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Nos amis les chiots (Les jeunes plantes)  

On célèbre les chiots! Découvre comment différents types de chiots doux et mignons apprennent, travaillent, jouent et grandissent pour devenir d’adorables membres d’une famille. Chaque livre comprend un texte simple, de grandes photos attrayantes, un glossaire imagé avec la prononciation, une table des matières et un index. On y trouve également une page à l’intention des enseignants, des parents et des gardiens qui suggère des questions d’orientation visant à faciliter la compréhension. Un guide de l’enseignant à télécharger est disponible.

Not a Buzz to Be Found

What do insects do in winter? Simple text presents a variety of ways that insects or their offspring survive the winter.

Not a Cat: A Memoir

Between his opening greeting and the bookend closing page on which he stalks away after taking no questions, Gato wants to make one thing perfectly clear: Although he has four legs, two ears, and a long, long tail, the word ""cat"" does not define him. His identity is his alone to describe and determine. With the help of Danica Novgorodoff's laugh-out-loud illustrations, he takes us on a tour of his adventures, accomplishments, and daily activities that makes mincemeat of our first impressions. He wears a sweater and a leash, so is he a dog? He runs in pastures, so is he a horse? He likes flowers, so is he a bee? He swims, so is he a duck? He has flown in airplanes and ridden in subways, so is he a person? Maybe he's all those things, but what he truly is, he wants us to know, is Gato. To underline the story's message of empowerment and self-identity, the back cover and backmatter include photos of the real Gato (Winter Miller's cat) doing everything he claims and more.

Not Done Yet: Shirley Chisholm's Fight for Change

Even as a child, Shirley Chisholm was a natural-born fighter who wanted things to be fair. At first, she thought she could help lift others by becoming a teacher. So she did. But she wasn't done yet. Stirring free verse chronicles Shirley's journey from teaching to entering politics, eventually becoming the first Black woman ever elected to Congress-and, in 1972, the first woman of any race to seriously run for president. Through poetry and digital illustration, author Tameka Fryer Brown and artist Nina Crews celebrate Chisholm's determination and her commitment to working for rights for all. Although Chisholm is gone, her legacy lives on, continuing to inspire those who fight for fairness and change.

Not Every Princess

Who do you want to be: a princess? Pirate? Teacher or scientist? And where would you like to play: a castle? Pirate ship? Library or spacelab? It's your decision to make, so think away. Your imagination and thoughts can create pictures and scenes, the most beautiful, amazing, picturesque dreams! Also included is a Note to Parents and Caregivers filled with useful advice and strategies to help children imagine, play, and ultimately envision and inspire themselves beyond the limited roles and expectations that gender stereotypes create.

Not Just A Book

A book is not just a book. It can be so many things: a hat or a building block, a flower press or a fly-swatter! But books are so much more than that. They can make you feel and can take you anywhere; they can make you laugh and can teach you anything you want to know.

Not My Hats

Hettie loves hats. She has tall hats, small hats, any size at all hats, round hats, pointy hats, fancy hoity-toity hats. But she will NEVER EVER share them! Will Puffin ever find something to warm his noggin?

Not Scary, Jonathan!

Jonathan's father was sweeping the floor, when all of a sudden . . . ROAR! ""Not scary, Jonathan."" Jonathan loves to dress up and scare his family, but they insist that he is just not scary. What happens when Jonathan is too scary?

Not Yet a Yeti

Everyone in George's family is a yeti. Yetis are big, scary, and ferocious! But George doesn't feel like a yeti. Maybe he wants to be something else instead?

Notations of Cooper Cameron, The

After the death of his beloved grandfather, eleven-year-old Cooper Cameron invents rituals to cope with his grief and his fear that something else bad will happen to his loved ones. His OCD behaviour seems crazy to everyone else, but to Cooper it makes perfect sense—his rituals are protecting his family from harm and even possible death. Then his behaviour begins to tear apart his parents' marriage. Armed with a notebook in which he records his observations of the world around him, Cooper sets out to cure himself and bring his family back together, with the help of an elderly man and a boy who has a crush on his older sister.