A SMALL BEAR WITH BIG ADVENTURES It's a boring, rainy afternoon -- the perfect time for Teddy Bear to share his scrapbook of memories with the little girls who owns him.
James HoweJAMES HOWE began his writing career with "Bunnicula," which was published in 1979. This book and the next, "Teddy Bear's Scrapbook," were coauthored with his late wife, Deborah.
Horace and Morris (but mostly Dolores) love cheese.
Howie, the wirehaired dachshund, tries his paw at writing a new kind of novel, a mystery in which he imagines himself as a private investigator and Delilah as the "mysterious dame."
An anthropological analysis of the importance of meetings in Kuna village-level politics.
New from the author of Bunnicula and There's a Monster Under My Bed.
Pinky learns the importance of identity as he defends his favorite color, pink, and his friendship with a girl, Rex, from the neighborhood bully.
Nothing is much fun without your best friend, as Pinky discovers one day when he wants to play and Rex isn't home.
The timing could not be worse for Delores the mouse when she develops a food allergy to yummy cheese right before the Everything Cheese Festival.
Excited about holding onto his position as the best speller in the second grade, Pinky has an embarrassing accident but is cheered up by his best friend Rex.
Excited about holding onto his position as the best speller in the second grade, Pinky has an embarrassing accident but is cheered up by his best friend Rex.
Rex is worried about making a fool of herself in the third-grade spelling bee, but Pinky discovers that misspelling a word isn't the most embarrassing thing that can happen in front of the whole class. Reprint.
Sequel to: Bunnicula / Deborah Howe and to: Howliday Inn / James Howe.
Celery Stalks at Midnight
For use in schools and libraries only. Narrated by the Monroe family dog Harold, these books tell the tale of a vampire bunny named Bunnicula who sucks the juice out of vegetables.
For use in schools and libraries only. When their family goes on vacation, Chester the cat and Harold the dog go to stay at Chateau Bow-Wow, where--with the other residents--they become involved in various mysteries and intrigues.
Chester the cat is more than ever convinced that Bunnicula is a vampire when there is a harvest of white vegetables on the morning after the night that Bunnicula was probably wandering through the neighborhood.
For use in schools and libraries only. Though scoffed at by Harold the dog, Chester the cat tries to warn his human family that their foundling baby bunny must be a vampire.
They drew up theories and practical proposals which combined the inheritance of physiocracy, the burgeoning political economy and Saint-Simon's industrialist philosophy.The main aim of this work is to enable readers to have access to this ...
Before it''s too late, Harold the dog and Chester the cat must find out the truth about the newest pet in the Monroe household -- a suspicious-looking bunny with unusual habits...and fangs!