Jellyfish feels jealous when Swordfish wins the race and gets a spot on the swim team. He says some unkind things to Swordfish. What can Jellyfish do to make things right? This relatable story helps kids identify their feelings and provides useful tools for managing emotions.
Whale is worrying about her schoolwork. She wants it to be perfect, so she erases the paper until it rips! What can she do to feel better and stop worrying? This relatable story helps kids identify their feelings and provides useful tools for managing emotions.
Shark wants to get up in front of the class during show-and-tell, but he feels a bit shy. Is there anything he can do to feel better? This relatable story helps kids identify their feelings and provides useful tools for managing emotions.
Angelfish feels very angry when she knocks into Whale’s big tail and her painting is ruined. Is there anything she can do to feel better? This relatable story helps kids identify their feelings and provides useful tools for managing emotions.
Swordfish feels sad. She is missing her dad. Her friends try to cheer her up, but nothing will make Swordfish smile. Is there anything she can do to feel better? This relatable story helps kids identify their feelings and provides useful tools for managing emotions.
The animals are having fun on the class field trip to the park, but Starfish feels scared to try something new. Can anyone help her feel a little bit brave? This relatable story helps kids identify their feelings and provides useful tools for managing emotions.
A novel reminiscent of the works of Herman Koch and Rachel Cusk, in which a lesbian couple attempts to escape the secrets of their pasts. “[Mootoo’s] unsettling latest examines how secrets always come back to haunt us—especially the ones we’ve managed to keep from ourselves.” —Globe & Mail, one of the 100 Favorite Books of 2020 One of Autostraddle‘s Best Queer Books of 2020 Polar Vortex is a seductive and tension-filled novel about Priya and Alex, a lesbian couple who left the big city to relocate to a bucolic countryside community. It seemed like a good way to leave their past behind and cement their newish, later-in-life relationship. But there’s leaving the past behind—and then there’s running away from awkward histories. Priya has a secret—a long-standing on-again, off-again relationship with a man, Prakash. In Priya’s mind Prakash is little more than an old friend, but in reality things are a bit complicated. Why has she never told Alex about him? Prakash has tracked Priya down in her new life, and before she realizes what she’s doing, she invites him to visit. Alex is not pleased, and soon the existing cracks in their relationship widen, revealing secrets Alex herself would have preferred to keep. Into the fissure walks Prakash, whose own agenda forces all three to face the inevitable consequences of their choices.
A bear cub describes situations that make her jealous: when someone has something she wants, when someone is good at something she wants to be good at, and when someone else gets all the attention. "Jealousy is a prickly, hot, horrible feeling. I don't like feeling jealous, but—everybody feels jealous sometimes." The little bear finds ways to make herself feel better—she talks to someone about how she feels and then does something pleasant—and soon the jealous feeling goes away.An author's note for parents and teachers is included.
Let's discover and explore a wide range of emotions together! Our feelings can be really hard to understand, and even harder to explain. Every day children are experiencing new emotions and often do not know how to describe them. Feelings seem to just happen to them, and it can be very scary and hard to control. From Ariel the Angry Alligator to Zack the Zealously Organized Zebra, this book will lay the foundation for comprehending some of the most common, yet confusing, and overwhelming feelings that we all experience. Through fun and relatable examples, our animal friends will tell us what is happening in their minds and bodies when feelings take over.