Book 30 in the Magic Tree House series (2003) A novel by Mary Pope Osborne The intrepid Jack and Annie are summoned once again to the fantasy realm of Camelot. There, Merlin the Magician tells them that the Stone of Destiny has been stolen. The answer to its disappearance lies within a haunted castle. With a young magician named Teddy, Jack and Annie take on the challenge in an adventure that takes them to new heights and places they couldnt even imagine!
In this issue of National Geographic Kids, discover how emperor penguin parents make sure their chicks thrive in harsh conditions. Then find out about an orphaned sun bear named Natalie, and meet the kind caretaker who helped her return to the wild. Next, see what some of history's most fearsome fighters wore on the battlefield.
In this issue of National Geographic Kids, discover how emperor penguin parents make sure their chicks thrive in harsh conditions. Then find out about an orphaned sun bear named Natalie, and meet the kind caretaker who helped her return to the wild. Next, see what some of history's most fearsome fighters wore on the battlefield.
Get ready for some way-great playdates inside and outside Blue's Room! Little ones will help Joe search for clues, and talk, play, and pretend with Blue in her playroom. In Snacktime Playdate children join Blue in her room for a snack-filled good time with games, art, stories and more. Then, Blue and Joe meet a wand named Wish in Blue's Wishes and Joe plays Blue's Clues to figure out what Blue wants to wish for.
The Nanny Diaries is an absolutely addictive peek into the utterly weird world of child rearing in the upper reaches of Manhattan's social strata. Cowritten by two former nannies, Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus, the novel follows the adventures of the aptly named Nan as she negotiates the Byzantine byways of working for Mrs. X, a Park Avenue mommy. Nan's 4-year-old charge, the hilariously named Grayer (his pals include Josephina, Christabelle, Brandford, and Darwin) is a genuinely good sort. He can't help it if his mom has scheduled him for every activity known to the Upper East Side.
Word Family Tales are humorous read-aloud stories created to build early phonics skills by teaching children to recognize “families” of words that share the same spelling pattern. This key reading strategy helps kids decode new words with ease—and become stronger readers, writers, and spellers.