| Annie Barrows - Best friends - 2010 - 140 pages
Best friends Ivy and Bean are back and looking for adventure in the second installment of this engaging new series. This time they've made an amazing discovery - a ghost in the ... | |
| Annie Barrows - Juvenile Fiction - 2013 - 383 pages
This three-book bundle is a great way to keep your little reader going. This bundle contains books 7-9 in the series, including: Ivy and Bean: What's the Big Idea?, Ivy and ... | |
| Annie Barrows - Juvenile Fiction - 2011 - 368 pages
New York Times best-selling series of books for children — Ivy + Bean Ivy and Bean, two friends who never meant to like each other: This boxed set, Ivy and Bean Boxed Set 2 ... | |
| Mary Ann Shaffer, Annie Barrows - Fiction - 2008 - 290 pages
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • NOW A NETFLIX FILM • A remarkable tale of the island of Guernsey during the German Occupation, and of a society as extraordinary as its name ... | |
| Annie Barrows - Juvenile Fiction - 2008 - 224 pages
Eleven-year-old Miri Gill feels left out in her family, which has two sets of twins and her, until she travels back in time to 1935 and discovers Molly, her own lost twin, and ... | |
| Annie Barrows - Juvenile Fiction - 2008 - 384 pages
Meet Ivy and Bean, two friends who never meant to like each other. This boxed set is a delightful introduction to these spunky characters. It includes the first three books in ... | |
| Annie Barrows - Juvenile Fiction - 2014 - 224 pages
Molly and Miri Gill are twins. They look the same, act the same, sometimes even think the same. But they weren't always twins. . . . Molly used to live in 1935, until Miri ... | |
| Annie Barrows - Fiction - 2015 - 528 pages
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the co-author of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society comes a wise, witty, and exuberant novel, perfect for fans of Lee Smith ... | |
| Shirin Yim Bridges - Juvenile Fiction - 2002 - 52 pages
In China, at a time when few girls are taught to read or write, Ruby dreams of going to the university with her brothers and male cousins. | |
| Meg Rosoff - Juvenile Fiction - 2005 - 48 pages
It is very hard to be friends with wild boars because they are dirty and smelly, bad-tempered, and rude. | |
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