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	Moon : A Peek-Through Picture Book
	
 by Britta Teckentrup
Features elaborate die-cut holes that show the progression of the moon's phases with each turn of the page, in a bedtime-appropriate primer that depicts a range of scenes, from deserts and forests to tropical beaches and a sleepy town that is tucking in for the night.
 
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	How to Catch a Star
	
 by Oliver Jeffers
Determined to catch a star by climbing to the top of the tallest tree and building a rocket ship out of paper, a young boy makes a discovery about the night sky that leads to an unexpected friendship.
 
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	Kitten's First Full Moon
	
 by Kevin Henkes
When Kitten mistakes the full moon for a bowl of milk, she ends up tired, wet and hungry trying to reach it, but her adventure eventually leads her back home where something special is waiting just for her.
 
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	First Star : A Bear and Mole story
	
 by Will Hillenbrand
While camping, Mole becomes frightened when the sun sets and to calm his fears, Bear tells him the legend of how the first stars came to be.
 
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	I Spy in the Sky
	
 by Edward Gibbs
Combines vibrantly colored illustrations and engaging animal facts in an interactive introduction to a variety of bird species that invites young children to spy through peepholes and follow clues to guess which bird is on subsequent pages.
 
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	A Circle in the Sky
	
 by Zachary Wilson
A child puts together various simple shapes to build a rocket that will fly to the moon. Includes suggested learning activities.
 
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	Higher! Higher!
	
 by Leslie Patricelli
Pleading with her dad to push the swing higher and higher, a little girl wonders just how high she has gone and compares her journey to fantastical feats, like venturing higher than a mountain or shooting straight into space. 
 
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	A Rainbow of My Own
	
 by Don Freeman
A small boy imagines what it would be like to have his own rainbow to play with.
 
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	Little Plane Learns to Write
	
 by Stephen Savage
Loving sky-writing, arcs, dives and nearly everything else about flight school, Little Plane nervously resists practicing the dizzying loopity-loops required to sky-write round letters. 
 
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	Hello, Airplane!
	
 by Bill Cotter
Illustrations and easy-to-read text follow an airplane as it says good-bye to the ground and hello to the sky, where it flies over a town, mountains, clouds, and people.
 
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