Nate the Great and the Tardy Tortoise
By (Author) Marjorie Weinman Sharmat
By (author) Craig Sharmat
Illustrated by Marc Simont
17
Random House USA Inc
Random House USA Children's Books
3rd October 2005
United States
Children
Fiction
Educational: First / native language: Readers and reading schemes
80
Width 130mm, Height 194mm, Spine 6mm
113g
The remaining titles in the long-running Nate the Great chapter book series are being reissued! Perfect for the Common Core and for introducing beginning readers to the detective mystery genre! These chapter books introduce beginning readers to the detective mystery genre. Perfect for the Common Core, kids can problem-solve with Nate, using logical thinking to solve mysteries! The sun is shining, the birds are singing, and someone is eating the flowers in Nate the Great's garden. A green tortoise is slowly, slowly stepping across the lawn, and Nate is slowly, slowly following him. Where does Nate's green guest truly belong It may take all of Nate the Great's patience and sharp eyesight to find out slowly.
Praise for the Nate the Great Series
Kids will like Nate the Great. School Library Journal, Starred Review
A consistently entertaining series. Booklist
Loose, humorous chalk and watercolor spots help turn this beginning reader into a page-turner. Publishers Weekly
Nate, Sludge, and all their friends have been delighting beginning readers for years. Kirkus Reviews
They dont come any cooler than Nate the Great. The Huffington Post
Born in Portland, Maine, in 1928, Marjorie Weinman Sharmat dreamed of becoming a writer. Little did she know that she would be the author of more than 70 books for children of all ages. Another of her childhood dreams, that of becoming a detective, has also been realized in her most popular Nate the Great series, begun in 1972. Many of Sharmat's books have been Literary Guild selections and chosen as Books of the Year by the Library of Congress. Several have been made into films for television, including Nate the Great Goes Undercover, winner of the Los Angeles International Children's Film Festival Award. Nate the Great Saves the King of Sweden has been named one of the New York Public Library's 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing.