By clicking continue, your current session will end.
Select Your Partner Organization
If you are already registered on our website, you can sign in by selecting your partner organization below, then entering your email address and password on the next screen.
SELECT ORGANIZATION
FACE MEMBERSHIP
LITERACY PARTNERSHIPS
Somebody Needs to Do Something About That Monster!
By Doug CenkoIllustrator Narrator Editor Photographed by
1 of
Somebody Needs to Do Something About That Monster!
By Doug CenkoIllustrator Narrator Editor Photographed by
Format Hardcover Book
AND
$18.99
LIST PRICE: YOU SAVE:
$
(%)
PRICE PER STUDENT:
OUT OF STOCK
This item is temporarily out of stock. Our order for this product is expected on .
Please enter a valid e-mail
Please enter a valid e-mail
Thank you! We will contact you when the item is available.
To be notified when this item is available, please click the "Notify Me" button below.
Thank you! We will contact you when the item is available.
CONTACT US
Item is on backorder and will ship when available.
Your order will ship on or around the release date.
Share
Also available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-a-Million, Indiebound, Target, and Walmart.
A silly and ironic twist on “The Little Dutch Boy,” featuring a charmingly unaware monster who just wants to be kind and make a difference.
Merv is a nice monster. He sits outside the village, snacking on plants and blissfully minding his own business. Until…the villagers start complaining about “that monster.” Merv assumes they must be talking about somebody else and decides to go take care of that nuisance himself! He asks for help from the witches, the troll under the bridge, and even the unicorns. But their assistance comes with strings attached, and poor Merv isn’t ready to meet their demands. Will Merv return to the village a failure, or might he...
A silly and ironic twist on “The Little Dutch Boy,” featuring a charmingly unaware monster who just wants to be kind and make a difference.
Merv is a nice monster. He sits outside the village, snacking on plants and blissfully minding his own business. Until…the villagers start complaining about “that monster.” Merv assumes they must be talking about somebody else and decides to go take care of that nuisance himself! He asks for help from the witches, the troll under the bridge, and even the unicorns. But their assistance comes with strings attached, and poor Merv isn’t ready to meet their demands. Will Merv return to the village a failure, or might he have been helping everyone all along?