How Spider Saved Thanksgiving


Book Description

When Spider's teacher, Miss Quito, forgets to bring a turkey to the school Thanksgiving pageant, Spider quickly makes one out of balloons




How Spider Saved Easter


Book Description

Although he doesn't usually celebrate Easter, Spider has some pleasant adventures with Ladybug and Fly.




How Spider Saved Valentine's Day


Book Description

When spider discovers how everyone in the class had received valentines except the two lazy caterpillars in the back, he comes up with a unique way to say Happy Valentine's Day to them.




How Spider Saved Thanksgiving


Book Description

Thanksgiving is turkey day--but not at Bugtown School. Miss Quito has forgotten to cast the turkey in her class's Thanksgiving Day play. Then Spider comes to the rescue with a brilliant idea!




How Spider Saved the Baseball Game


Book Description

Spider cannot hit, field, or catch, so he becomes the pitcher, and at the bottom of the ninth it was up to him.




How Spider Saved Turkey


Book Description

Spider and his friends share their meager Thanksgiving meal with an unexpected guest.




The Giant Encyclopedia of Circle Time and Group Activities for Children 3 to 6


Book Description

Contains more than six hundred circle time and group activities designed by teachers to use with children three to six years old, each including a suggested age, a list of materials, and step-by-step directions, and features lists of related books, songs, and poems.




How Spider Saved Christmas


Book Description

Spider thought his Christmas presents to Fly and Ladybug were unappreciated until the gifts were used to prevent a disaster.




How Spider Saved Halloween


Book Description

Fly and Ladybug's squashed Jack-o'-lantern helps Spider think of a costume that saves Halloween from disaster.




Thank You, Sarah


Book Description

From the author of Speak and Fever, 1793, comes the never-before-told tale of Sarah Josepha Hale, the extraordinary "lady editor" who made Thanksgiving a national holiday! Thanksgiving might have started with a jubilant feast on Plymouth's shore. But by the 1800s America's observance was waning. None of the presidents nor Congress sought to revive the holiday. And so one invincible "lady editor" name Sarah Hale took it upon herself to rewrite the recipe for Thanksgiving as we know it today. This is an inspirational, historical, all-out boisterous tale about perseverance and belief: In 1863 Hale's thirty-five years of petitioning and orations got Abraham Lincoln thinking. He signed the Thanksgiving Proclamation that very year, declaring it a national holiday. This story is a tribute to Hale, her fellow campaigners, and to the amendable government that affords citizens the power to make the world a better place! Included in this e-book edition is a read-along option.