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Mojo and the Russians
by Walter Dean MyersA little bit of Mojo goes a long way for a group of youngsters trying to protect their friend from some suspicious characters.
Molang Loves (Molang)
by Jenne Simon<P> Molang loves lots of things... like dressing up in silly costumes and watching movies and taking pictures and, of course, going to parties! Today Molang and Piu Piu are going to a party at a friend's house, but Piu Piu is having a bad feather day! Looks like it's up to Molang to cheer Piu Piu up. Because if there's one thing Molang loves more than anything, it's Piu Piu. <P>Don't miss this beautiful storybook!
Molds and Fungi
by Buffy SilvermanMolds and other fungi live all over the world. Despite the amazing variety of fungi, all are alike in important ways. This book describes the characteristics of the fungi kingdom and portrays the life cycles of unusual and important fungi. The role of fungi in the food chain is explored, as is the impact of fungi on people.
Moldylocks and the Three Beards: A Branches Book (Princess Pink and the Land of Fake-Believe #1)
by Noah Z. JonesNoah Z. Jones turns well-known fairy tales upside-down in this humorous new series!This series is part of Scholastic's early chapter book line called Branches, which is aimed at newly independent readers. With easy-to-read text, high-interest content, fast-paced plots, and illustrations on every page, these books will boost reading confidence and stamina. Branches books help readers grow!In the Land of Fake Believe, Princess meets a strange girl named Moldylocks. When Princess's stomach grumbles, Moldylocks takes her to the home of the Three Beards. The girls sit in the Beards' chairs, eat their chili, and jump on their beds. The Three Beards are not happy when they get home--and they are very, very hungry! Will Moldylocks and Princess go into the chili pot? With easy-to-read text and engaging full-color artwork throughout, kids will be drawn right into this very funny land of fractured fairy tales!
Mole Is Not Alone
by Maya TatsukawaIn this cozy picture book about friendship, Mole anxiously decides to journey through underground tunnels to attend a party.Mole is invited to a party, which is very worrisome. What if the party is too rowdy for Mole? What if Mole doesn’t know anyone there? What if Mole is just too shy to make friends? Mole worries through the tunnels, around Snake’s burrow, under the forest, past Bear’s den, and all the way to Rabbit’s door. But despite all those worries, maybe Mole can find a quiet way to make friends . . . With warm and sweet illustrations, every page of Mole Is Not Alone is an invitation to look and look again. Readers can follow Mole’s tunnel as it connects from one page to the next, learning along the way that everyone can make friends, even if some parties are quieter than others.An Indie Next List Pick A Kirkus Review Best Book of 2023A Book Page Best Book of 2023
Mole Rat Keeps His Feet Dry: A Kenyan Folk Tale
by Gail JarrowElephant, Giraffe, and Lion urge Mole Rat to escape the rain with them, but Mole Rat assures them that he will stay dry underground.
Mole and Shrew All Year Through
by Jackie French KollerMole and Shrew celebrate a holiday for each season of the year and an extra one for New Year's. Whether Mole is worried about what a resolution is or hunting for the perfect "fur" tree, there is plenty of joy and hilarious confusion in this charming chapter book reissue.
Mole and Shrew Are Two
by Jackie French KollerFor fans of the Frog and Toad books and Amelia Bedelia stories, the antic tales of Mole and Shrew will prove to be worthy successors. In the introductory title, find out how Mole and Shrew first meet, how Mole finds a new home, and how, with much confusion along the way, Mole and Shrew finally become fast friends!
Mole and Shrew Find a Clue
by Jackie French KollerOne day, while Mole is out shopping, he overhears Buzzard telling someone that she is going to have Rabbit and his family for dinner. Could this be true? Could Buzzard be plotting to eat the whole Rabbit clan? It's up to Mole and his brave friend Shrew to get to the bottom of the situation. . . .
Mole and Shrew Have Jobs to Do
by Jackie French KollerIn this third title about Mole and Shrew, the fabulous friends find themselves a little short of cash. At Shrew's suggestion, the two head into the working world with hysterical results. Mole manages to thwart their attempts at everything from hanging wallpaper ("Where are the hooks?" asks Mole) to waiting on tables ("Why would you want to wait on a table? A chair would be more comfortable. ").
