| Title | : | How to Clean Your Room in 10 Easy Steps |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.82 (865 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0375844104 |
| Format Type | : | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages | : | 40 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2010-05-11 |
| Genre | : |
Got a messy room? No problem!This simple, laugh-out-loud picture-book guide to cleaning your room is sure to make picking up a snap. Here is the first rule: Always wait until your mother hollers, "GET UP THERE AND CLEAN YOUR ROOM—NOW!" using all three of your names. Once she does, you'd better get moving. From dumping out drawers and dividing stuff into piles to arranging all eight zillion of your stuffed animals, here's the kind of advice on room tidying that everyone can relate to.With funny, direct text by Jennifer LaRue Huget and amazing illustrations by New Yorker artist Edward Koren, this book is sure to appeal to messy kids everywhere.
Editorial : From School Library Journal Kindergarten-Grade 2—A girl demonstrates how to get results and have fun at the same time. Dusting can be done with a sock, dust bunnies can be hidden away in a dresser drawer with the candy wrappers ("You know, for crafts"), and unwanted and broken toys can be wrapped up and given to a younger sibling. The things that you love should be shoved into the closet with the door secured tightly. "Watch out. It might explode." The tongue-in-cheek humor in Koren's pen-and-ink and watercolor illustrations and Huget's writing will be appreciated by children who are responsible for cleaning their own rooms. They may not have a pet cat and dog helping them as Ann Erica Kelly does, but her story lightens the burden of this most dreaded chore.—Tanya Boudreau, Cold Lake Public Library, AB, Canada(c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Garnet is a wonderful child, surrounded by a loving family. I have discovered a new language, and now I can go back to all of my computer music magazines and actually understand what they are talking about. She discusses the different strategies animals have for choosing a mate, choosing a nest, hatching eggs versus bearing live young, and rearing their young. I went to New Orleans one year and just happened to stumble on this book. When they tried to write the Plane's cantwell, it just didn't work. David Brill knows the experience well, and his latest book, "A Separate Place," is his endeavor to expunge the pain from his system. The U.S. (Those issues are real-world: phone calls, meetings, procrastination, delegation, office organization, and visitors.) The 50-tip summary starting on page 171 is especially helpful.
Readers should know that Kroehner's examples use the Day-Timer system. Reading Dean's many helpful hints on this subject I thought: "Finally----real-world DIY advice t
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