Shannon Workman's Library
Norman Smith Elementary
ISBN | Title | Author | Description | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
Where Is My Teddy? | ||||
9780064431781 | Where the Wild Things Are | Maurice Sendak | Max is sent to bed without supper and imagines sailing away to the land of Wild Things,where he is made king. | Harper Collins |
9780395902851 | Where's Cupcake? | Catherine Peters | ||
Whistle For A Willy | ||||
9780590638739 | Who Beats the Heat? | Pamela Chanko, Daniel Moreton | Photographs and simple text introduce animals that live in the desert. | Scholastic Paperbacks |
9780516420738 | Who Is Coming? | Pat McKissack | A little African monkey runs away from all the dangerous animals except one. | Childrens Press |
Who Lives In A Tree | ||||
Who Lives In The Arctic | ||||
9780590769617 | Who Lives in the Rainforest? | Susan Canizares, Mary Reid | Photographs and simple text explore the variety of animals found in the Amazon rainforest. | |
9780823981892 | Who's at School? | Fran Campbell | Color pictures and simple text name the various people-- not just teachers-- who work at a school. | Rosen Classroom |
Who's Hiding | ||||
0328157007 | Whose Garden Is It? | Mary Ann Hoberman | ||
059031808 | Whose Mouse are you? | Robert Kraus | ||
9780375825385 | Wild About Books | Judy Sierra | Knopf | |
Will Moses Raining Cats And Dogs | ||||
9780590107266 | Wind | Susan Canizares, Betsey Chessen | Shows that the wind has power to do many things such as make leaves fall, kites fly, and windmills spin. | Scholastic Teaching Resources |
9780140505795 | Wings | James Marshall | For use in schools and libraries only. Silly Minnie finds herself in all kinds of trouble when she accepts a balloon ride from a crafty fox, and it is up to her sensible friend Harriet to rescue her. | |
Winnie The Pooh Eeyore, Be Happy! | ||||
9781562826468 | Winnie The Pooh's Bedtime Stories | Bruce Talkington | Disney Press | |
9780545417211 | Wonder Horse | Emily Arnold McCully | A fictionalized account of Bill "Doc" Key, a former slave who became a veterinarian, trained his horse, Jim Key, to recognize letters and numbers and to perform in skits around the country, and moved the nation toward a belief in treating animals humanely. Includes an author's note. |