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Mary The Scary Hair Fairy explains the confusing phenomenon of waking up with "scary hair". Children go to sleep with perfectly neat, combed and happy hair, only to wake up to a knotty, tangled mess. There is really only one explanation, a mischievous fairy named Mary, sneaks in to their bedroom at night and blasts them with her "scary hair" fingers. In this story of wonder, you will find out whi Scary Mary is and why this "scary hair" phenomenon occurs. The Sir Rhymesalot reading level (lexile) is age 11 - 14 (grade 4 - 6) but parents reading these books to children aged 3 - 7 (K - 2) can…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Mary The Scary Hair Fairy explains the confusing phenomenon of waking up with "scary hair". Children go to sleep with perfectly neat, combed and happy hair, only to wake up to a knotty, tangled mess. There is really only one explanation, a mischievous fairy named Mary, sneaks in to their bedroom at night and blasts them with her "scary hair" fingers. In this story of wonder, you will find out whi Scary Mary is and why this "scary hair" phenomenon occurs. The Sir Rhymesalot reading level (lexile) is age 11 - 14 (grade 4 - 6) but parents reading these books to children aged 3 - 7 (K - 2) can strengthen literacy and vocabulary significantly in their young minds. This is due to the power of rhyme as a literacy builder.
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Autorenporträt
An Australian poet-pirate-persona is a very good place to start describing this relentless-rhymer, but his books are as multidimensional as the renaissance polymath himself. Simon Mills is a gregarious, larger-than-life author who masterfully communicates on multiple levels. Courageously comedic and then soulful when you least expect it, his stories entertain the parent reader on one level and the youngster on another entirely. You will meet Violet the Virus who longingly loves people but has no idea she is harmful. You will meander through Venice with Pigeoni, the Italian consigliere whose fanciful-fairytales prove too much for his fellow feathered friends until they discover the remarkable truth of his character. Parables that ponder themes from bullying to self-belief in I Lost My Brave, and from racial harmony, in Cyril the Squirrel to social distancing dilemmas in I Lost My Hug.