NBS recommends almanacs for kids

Time For Kids: Almanac 2012

By Time Inc. Company

P235

MANILA, Philippines - Packed with facts, stats and news from around the country and around the world, the Time For Kids Almanac 2012 includes information on topics ranging from animals to acid rain, voting rules to video games, sports stars to space exploration, and much more. This richly designed resource features more than 800 photos, maps, lists and timelines, and is sure to keep young readers engaged, entertained and learning — all at once.

The National Geographic Almanac 2012

By National Geographic

P399

Check out the world’s best-selling National Geographic Kids 2012 Almanac, No. 3 on The New York Times Best Sellers list for Children’s Paperbacks. In the lively style of National Geographic Kids magazine, this colorful page-turner excites young people about their world and everything in it. The National Geographic Kids 2012 Almanac is packed with fun-to-browse features, useful reference material, homework help developed by educators, and the kind of quirky facts that kids adore. Amazing animals, cool inventions, funny roadside attractions, outer space, green living, natural disasters, maps, puzzles—it’s all here in one irresistible volume.

Full Dark, No Stars

By Stephen King

P315

Just as many of his acclaimed works of short fiction have generated such enduring film as The Shawshank Redemption and Stand by Me, this chillingly rendered quartet of Stephen King tales “might yield another classic” (Columbus Dispatch), with its richly drawn characters and mesmerizing plotlines.

The Pacific: Hell Was An Ocean Away

By Hugh Ambrose

P315

With access to military records, letters, journals, memoirs, photos, and interviews, The Pacific offers a unique perspective on the war against Japan. These are the men who put their lives on the line; who were dispatched to the other side of the world to fight an enemy who preferred suicide to surrender; who suffered in POW camps and witnessed casualties among soldier and civilian alike; and whose medals came at a shocking price — a price paid in full by all.

The Help

By Kathryn Stockett

P315

Aibileen Clark is a black maid in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, raising her seventeenth white child. She’s always taken orders quietly, but lately it leaves her with a bitterness she can no longer bite back. Eventually, she and her seemingly different friends join to work on a project that could forever alter their destinies and the life of a small town: to write in secret a tell-all book about what it’s really like to work as a black maid in the white homes of the South. 

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