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Father's Day Books and Resources
We collected some great Father's Day books to be enjoyed by the whole family.
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Father's Day Book Resources |
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Father's Day Books
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Just Me and My Dad
It's the tale of a father-and-son camping trip filled with Little Critter's mistakes and good intentions. In spite of difficulties, however, the happy father and son manage to put up their tent, catch fish for dinner, and sleep beneath the stars.
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Guess How Much I Love You
Fresh as a fiddlehead fern in spring, this beguiling bedtime tale features a pip of a young rabbit and his indulgent parent. Searching for words to tell his dad how much he loves him, Little Nutbrown Hare comes up with one example after another, only to have Big Nutbrown Hare continually up the ante.
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Owl Moon
A girl and her father go owling on a moonlit winter night near the farm where
they live. Bundled tight in wool clothes, they trudge through snow "whiter than the milk in a cereal bowl"; here and there, hidden in ink-blue shadows, a fox, raccoon, fieldmouse and deer watch them pass.
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Ramona and Her Father
Ramona's father has been laid off, and she desperately wishes she could go on TV and earn a million dollars to support her family. What she does instead is get burrs in her hair, a compulsion to stop her father from smoking, and some trouble in the second grade.
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The Berenstain Bears' and the Papa's Day Surprise
“Father’s Day is nothing but a greeting card holiday,” is what Papa says. If that’s the way Papa feels, then his family just won’t celebrate this year. But, as the big day rolls around, and there’s no card, no gift, and no breakfast in bed, Papa’s spirits sink lower and lower. That’s when the cubs spring on him their wonderful Papa’s Day surprise!
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The Day I Saw My Father Cry
The Day I Saw My Father Cry" tells of the very sad day when Little Bill and his father lost a special friend
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A Cloak For The Dreamer
Misha, the son of a tailor, doesn't want to follow in his father's footsteps as
his brothers do, but would rather travel the world. When the tailor tells each
of his sons to make a cloak for the archduke to test their skills, two of them
make patchworks of squares, triangles, and rectangles. Misha, inspired by the
maps he pores over, cuts circles, but they don't fit together, leaving spaces
between the pieces of fabric. Seeing the garment, the tailor realizes he must
let his son follow his dream.
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