anderson

Do you ever wonder what makes you grow? Or why you shiver when you are cold? Have you ever marveled at the speed of a cheetah, the fastest land animal on Earth? Or been awed at how a chameleon can change color? Solving such mysteries is part and parcel of animal physiology, the science that investigates how different animal bodies work. Learning how they do increases our appreciation of the uniqueness and diversity of the vast animal kingdom, and adds to our understanding of how our own bodies work. HOW BODIES WORK: ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY offers a glimpse inside ourselves and the amazing world around us.

How Can I Overcome the Fear of Public Speaking?

by Lizzie Wade

Some people are afraid of public speaking more than others. Learn about some surprising ways to overcome stage fright.

How Can Some People Be Good at Singing?

by Lizzie Wade

Some people are better at singing than others. Why is that? A researcher explains why some people love doing karaoke, and others simply can't do it.

How Can We Identify Materials Based on Their Properties? Student Activity Guide

by Smithsonian Science Education Center

NIMAC-sourced textbook

How Can We Predict Change in Ecosystems? Student Activity Guide

by Smithsonian Science Education Center

NIMAC-sourced textbook

How Can We Provide Freshwater To Those In Need? Student Activity Guide

by Carolina Biological Supply Company Smithsonian Science Education Center

NIMAC-sourced textbook

How Can We Use the Sky to Navigate?: Student Activity Guide

by The Smithsonian Institution

NIMAC-sourced textbook

How Caterpillars Turn Into Butterflies (Nature's Mysteries Ser.nature's Mysteries)

by Jill Bailey

Young readers can learn about many of the most amazing aspects of nature in this strikingly illustrated set of books. Ideal for the reader who must know how nature works, this series has the answers to many questions, helping to open up the world of nature's secrets.

How Come?: Every Kid's Science Questions Explained

by Kathy Wollard

Fact-filled, fun-filled, as interesting to parents as it is to kids, the How Come? series is the trusted source for lively, clear answers to kids’ science queries. Now the best questions and answers from all three books—How Come?; How Come? Planet Earth; and How Come? In the Neighborhood—have been revised, updated, freshly illustrated in full color, supplemented with twenty completely new questions, and combined into one bigger, better volume. How Come? explains, in fascinating detail, more than 200 mysteries and phenomena in the world around us. These are the questions that pique kids’ curiosity—and stump parents.When it rains, does running (rather than walking) to the nearest shelter really keep you any drier? How can a stone skip across a pond (instead of sink)? If the Earth is spinning, why can’t we feel it? Why don’t we fly off? Why do elephants have trunks? And the all-time classic, Why is the sky blue? (Sunlight has a hidden rainbow of colors, and air molecules scatter blues the most—sending bright blue light down to Earth.) The text is clearly written, engaging, and accessible. It’s for every kid who wants to know—and every grown-up who simply doesn’t know.

How Did Robots Land on Mars? (How'd They Do That? Ser.)

by Clara MacCarald

After traveling millions of miles through space, roving robots gently landed on Mars and then drove across its surface. Read this book to learn how engineers accomplished these amazing feats of space exploration.

How Did Tea And Taxes Spark A Revolution?: And Other Questions About The Boston Tea Party (Six Questions Of American History)

by Linda Gondosch

On a cold evening in December 1773, a group of men climbed aboard three ships docked in Boston Harbor. Armed with hatchets, the men began breaking into the ships’ valuable cargo―342 crates of tea. They dumped the tea into the black water of the harbor and then marched back home through the city streets. This “Boston Tea Party” was a bold act of protest by American colonists against British rule. It pushed the colonies and Great Britain a step closer to war. But who were these protestors? Why would they risk angering the powerful British government? And how did the British respond? Discover the facts about the Boston Tea Party and the colonists’ struggle for independent rule.

How Did That Get to My Table? Salad (Community Connections)

by Emily J. Dolbear

Young readers will gain an understanding on how salad is grown and how it ends up on their table. Picture descriptions added.

How Did They Do That?

by Charles Hirsch Susan Meyers

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Refine Search

Showing 12,551 through 12,575 of 30,699 results