Mother Grouch Nursery Rhymes


Book Description

Traditional nursery rhymes with a Sesame Street Flavor. Each rhyme has a special scene depicting the gang from Sesame Street under the lift-up flap.




The Sesame Street Mother Goose


Book Description

Familiar nursery rhymes are accented by pop-up illustrations of Sesame Street figures assuming the roles of Mother Goose characters




Big Bird's Mother Goose


Book Description

Twelve nursery rhymes are acted out by the Sesame Street Muppets in Mother Goose costumes.




What Are You So Grumpy About?


Book Description

A collection of cartoons that present various reasons for being grumpy, such as eating "grown-up" cereal, getting a boring birthday present, doing chores, and being touched by a brother or sister.







WALC 6


Book Description

Provides a comprehensive series of tasks and functional carryover activities allowing for integration of language and cognitive skills for neurologically-impaired adolescents and adults with diverse levels of functioning. Exercises cover a broad scope of skills including orientation, auditory comprehension, verbal expression, and reading comprehension.




Die, Mother Goose, Die


Book Description

When Misty rammed the ice pick in his head, she felt alive, free, and wonderful. And the best part was she had six more to do. With a sigh, her mind went to an earlier time as she squatted in the corner and sucked her thumb. Childlike tears rolled down her cheeks as she hugged her Raggedy Ann doll and recited a Mother Goose nursery rhyme. Mary, Mary, quite contrary. How. . . . . . Police Sergeant Jack Delaney and the Doom squad were stumped. The murders had no common link. He knew if they could find the motive, they would solve the case. The problem was the motive was created fifty years ago.







Through the Eyes of a Child


Book Description

Looks at the history of children's literature, discusses criteria for evaluation, and surveys genres.




Mother Goose


Book Description

A modern edition of a book first published in 1913.