My Nose, Your Nose


Book Description

People can look different from one another, but in lots of ways they are just the same. Like Arthur, whose nose turns up and Agnes whose nose turns down - they both love the smell of chocolate cake! A fun and educational picture book with bold and vibrant illustrations ideal for the very young. Companion to MY BEAK, YOUR BEAK.




Is This My Nose?


Book Description

Can you find your nose, eyes, ears, mouth and chin? This vibrant book encourages little ones to associate words and pictures with their own bodies. Open the fold-out mirror at the back of the book to help them discover their own faces as you read aloud together.




Your Nose!


Book Description

You can tell everybody I told you so. It’s the greatest little nose I know. Starring a little fox child and a big fox parent, here’s a loving ode to terrific noses of all kinds. Your Nose! is a year-round valentine in the tradition of beloved Boynton board books like Snuggle Puppy. It’s a celebration of the love between a parent and child—and of the beautiful, boop-able noses we love.




The Nose Book


Book Description

"I see a nose on every face. I see noses every place!” Noses come in all shapes, colors, and sizes and are handy to have for sniffling, smelling, and . . . playing horns? This simple, sometimes silly story offers little ones a first ode to the nose and all that it does.




The Holes in Your Nose


Book Description

This second book in the My Body Science series confronts the curiosity children have about the holes in their noses. For an entertaining, informative and hopefully helpful few minutes, read this book to a child. You'll both have fun! Full color.




My Nose, Your Nose


Book Description

Looks at what pairs of children have in common, despite their obvious differences, such as Daisy and Kit both kicking hard in the swimming pool, although one's legs are short and the other's long.




Where's My Nose?


Book Description

A host of adorable babies star in this rhyming board book as they search through their clothes, under furniture, and everywhere for their noses. Includes a Mylar mirror in the back of the book. Full-color illustrations.




What Your Nose Shows


Book Description

Alongside Wallace Stevens, James Merrill, and other pillars of twentieth-century poetry, Anthony Hecht joins the Borzoi Poetry series. Hecht, whose writing rings with the cadences of the King James Bible, and who, as an infantryman at the end of World War II, participated in the liberation of the concentration camps, lived and experienced the best and worst of the twentieth century. Readers of this volume&—the first selected poems to be made from Hecht&’s seven individual volumes&—will be captivated by Hecht&’s dark music and allusions to the literature of the past. As J. D. McClatchy explains in his introduction, Hecht was a poet for whom formal elegance was inextricably bound up with the dramatic force, thematic ambition, and powerful emotions in each poem. The rules of his art, which he both honored and transformed, are &“moral principles meant finally to reveal the structure of human dilemmas and sympathies.&” This elevated sense of what poetry can accomplish defines our experience of reading Hecht, and will ensure his place in the canon for years to come. Adam and Eve knew such perfection once, God&’s finger in the cloud, and on the ground Nothing but springtime, nothing else at all. But in our fallen state where the blood hunts For blood, and rises at the hunting sound, What do we know of lasting since the fall? Who has not, in the oil and heat of youth, Thought of the flourishing of the almond tree, The grasshopper, and the failing of desire, And thought his tongue might pierce the secrecy Of the six-pointed starlight, and might choir A secret-voweled, unutterable truth? &—from &“A Poem for Julia&” From the Trade Paperback edition.




My Nose, My Toes and Me!


Book Description

A question-and-answer introduction to body parts, with the answers concealed under lift-up flaps.




Under Your Nose


Book Description

Chloe and Zachary must do without their personal electronics while they stay at the family cottage. With nature's playground at their feet, they discover that the great outdoors is much more fun than anything their tablets have to offer.