Not a Butterfly Alphabet Book
This nature alphabet book from best-selling author Jerry Pallotta features moths (not butterflies!) of all shapes and sizes.
Meet dozens of moths--and a few bonus creatures--with engaging text and a laugh-out-loud narrative, from A (Atlas Moth) to G (Green Lips Moth--no kissing allowed!) to J (Jersey Tiger Moth, whose underwings are a completely different color than their upper wings, not to be confused with their underwear) to Z (Zigzag Moth). Readers of all ages will be entertained (and learning!) with every page turn.Jerry Pallotta is the author of more than twenty alphabet books, including The Crab Alphabet Book, The Sea Mammal Alphabet Book, The Icky Bug Alphabet Book, The Butterfly Alphabet Book, and The Beetle Alphabet Book, as well as more than twenty math books, a holiday series, an early-reader series, and a US military series.
Shennen Bersani is the author and illustrator of Achoo! Why Pollen Counts. She has also illustrated many books for children, including Butterfly Colors and Counting and Ocean Counting: Odd Numbers; Astro: The Steller Sea Lion; Sea Slime and It's Eeuwy, Gooey and Under The Sea (Sylvan Dell); and Icky Bug Shapes (Scholastic). www.shennenbersani.comA is for Atlas Moth
Don’t even think about calling this creature a butterfly! This is a moth. The Atlas Moth is the largest moth in the world. Wingtip to wingtip, this moth can be as wide as this page.
B is for Bella Moth
The word bella means “beautiful.” Most people think butterflies are more colorful than moths and have more intricate and interesting wings. It’s not true! Moths are spectacular, too.
C is for Cow Moth.
Butterflies and moths land differently. Most butterflies land with their wings folded up. Moths land with their wings spread out. Cow Moth, we want to say one thing. Moo!
Meet dozens of moths--and a few bonus creatures--with engaging text and a laugh-out-loud narrative, from A (Atlas Moth) to G (Green Lips Moth--no kissing allowed!) to J (Jersey Tiger Moth, whose underwings are a completely different color than their upper wings, not to be confused with their underwear) to Z (Zigzag Moth). Readers of all ages will be entertained (and learning!) with every page turn.Jerry Pallotta is the author of more than twenty alphabet books, including The Crab Alphabet Book, The Sea Mammal Alphabet Book, The Icky Bug Alphabet Book, The Butterfly Alphabet Book, and The Beetle Alphabet Book, as well as more than twenty math books, a holiday series, an early-reader series, and a US military series.
Shennen Bersani is the author and illustrator of Achoo! Why Pollen Counts. She has also illustrated many books for children, including Butterfly Colors and Counting and Ocean Counting: Odd Numbers; Astro: The Steller Sea Lion; Sea Slime and It's Eeuwy, Gooey and Under The Sea (Sylvan Dell); and Icky Bug Shapes (Scholastic). www.shennenbersani.comA is for Atlas Moth
Don’t even think about calling this creature a butterfly! This is a moth. The Atlas Moth is the largest moth in the world. Wingtip to wingtip, this moth can be as wide as this page.
B is for Bella Moth
The word bella means “beautiful.” Most people think butterflies are more colorful than moths and have more intricate and interesting wings. It’s not true! Moths are spectacular, too.
C is for Cow Moth.
Butterflies and moths land differently. Most butterflies land with their wings folded up. Moths land with their wings spread out. Cow Moth, we want to say one thing. Moo!
PUBLISHER:
Charlesbridge
ISBN-10:
1580896898
ISBN-13:
9781580896895
BINDING:
Hardback
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 9.2900(W) x Dimensions: 11.4000(H) x Dimensions: 0.4100(D)