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Magic tree house books barnes and noble
Magic tree house books barnes and noble










“Some of my books have labels that cover the number, so for me it is easier to shelve them alphabetically, especially because I have multiple copies of some titles,” she says.

#Magic tree house books barnes and noble series

Sherri Malget, librarian for Hawthorne Elementary and Rancho Village in Oklahoma City, OK, shelves the series alphabetically in the fiction section. “It also makes them easier for the younger students to find.” Now she will designate one bin for the Merlin Missions and one for the Fact Trackers-when she and her staff have time. “They were always in a big mess on the shelf and front-facing them in the bins makes them less messy,” she says. Barbara Gogan, school librarian at Peter Noyes Elementary School in Sudbury, MA, keeps all the “Magic Tree House” books in four bins on top of a low bookcase. When they are broken into two groups, you can better appreciate the fact that the kids are becoming better readers and moving forward even if it seems as if they’ve been reading “Magic Tree House” books for a long time.” Other librarians, equally caught off guard by the news, are contemplating splitting the series, though not numerically. “I think what it does is help parents and teachers-especially as kids first get into chapter books-not get overwhelmed by the fact that there are 56 of these books and wonder which ones to pick. Splitting the series makes it more obvious that the Merlin Missions are for higher-level readers, she says. Mary Pope Osborne Photo by Elena Seibert That makes sense to Loehr. She’ll use stickers to renumber the Merlin Missions until she gets a new set. Shoemaker, who had always shelved the books numerically to make it easier for the students to find, will keep the titles in numerical order-but separate them onto two shelves: one for the classic adventures and one for the Merlin Missions. But, she added, that the new numbering system gives parents, teachers, and librarians a truer indication of the different reading levels. “We ended up saying, ‘Well, it's going to be a hard few years as people adjust,’” Loehr notes. That decision caused some internal debate. The classic adventure books will retain the numbers one through 29 (with #30, a book about Galveston, TX, out next summer) and the Merlin Missions will be numbered one to 27. “So the idea was to break the series in two to make that clearer.” Now instead of being numbered chronologically from one to 56, the beloved books chronicling the adventures of time-traveling siblings have been split into three separate but related lines: the classic adventure books (previously one to 28), the Merlin Missions (previously 29 to 55), and the nonfiction Fact Trackers, which act as companions to their fictional counterparts. “The Merlin Missions were longer, more complicated books aimed at children who were reading at a third grade level,” explains Mallory Loehr, senior vice president and publisher at Random House Children’s Books. Along with the new look, the publishing house wanted to clarify the difference between the classic adventure books and the Merlin Missions titles. Her first thought: “This was going to mean a lot of work for librarians to reorganize these books!” That wasn’t the publisher’s intent. She also noticed the book’s number-#29-the same one as Christmas in Camelot, an older title in the series. Shoemaker, the librarian for Mill Road Primary School in Red Hook, NY, spotted when she saw the latest addition, A Big Day for Baseball, at a Barnes and Noble. But that’s not the only thing that Barbara J. Publishing houses often reissue older titles with new covers, and Mary Pope Osborne's “Magic Tree House” series, celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, is no exception.










Magic tree house books barnes and noble