Mole and Shrew Step Out
by Jackie French KollerMole commits a comic blunder regarding a fancy ball, but his good friend Shrew sticks by him.
Mole's Home (Fountas & Pinnell Classroom, Guided Reading)
by Aleksey Ivanov Olga Ivanov Casey MaoNIMAC-sourced textbook
Mole's Star
by Britta TeckentrupA magical, star-filled picture book about learning to share the wonders of our world.Every evening, Mole comes out of his burrow to watch the twinkling stars in the sky above. How he wishes he could have them for his very own! Then one night he sees a shooting star, and suddenly his wish comes true. There's just one problem: now that Mole's burrow is full of beautiful, shining stars, none of the other animals can enjoy them . . .Written and illustrated by the award-winning Britta Teckentrup, this beautiful picture book will spark conversations about sharing, friendship and using the resources of our world responsibly.Look out for more books from Britta Teckentrup:Little Mouse and the Red Wall The Memory TreeMy Hand in Your HandNever Take a Bear to School
Moles (Superpower Field Guide)
by Rachel PoliquinFunny and fact-filled, MOLES is another installment in the SUPERPOWER FIELD GUIDES series by author Rachel Poliquin, featuring full-color illustrations by Nicholas John Frith that will engage readers with witty narration and fun visual elements, inspiring readers to dig deep and see the world, both above and below ground, with new eyes. Meet Rosalie, a common mole. The first thing you need to know about Rosalie is that she is shaped like a potato. Not a new potato, all cute and round, but a plain old lumpy potato. She may be small. She may be spongy. But never underestimate a mole. I know what you’re thinking: moles are just squinty-eyed beasts that wreck your lawn. You’re right! Those squinty eyes and mounds of dirt are proof that moles have superpowers. There is absolutely nothing common about the common mole.
Molla e i saltasassi
by Rafael EstradaVi ho mai raccontato la storia di Molla? Molla era un bambino con il naso da topo, lo sguardo sognante e i capelli da porcospino. Credeva di poter fare qualunque cosa gli venisse in mente, tanto era buono ed innocente. —Mi piacerebbe saper saltare come i saltasassi —disse un giorno, quasi senza sapere perché, abbastanza forte da essere sentito da tutti. Sua madre, Balestra, sorrise come fanno le mamme; Elastico, suo padre, tossì come fanno i papà; e il nonno mosse il capo su e giù. Balestra conosceva più di chiunque altro la tendenza di Molla ad immaginare cose impossibili, e mentre gli pettinava gli indomabili capelli, con tutta la pazienza di una madre, gli chiese: —Che pazzia è questa di sognare di saltare, come se non avessimo i saltasassi? —Ma mamma, ti assicuro che non è una pazzia! Sono sicuro che con un po’ di esercizio ci si potrebbe riuscire. —Figlio mio, ti rendi conto che sarebbe come dire che annaffiandoti tutti i giorni, prima o poi comincerai a fare fiori e frutti? Molla la guardò di sghimbescio e arricciò il naso, sforzandosi di capire quello che sua madre voleva dirgli. Poi, con un sorriso, le rispose: —Tu lo sai che non è la stessa cosa, mamma… Nemmeno per un momento pensò di mettersi a discutere con suo figlio, perché sapeva quanto potesse essere ostinato. E così continuò a pettinarlo guardando verso la finestra, forse nella speranza che da lì potesse giungere qualche risposta. Poiché così non fu, si strinse nelle spalle rinunciando a domare sia Molla che i suoi ciuffi ribelli. —Coraggio, tesoro —gli disse, —fai colazione. Tutto questo succedeva durante una mattina soleggiata, quando l’inverno cominciava già ad accomiatarsi dalla Pietraia. L’erba si lasciava cadere ora da una parte, ora dall’altra, secondo il volere del vento.
