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Cabin Fever Story Time: The Letter X

Read in Tuesday Book Babies

Written by Bridget Heos
Illutsrated by Dan Regan
Mid-Continent Public Library, 2015.  Picture Book.

An alien goes to the Mid-Continent Public Library's space branch and learns how to plant the seeds of reading through words.  --Publisher





Read in Wednesday Preschool Time

By Ged Adamson
Schwartz & Wade Books, 2019.  Picture Book.

A little fox is digging for food when--OUCH! What is that?--the fox finds a box! When the fox brings the box home to his animal friends--and turns a funny-looking knob--the box starts to sing, and music fills the forest. Everyone agrees that it feels nice. Day and night, they listen to the box's songs, until, one day, it goes quiet. No matter what they try, they just can't get the box to sing again. The animals stop swishing their tails and flapping their wings.... But, in the silence, the fox hears the drip-drop rhythm of melting icicles and the thump thump of a beaver's tail and comes to realize music is everywhere. The noises of the forest and the animals build into a symphony, until, eventually, everyone joins together in a joyous dance party.  --Publisher




Read in Wednesday Preschool Time

By Kate Read
Peachtree Publishing Company Inc., 2019.  Picture Book.

A stunningly gorgeous counting book with a delightful surprise
One hungry fox with two sly eyes is on the prowlā€¦three plump hens had better watch out! Rich and colorful illustrations plunge the reader into a dramatic and exciting story set in a moonlit farmyard. With something different to count on each page, learning to count from one to ten has never been so thrilling! This surprisingly simple counting book with a gripping tale, great for early education and read-alouds, has a hugely satisfying ending that's sure to delight generations.  --Publisher




Read in Thursday Toddler Time

Written by Jane Yolen
Illustrated by Chris Sheban
Creative Editions, 2016.  Picture Book.

If you give a child a box, who can tell what will happen next? It may become a library or a boat. It could set the scene for a fairy tale or a wild expedition. The most wonderful thing is its seemingly endless capacity for magical adventure, a feature imaginatively captured in cardboardesque art by Chris Sheban and rhythmically celebrated in this poetic tribute by renowned children's author Jane Yolen.  --Publisher




Read in Friday Cuentos

Escrito y Ilustrado por Mo Willems
Traducido por Anna Llisterri
Andana Editorial, 2018.  Spanish Picture Book.

La paloma estĆ” muy sucia, pero no quiere ir a baƱarse.  --Publisher

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