"Watermelons are fruits. Cabbages are leaves. Walnuts are seeds. Carrots are roots. People eat many parts of plants. Even flowers!--
This field guide identifies the plants that honey bees and native bees – as well as butterflies, moths, and hummingbirds – find most nutritious, including flowers, trees, shrubs, herbs, and pasture plants.
A sweeping portrait of the world's oceans lyrically explains the precarious balance that sustains life cycles and food chains under the sea. By the Caldecott Honor-winning author of When Sophie Gets Angry--Really, Really Angry.
Jerry Pallotta, author of more than 50 children's books, visits at least 150 schools each year. His book, The Icky Bug Alphabet Book, has sold more than one million copies.
Fran and her dog Fred try many things to get a small bud to grow into a flower, but it isn't until Fran puts the flower outside that she gets a big surprise just for her.
Learning about fruits and vegetables becomes fun in What's in the Garden? This book serves as a garden tool for kids and doubles as a healthy cookbook, with tons of kid-friendly recipes for you to cook with your child.
Illustrations offer support for decoding the more challenging vocabulary words introduced. The books in the award-winning I Like to Read series are especially created for new readers and are leveled using Fountas & Pinnell standards.
An array of collages follows the progress of a mother and daughter as they plant bulbs, seeds, and seedlings and watch them grow into a rainbow of colorful flowers.
Rhyming text and illustrations invite young readers to follow the stages of flower growth as a tiny seed matures and blooms into a beautiful flower.
While planting seeds in their garden, two animals learn the value of kindness.
"Simple text and photographs describe how apples grow on trees"--Provided by publisher.