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Babs Bell Hajdusiewicz

Author of Who Went Up?

65 Works 1,023 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Babs Bell Hajdusiewicz

Who Went Up? (1999) 143 copies
Annie's Plants (2006) 106 copies
The Big Hand-off (2006) 89 copies
Busy People (2000) 88 copies
Jacks and More Jacks (1995) 64 copies, 1 review
The Bridge Is Up! (2004) 49 copies
Sputter, Sputter, Sput! (2008) 42 copies, 2 reviews
The Bridge is Up! (2006) 16 copies, 1 review
Words and More Words (1997) 12 copies
I Can! Can You? (2014) 10 copies
Where Is Monkey? (2014) 8 copies
I Would if I Could (1991) 8 copies
Whose Shoes? (2014) 8 copies
Why, Dainty Dinosaur? (1988) 7 copies, 1 review
Vroom! Honk-a! Boom! (2014) 6 copies
SO BIG! (2014) 6 copies
Giddy-up! Let's Go! (2014) 5 copies
I'm 3! (2014) 4 copies
Who Chews? (2014) 4 copies
Who Can Hop? (1996) 4 copies
When Do Cars Stop? (1996) 4 copies
Home on a Bench 3 copies
Why Do I Feel Safe? (1996) 1 copy
My Faces 1 copy
Fix It Frannnie! (1992) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Hajdusiewicz’s Why Dainty Dinosaur? is a beginner reader book about a little girl’s curiosity concerning the wheelchair ramp on the house next door to her. She watches the ramp go up with her pal the dainty dinosaur and questions its existence on the empty house next door. She watches as the moving people arrive, followed by the new family moving in. The little girl is first elated to see a little boy around her age, but then assumes he cannot play with her when his dad carries him into show more the house like a baby. She is pleasantly surprised to find that he can in fact play with her with the help of his wheelchair. The two children have a great time playing all different games together in his new house and in the yard, which he can easily get to with the use of the new wheelchair ramp. This is a great story, told in just a few words that can easily be read by a beginner reader. It is one that a child with a handicap can relate to, and other children can learn from. show less
I love this book because readers are able to predict the story patterns, the pictures are bright and inviting to young children.
In this cumulative story, a traffic jam is created when everyone has to wait for the bridge to come down.
Summary: A boy drives his car all around the time, but when he runs out of gas he has to solve his problem in order to keep driving.
Genre: Realistic Fiction
Media: Ink Pen

Awards

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Associated Authors

Laura Cornell Illustrator
Kimble Mead Illustrator
Rob Hefferan Illustrator
Peter Foster Illustrator
Marc Mongeau Illustrator

Statistics

Works
65
Members
1,023
Popularity
#25,180
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
96
Languages
1

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