Little Red Riding Hood


Book Description

Read it yourself is a learning to read series of classic, traditional stories with four levels of difficulty to suit the stage your child is at with reading. Written in a simple way for young readers, they will build their confidence in learning to read as they progress through each level.




Little Red Riding Hood: Read It Yourself - Level 2 Developing Reader


Book Description

Based on the much-loved fairy tale. Little Red Riding Hood goes to visit her grandmother on the other side of the forest. But Grandmother's voice sounds funny, and, oh, what BIG teeth she has! Is she quite who she seems? Little Red Riding Hood is from Developing Reader Level 2 and is ideal for readers aged from 5+ who can read short, simple sentences with help. Based on the much-loved fairy tale. Little Red Riding Hood goes to visit her grandmother on the other side of the forest. But Grandmother's voice sounds funny, and, oh, what BIG teeth she has! Is she quite who she seems? Each book has been carefully checked by educational and subject consultants and includes comprehension puzzles, book band information, and tips for helping children with their reading. With five levels to take children from first phonics to fluent reading and a wide range of different stories and topics for every interest, Read It Yourself helps children build their confidence and begin reading for pleasure.




Little Red Riding Hood


Book Description

Simple text and captivating illustrations are paired with beautiful music and fun sound-effects to help tell the classic tale of "Little Red Riding Hood." When Little Red Riding Hood’s grandmother becomes sick, she decides to visit her and bring her a basket of her favorite things. Her mother warns her to not talk to any strangers on her journey. But Little Red Riding Hood soon forgets her mother’s warning and talks to a wolf along her way. The clever wolf races ahead to Grandmother’s house because he wants a tasty supper. Find out how a nearby woodcutter saves Little Red Riding Hood and her Grandmother. A happy ending adds interest to this fairy tale and encourages a lifelong love for reading.




Little Red Riding Hood


Book Description

Little Red Riding Hood sets off through the forest to visit her grandmother, who is ill. On the way, she meets a big, bad wolf. But watch out, the wolf has a sneaky plan!




Read It Yourself Level 2 Little Red Riding Hood


Book Description

Helping to build the confidence in children in learning to read, this title features the stories which are told with frequent repetition of the main story words and phrases.




Sly Fox and Red Hen


Book Description

Read it yourself is a series of popular, traditional tales written in a simple way for children who are learning to read. Sly Fox and Red Hen is at level 2, which is for beginner readers who can read short simple sentences with help.




Petite Rouge


Book Description

Big Bad Gator Claude will do anything to have a taste of Petite Rouge...even if it means putting on a duck bill, flippers, and frilly underwear. He presents no match for the spunky heroine and her quick-thinking cat TeJean, though, as they use some strong Cajun hot sauce to teach Claude a lesson he will never forget! The combination of hilarious rhyme and exaggerated art creates a highly original retelling of the classic fairy tale. A pronunciation guide/glossary accompanies a tempting dialect that begs to be read aloud or acted out again and again. This is Little Red Riding Hood as she's never been seen before: Cajun and ducky.




Mighty Red Riding Hood


Book Description

A smart and sassy boy in a red riding hood confronts a pushy wolf espousing gender norms.




Little Red Riding Hood


Book Description

A rendition of the favorite folktale about a little girl who goes through the woods to visit her grandmother and encounters a sly wolf on the way.




Read it Yourself Book Box (Level Four)


Book Description

With accessible writing, Neal Singer introduces young readers to what fusion is--and isn't. He explains the ways scientists have approached and developed fusion and discusses its advantages over other forms of energy production. Mention nuclear fusion--the joining of two light atoms to form a heavier one--and most people think of bombs. But fusion has other uses, too. Inside an encapsulated space at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico, scientists test the Z Machine, a pulsed power structure that uses electricity and magnetism to produce nuclear fusion. Although much of the research has focused on the development of nuclear weaponry, the Z Machine--along with the ITER machine in France and the National Ignition Facility in California, also discussed in suitable detail--may also help scientists find a way to harness fusion energy in order to provide clean, renewable energy to the world's growing population.