Molly & Pim and the Millions of Stars
by Martine MurrayFor fans of Katherine Rundell’s Rooftoppers comes a story about mothers and daughters and magical trees that Rebecca Stead calls “an utter delight.” All Molly wants is to be normal like her friend Ellen Palmer. Ellen, with her neat braids and a tidy house and a mother and father who are home for dinner every night. But Molly’s mom spends her mornings tramping through the woods, looking for ingredients for her potions. Their house is not neat, and their rooster, the Gentleman, runs wild in their yard. And it is the Gentleman that angers their grumpy neighbors, the Grimshaws. So Molly’s mom makes a potion that will grow a tree between their houses. When Molly’s mom accidentally drinks the potion and turns into the tree, Molly is determined to get her back. But with the Grimshaws planning to cut down the tree branches that reach onto their property, time is of the essence. With the help of her mysterious classmate Pim Wilder, Molly sets out to save her mother and discovers the wonder that lies in the ordinary. Praise for Molly & Pim and the Millions of Stars: “Open-hearted and magical—an utter delight.” —Rebecca Stead, author of When You Reach Me and Goodbye, Stranger “A beautiful, magical story, full of surprises and brimming with wisdom.” —Karen Foxlee, author of Ophelia and the Marvelous Boy
Molly Bannaky
by Alice Mcgill Chris K. SoentpietOn a cold gray morning in 1683, Molly Walsh sat on a stool tugging at the udder of an obstinate cow. When she spilled the milk, she was brought before the court for stealing. Because she could read, Molly escaped the typical punishment of death on the gallows. At the age of seventeen, the English dairymaid was exiled from her country and sentenced to work as an indentured servant in British Colonial America. Molly worked for a planter in Maryland for seven long years. Then she was given an ox hitched to a cart, some supplies-and her freedom. That a lone woman should stake land was unheard of. That she would marry an African slave was even more so. Yet Molly prospered, and with her husband Bannaky, she turned a one-room cabin in the wilderness into a thriving one hundred-acre farm. And one day she had the pleasure of writing her new grandson's name in her cherished Bible: Benjamin Banneker.<P><P> Jane Addams Children’s Book Award Winner
Molly Gets Mad
by Suzy KlineSurprise--Molly's in trouble again! Molly Zander and her best friend Morty get more surprises than they bargained for on their "surprise" class trip to the town's brand-new ice rink. Everyone tries to guess the secret destination, but when they get to the rink, Molly finds out she's not the only star athlete around anymore--she has some real competition in Florence, a talented figure skater. Though Molly risks her friendship with Morty by trying to be number one, in the end she decides that some things are more important than being the best.
Molly Gets a Goat: (and Wants To Give It Back) (Dear Molly, Dear Olive)
by Megan AtwoodCity-girl Molly makes a bet with her pen pal, Olive, who lives on a farm in Iowa. Olive doesn't believe Molly knows what real country life is like, and Molly doesn't think Olive would do well in a city. Through a series of emails, they decide they will each spend a day living like the other one does. Between hungry goats and confusing city transportation, the girls realize walking in another person's shoes is not as easy as they expected! First-person narratives that alternate point-of-view from chapter to chapter show the crazy struggles of these two relatable characters.
Molly Helps Mother
by Laura Clay"One day Mother was very sick. She was so sick that she had to stay in bed, so Grandma came to spend the day while Father was at work. Molly wanted to help Mother too but she did not know what to do."
Molly Learns A Lesson: A School Story (American Girls #2)
by Valerie TrippFrom the book: "When the teacher announces the Lend-a-Hand Contest to help the war effort, Molly is determined that the third grade girls will plan the winning project. Instead, they choose an idea that Molly knows will never work out. So she talks two friends into planning their own project and keeping it a secret from the rest of the girls in the class. But the secret project turns out to be harder than Molly thought it would be. She begins to worry that it might not win after all and decides to spy on the other girls to see how they are doing. When Molly and her friends get caught peeking in a window, they learn some important lessons."
Molly Mackerel McNo (Fountas & Pinnell Classroom, Guided Reading Grade 4)
by Karen Donnelly Nadia HigginsNIMAC-sourced textbook
Molly Marches On Collection (American Girls Short Stories #18)
by Valerie TrippMolly is disappointed. The hike is nothing like she imagined. The girls sound like a herd of elephants, the trail is marked, and even the leader blows a bugle to get their attention. Nothing is being done the way Sacagawea would have done it. <P><P>When Molly's team comes to a split in the trail, she breaks the rules of hiking and sets out on her own. <P>This file should make an excellent embossed braille copy.
Molly McGinty Has a Really Good Day
by Gary PaulsenProper Catholic schoolgirl Molly already puts up with her wacky grandmother Irene. But when she loses her all-important Notebook, life becomes a slapstick nightmare.