How to read a story / by Kate Messner ; illustrated by Mark Siegel.
"A picture book celebration of the act of exploring--and sharing--a book"--Provided by publisher.
Record details
- ISBN: 1452112339
- ISBN: 9781452112336
- Physical Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations
- Publisher: San Francisco : Chronicle Books, [2015]
- Copyright: ©2015
Content descriptions
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note: | LSC 22.99 |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Books and reading > Juvenile literature. |
- Baker & Taylor
An uplifting celebration of the process of becoming a reader invites children to pull a book off a shelf, settle in with a reading partner and read aloud while considering how the story might turn out. Simultaneous eBook. - Baker & Taylor
Offers an illustrated guide for young children to the act of reading, given in ten steps, from finding a good story to saying "the end." - Baker & Taylor
"A picture book celebration of the act of exploring--and sharing--a book"-- - Grand Central Pub
Step One: Find a story. (A good one.)
Step Two: Find a reading buddy. (Someone nice.)
Step Three: Find a reading spot. (Couches are cozy.)
Now: Begin.
Accomplished storytellers Kate Messner and Mark Siegel chronicle the process of becoming a reader: from pulling a book off the shelf and finding someone with whom to share a story, to reading aloud, predicting what will happen, and'finally'coming to The End. This picture book playfully and movingly illustrates the idea that the reader who discovers the love of reading finds, at the end, the beginning. - Grand Central Pub
Step One: Find a story. (A good one.)
Step Two: Find a reading buddy. (Someone nice.)
Step Three: Find a reading spot. (Couches are cozy.)
Now: Begin.
Accomplished storytellers Kate Messner and Mark Siegel chronicle the process of becoming a reader: from pulling a book off the shelf and finding someone with whom to share a story, to reading aloud, predicting what will happen, andâfinallyâcoming to The End. This picture book playfully and movingly illustrates the idea that the reader who discovers the love of reading finds, at the end, the beginning.