Read and count along with Dr. Seuss and George Booth's classic Beginner Book full of errors. This is no ordinary day! There's a shoe on the ceiling and bananas in the apple tree, and it only gets wackier. From a hole in the kitchen table to a green sun in the sky, young readers will love finding each silly mistake. Illustrated by renowned New Yorker cartoonist George Booth, Wacky Wednesday is impossible to forget.
Originally created by Dr. Seuss, Beginner Books encourage children to read all by themselves, with simple words and illustrations that give clues to their meaning.
This book is a tour de force for helping with reading and counting to ten, using a vocabulary of only 75 words!
Drawings and verse point out the many things that are wrong one wacky Wednesday.
From the acclaimed author of Roll with It and Tune It Out comes a funny, moving, and “not to be missed” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review) middle grade novel about a boy who uses his unusual talent for decoding people’s trash to try to ...
Discover every single wacky mix-up in this senseless book of mistakes with Katherine Mann in The Wacky Wednesday From a shoe adhered on the roof to tigers at school to flying vehicles, this is no typical Wednesday!
With the endearing father-child dynamic of Jabari Jumps and engaging mixed-media illustrations, Gaia Cornwall’s tale shows that through perseverance and flexibility, an inventive thought can become a brilliant reality.
Readers young and old will be entertainedby this silly story. So turn the page and find out what could possibly happen next! Originally created by Dr. Seuss himself, Beginner Books are fun, funny, and easy to read.
This simple rhymed riff about color is illustrated with art from some of the most beloved--and colorful--works by Dr. Seuss.
On Wednesday nights when Grandma stays with Anna everyone thinks she is teaching Anna to read.
Rhyming text introduces counting, in a text with art from Dr. Seuss books.
But not for the book. Sometimes the little boy’s excitement gets the better of him and the book suffers from possibly too much love: bent pages, tears, hugs, tossing, and shaking. The poor book requires first aid from his friends.