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Can You See what I See? The Night Before Christmas Picture Puzzles to Search and Solve

Can You See what I See? The Night Before Christmas Picture Puzzles to Search and Solve

AI LRS Analysis

Based on the book description, categories, and metadata — not verified against the full text.

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by Walter Wick

Book Details

Publisher: Scholastic
Published: 2005
Language: en
Pages: 35
ISBN: 9780439769273
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High confidence: 95%

Looky Rating System Score adjusted for ages 4+

Content Intensity

How strong or frequent is this content? Higher scores mean more intense content.

0
💥ViolenceNone
0
❤️Love & RomanceNone
0
🧠Mental HealthNone
0
💬!*$#LanguageNone
0
🍷🚬Substance UseNone
0
😨Fear / HorrorNone

Story Themes

What is this book about? Higher scores mean the theme is more central to the plot — not a warning.

0
🧙Fantasy / SupernaturalNot present
0
🏳️‍🌈LGBTQ+ RepresentationNot present
0
🚀Sci-Fi / FuturisticNot present
0
Disability & NeurodiversityNot present

Description

The first photograph, "The Night Before Christmas," features a gingerbread house, Christmas cookies, candles, bulbs, and more. "Visions of Sugarplums" is an abstract composition of Christmas confections; and "Such a Clatter!" is a dynamic explosion of objects. In "It Must Be Saint Nick," Santa is shown in shadow; and in "A Bundle of Toys," the presents in Santa's sack are revealed as a magnificent jumble. The final photograph, "Happy Christmas to All" is a beautiful, pastoral landscape, lustrous under new-fallen snow. The original poem is printed on the endpapers. Scenes from Clement C. Moore's The Night Before Christmas, inspire twelve gorgeous and fascinating compositions where readers search for dozens of intriguing hidden objects. The first photograph, "The Night Before Christmas," features a gingerbread house, Christmas cookies, candles, bulbs, and more. "Visions of Sugarplums" is an abstract composition of Christmas confections; and "Such a Clatter!" is a dynamic explosion of objects. In "It Must Be Saint Nick," Santa is shown in shadow; and in "A Bundle of Toys," the presents in Santa's sack are revealed as a magnificent jumble. The final photograph, "Happy Christmas to All" is a beautiful, pastoral landscape, lustrous under new-fallen snow. The original poem is printed on the endpapers.

Themes & Topics

Juvenile NonfictionGames & ActivitiesHolidays & CelebrationsChristmas & Advent

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