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Monday, Wednesday, and every other weekend
by Karen Stanton
Although Henry enjoys the time he spends at his mother's apartment and his father's house, his dog Pomegranate gets confused about which place is home.
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Just like always
by Anne Perry
A girl finds that most things in her life remain the same after her parents' divorce.
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Two homes
by Claire Masurel
A young boy named Alex enjoys the homes of both of his parents who live apart but love Alex very much, in a comforting story about the reality of divorce.
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My mom's wedding
by Eve Bunting
Seven-year-old Pinkie has mixed feelings about her divorced mother's wedding, especially when she learns that her beloved father will be an attending guest.
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Fred stays with me
by Nancy Coffelt
A little girl describes how she sometimes lives with her mother and sometimes with her father, but her dog, Fred, is her constant companion, in a heartwarming book that celebrates friendship.
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The best of both nests
by Jane Clarke
When Stanley Stork's mother announces that his Dad is going to build his own nest, Stanley doesn't like the idea of visiting two nests and worries that their divorce is all his fault, but after seeing his dad's new place, he realizes that maybe things will work out after all.
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Oliver at the window
by Elizabeth Shreeve
When Oliver's parents move into separate houses, he spends a lot of time looking out of windows with his pet lion as he adjusts to a new preschool and to living in two places.
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A tale of two Seders
by Mindy Avra Portnoy
After her parents' divorce, a young girl experiences a variety of Passover seders. Includes recipes and facts about Passover.
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Caillou : a new family
by Christine L'Heureux
When Caillou asks his cousins why their mother does not live with their father, he learns about divorce, what it is like to have two homes, and the feelings that his cousins experience.
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Living with Mom and living with Dad
by Melanie Walsh
Moving between two different homes when her parents stop living together, a little girl compares her bedrooms and living environments and moves favorite toys back and forth while adjusting to a new routine, in a story complemented by interactive lift-flaps.
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Two nests
by Laurence Anholt
Two birds build a nest together and hatch a baby bird, but when they fail to get along the father bird moves to a new nest, and though baby bird is unhappy at first, when he learns to fly from nest to nest he sees that the situation isn't that bad.
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The smart kid's guide to divorce
by Christine Petersen
Presents advice on how to handle a divorce for young readers, including reasons for divorce, dealing with change, and new families.
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Mom and Dad don't live together anymore
by Kathy Stinson
A classic and critically acclaimed picture book, newly illustrated, takes a positive, sensitive and reassuring look at divorce as experienced by young children.
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Divorce is the worst
by Anastasia Higginbotham
A lovingly crafted picture book speaking to the child's perspective on divorce. The book offers advice, sympathy, and wit to match without being pandering or authoritative. While admitting that divorces are painful, it above all empowers its young reader to cope with and even make the best of a difficult situation.
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Dinosaurs divorce : a guide for changing families
by Laurene Krasny Brown
Text and illustrations of dinosaur characters introduce aspects of divorce such as its causes and effects, living with a single parent, spending holidays in two separate households, and adjusting to a stepparent.
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Why do families break up?
by Jane Bingham
Explores issues related to divorce, including discussion of causes, the experience of moving, and learning to cope with a parent's new partner.
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The divorce helpbook for kids
by Cynthia MacGregor
A guide to dealing with the divorce of parents, discussing various reasons for divorce, the emotions experienced by the children, and ways of coping with the change.
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Divorce and separation
by Patricia J. Murphy
Introduces divorce and separation, discussing what happens to the children, the emotions that are often experienced by those whose parents have gotten divorced or separated, getting help, and accepting change.
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Divorce casualties : understanding parental alienation
by Douglas Darnall
Draws on updated research to explain how to protect the well-being of children of divorced parents by minimizing their exposure to parental conflicts, in a new edition that also stresses the importance of both parents taking an active part in the caregiving process.
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Parents are forever : a step-by-step guide to becoming successful coparents after divorce
by Shirley Thomas
Parents Are Forever leads parents gently, in step-by-step fashion, toward becoming successful coparents after divorce. Based on the grief recovery model, this book tells moms and dads exactly what they need to do to help the children they love cope with changes in their lives. Parents are shown how to have business meetings, how to create a parenting plan, and how to keep their childrens' needs as their first priority while they transition to a new kind of family.
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