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Flipping forward twisting backward / by Fullerton, Alma.; Mensinga, Sarah.;
LSC
Subjects: Novels in verse.; Learning disabled children; Gymnasts; Girls;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 2
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Community soup / by Fullerton, Alma.;
In a garden outside a Kenyan schoolhouse, the children work together to harvest the vegetables they have grown and make them into a soup for everyone to share, but Kioni's goats have followed her to school today and they are trying to eat all the vegetables.LSC
Subjects: Community gardens; Community kitchens;
© c2013., Pajama Press,
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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No more plastic / by Fullerton, Alma.;
When she sees a beached whale that has starved to death after ingesting plastic, a young girl named Isley is inspired to adopt a plastic-free lifestyle, encouraging her family to join her. When people start falling back into old habits, Isley builds a plastic sculpture of a whale that inspires lasting change.LSC
Subjects: Plastic scrap; Plastic marine debris; Waste disposal in the ocean; Children and the environment;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Hand over hand / by Fullerton, Alma.; Benoit, Renné.;
Nina wants to learn how to fish but her grandfather as always reply "A boat is no place for a girl". When Nina promises to bait her own hook and remove her own catch, her grandfather finally relents, "just for today." Lolo shows Nina how to jig the lines, set the hook and pull in a fish hand over hand. But no one is laughing when Nina brings in the biggest fish of the day!LSC
Subjects: Fishing stories.; Grandfathers; Granddaughters; Fishing villages;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The journal of anxious Izzy Parker / by Fullerton, Alma.; Mistry, Beena.;
"Izzy wants to be a lion. But mostly, she feels like a mouse. Eight-year-old Izzy Parker's biggest problem is feeling anxious and afraid. Her mom's decision to move them across the country to Prince Edward Island didn't help. Izzy worries she will say the wrong thing or laugh at the wrong time, and none of the kids will want to be her friend. Sometimes, it's so hard to be Izzy that she can't breathe. In her honest, awkward, and anxious journal, Izzy writes down the story of her life and how she is trying to be a little less afraid. The good news: things might not be as bad as they seem. Even better? They will soon have a small, furry new family member--an emotional support dog named Gandalf!"--
Subjects: Diary fiction.; Anxiety; Moving, Household;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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