The forever garden / Laurel Snyder, Samantha Cotterill. [print]
Material type: TextPublication details: New York : Schwartz and Wade Books, (c)2017.Description: (unpaged) : illustrations ; 27 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780553512731
- 0553512730
- .S675.F674 2017
- COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Juvenile Book (10-day checkout) | G. Allen Fleece Library Juvenile Collection - Second Floor | Fiction | PZ7.S963.F674 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923001689963 |
Each day, rain or shine, Honey works in her garden, and each day, the little girl who lives next door is right by Honey's side. She hangs on the fence in the mornings. She watches from her window when it's raining. And on nice nights, when Honey eats in her garden, the girl goes over for dessert. Here's a heartwarming picture book that shows how friendship-- just like a garden-- grows. But ... what happens when one friend has to move away?
Preschool. Kindergarden. Grade one. Grade two. Grade three. https://www.amazon.com/Forever-Garden-Laurel-Snyder/dp/0553512730
Arkansasinterest Arkansasreading Arkansaspoints Arkansastest.
2.2 0.5 189201. MCPL
COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Laurel Snyder is a poet, essayist and occasional commentator for National Public Radio who is best known for her novels and picture books for young readers. She makes her home in Atlanta. In 2010, her book "Any Which Wall" was chosen for inclusion on the Georgia Center for the Book's inaugural list of "25 Books All Young Georgians Should Read." Laurel Snyder was born in Baltimore in 1974. In 1992 she came to the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga and fell in love with the South. A graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop and a former Michener-Engle Fellow, she moved to Atlanta in 2003. She has published poetry and essays in the Utne Reader, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Revealer, Salon and the Iowa Review. She also has delivered occasional essays on NPR "though most of the time I'm a mom," she says. She has written two books of poetry, "Daphne & Jim: A Choose-Your-Own-Adventure Biography in Verse" (2005) and "The Myth of Simple Machines" (2007). She also edited a book of essays, "Half/Life: Jew-ish Tales from Interfaith Homes" (2006). Her picture books include "Inside the Slidy Diner" (2008) and "Baxter: The Pig Who Wanted to be Kosher" (2010). Her three novels for young readers include "Any Which Wall" (2010), "Up and Down the Scratchy Mountains" (2010) and the forthcoming "Penny Dreadful." https://www.georgiacenterforthebook.org/Georgia-Literary-Map/Georgia-Author-Detail.php?record_id=188
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