| Item 9781551432274$3.94 - $5.69 up to $0.12 Cashback"What is snow?" Araba, a Ghanaian child, asks her Canadian pen pal. The response unfolds as a letter in poetry, rich in lyricism and in what author Sheree Fitch would call "lipslipperiness." Janet Wilson's glowing pastel illustrations revel in all the sensory experiences, the color, associated with the cold white stuff. Through the asking...
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Snowflakes $1.70 $0.03 Cashback $5.94 - $9.95 up to $0.20 Cashback Snowflakes Cut-Outs $2.99 $0.06 Cashback Snowflakes & Gingham $19.99 $0.40 Cashback Copos de nieve/Snowflakes $23.97 $0.48 Cashback
"What is snow?" Araba, a Ghanaian child, asks her Canadian pen pal. The response unfolds as a letter in poetry, rich in lyricism and in what author Sheree Fitch would call "lipslipperiness." Janet Wilson's glowing pastel illustrations revel in all the sensory experiences, the color, associated with the cold white stuff. Through the asking and the telling, two children reach halfway around the world and touch one another.
When her pen pal from the tropics asks what snow is like, a Canadian child writes a letter and tries to describe it so that someone who has never seen snow can imagine it.
No Two Snowflakes General
| ISBN | 9781551432274 |
| Fiction/Non-Fiction | Fiction |
| Publisher | Orca Book Pub |
| Pages | 32 |
| List Price | $9.95 |
| Author | Fitch, Sheree |
| Publication Date | 09/01/2002 |
| Release Status | In Print |
| Format | Paperback |
| Language | English |
| Measurements | Height: 8.75 Inches (US)Width: 9.75 Inches (US)Thickness: 0.25 Inches (US)Unit Weight: 0.35 Pounds (US) |
| Grade Range | 1 - 2 |
| Illustrator | Wilson, Janet |
"What is snow?" Araba, a Ghanaian child, asks her Canadian pen pal. The response unfolds as a letter in poetry, rich in lyricism and in what author Sheree Fitch would call "lipslipperiness." Janet Wilson's glowing pastel illustrations revel in all the sensory experiences, the color, associated with the cold white stuff. Through the asking and the telling, two children reach halfway around the world and touch one another.
When her pen pal from the tropics asks what snow is like, a Canadian child writes a letter and tries to describe it so that someone who has never seen snow can imagine it.
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