5 edition of Punny places found in the catalog.
Published
2004
by Carolrhoda Books in Minneapolis
.
Written in English
A collection of jokes about different places.
Edition Notes
Statement | by June Swanson ; pictures by Brian Gable. |
Genre | Juvenile literature. |
Series | Make me laugh! |
Contributions | Gable, Brian, 1949- ill. |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | PN6371.5 .S865 2004 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | 31 p. : |
Number of Pages | 31 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL3576425M |
ISBN 10 | 157505647X, 1575057034 |
LC Control Number | 2002151102 |
For whom the cloche tolls
Occupational employment in transportation, communications, utilities, and trade.
Diez comedias del Siglo de Oro
investigation of the critical bearing pressures causing rupture in lubricating oil films ...
The hydrogen murder
International organizations and the idea of autonomy
Victorian origins of the British Welfare State.
That day at Gibraltar.
Janitors for Census and other House committee rooms.
Annual Sunday School and Christian Endeavour Convention, to be held at Watton, from Friday, July 12th to Tuesday, July 16th, 1901
Amendment proposed by Mr. Pickens, in the committee of the whole House, to the bill for the assessment and collection of direct taxes and internal duties
Vladimir Nabokov and the art of painting
Making music work.
Ukulele for kids
Hair in Funny Places has been added to your Cart Add to Cart. Buy Now Buy Used. $ FREE Shipping Get free shipping Free day shipping within the U.S. when you order $ of eligible items sold or fulfilled by Amazon.
Or get business-day shipping on this item for $ /5(22). The drawings are funny and the text provides a basic introduction to some of the first changes that kids will start to notice, such as the "hair in funny places". This book does not go into "sex education" per se, but focuses instead on those basic changes that all boys and girls experience/5(28).
Cold Comfort Farm, by Stella Gibbons Published in in satirical response to romantic rural literature popular at the time, Stella Gibbons’ Cold Comfort Farm is a rollicking read about Flora Poste, a broke year-old metropolitan orphan who decides to impose herself upon her remote farming relatives, the Starkadders.
Full of aptly (and hilariously) named characters. Libraries: Though there’s no denying it as one of the most cherished places to crack open a book, the library is, oddly enough, a place I never really liked reading in.
Sure, I can spend a good hour or two browsing the shelves of a well stocked main branch, but the sense that I will eventually have to leave such a wonderful place compels me.