Henry the Fourth

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 9 December 1998
A simple story about four dogs at a dog show introduces the ordinal numbers: first, second, third, and fourth.

Seaweed Soup

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 21 August 2001
It's slimy. It's smelly. Its green and it's gooey. It's seaweed soup -- and its Turtle's favorite lunch! Turtle has made enough seaweed soup for everyone. But it looks awful and smells worse! Nobody wants to even taste it. How can they tell Turtle without hurting his feelings? As Turtle serves lunch to his reluctant guests, young readers can learn about matching sets (also called one-to-one correspondence) by keeping track of all the different bowls, cups, spoons, and napkins on the table. Lighthearted art and a surprise ending make this a story readers will eat up.

The Best Bug Parade

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 1 May 1996
A variety of different bugs compare their relative sizes while going on parade.

Beep Beep, Vroom Vroom!

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 1 January 2000
The yellow cars beep! The red cars vroom! As Molly plays with her big brother's toy cars, readers will see and recognize patterns, an essential first step in learning to reason from the specific to the general. But can Molly put the cars back in the right order before her brother returns?

Monster Musical Chairs

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 22 August 2000
Monster Musical Chairs Every time the music stops, one more monster is OUT! Kids won't be able to sit still for this musical introduction to subtraction at its simplest.

Missing Mittens

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 15 November 2000
Missing Mittens Every animal on Farmer Bill's farm is missing one mitten. Readers can investigate odd and even numbers as they unravel this mitten mystery!

Bug Dance

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 1 December 2001
The bugs in Coach Caterpillar's gym class are learning a new dance. But Centipede can't do it! If he can't learn the directions left, right, forward and backward, this class will be one big FLOP!

Introduces pattern recognition as a sock searches the house for its lost mate.

Every Buddy Counts

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 3 January 1997
You can start with one little hamster and keep counting past six slinky fish, eight favorite playmates, and more -- all the way up to ten cuddly teddy bears. With buddies, counting is fun!

Just Enough Carrots

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 1 September 1997
Elephants, rabbits, and birds shop in this funny grocery store. Can you guess what the little rabbit wants more of? Munchy, crunchy carrots, of course! And fewer of? Squirmy worms and chewy peanuts (yuck!). So why is his mother buying all those cans of worms?

Jack the Builder

by Stuart J. Murphy

Published 28 February 2006
Jack stacks up blocks high. Two make a robot, five make a boat, and fifteen make...whatever you can imagine! Math becomes child's play as young readers are introduced to the skill of counting on, a first step toward mastering addition.