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You know Dr. Seuss, creator of Grinches and Guffs, Wockets and Waskets, and all manner of benevolent beasts. He's the best-selling children's author in America today. From his first book, "And to ...
Banned books like Dr. Seuss' "And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street" is nothing new in America. Even anti-racist works have been suppressed.
As part of Dr. Seuss Enterprises and Random House Children's Books Dr. Seuss's Word Challenge to promote literacy, kids sailing aboard Carnival Cruise Line this summer read an astonishing 213 million ...
Since Theodor Seuss Geisel published it in 1990, “Oh, the Places You’ll Go” has attained a unique position in American culture. No other book enjoys such iconic status as a go-to gift.
With more than 50 Dr. Seuss books to choose from, she narrowed her selection by picking popular, basic books that help students recognize rhyming words.
John Cena and astronaut Scott Kelly to kick off Oh The Places You'll Go!, a Dr. Seuss-inspired virtual graduation celebration for the Class of 2020.
Dr. Seuss’ book re-enters the bestseller lists each spring because, in America at least, it’s The Book to give to graduates. It now comes adorned with a spiffy legend reading, “Graduate ...
The extraordinary, continued success of the book stems from the book’s infinitely flexible appropriateness.
Dr. Seuss's first book, "And To Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street," was rejected more than 20 times before he finally found a publisher.
The wildly popular books of Dr. Seuss have sold more than 650 million copies in 95 countries. They claim permanent spinner displays in book stores. And many parents believe that his playful misuse ...
The researchers took 65 made-up words from Dr. Seuss’s books—like “wumbus” and “yuzz-a-ma-tuzz”—and ran them through the entropy formula.
Dr. Seuss has taught generations of children to read with such beloved classics as The Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham. His perennial graduation gift, Oh, the Places You’ll Go!, was No. 2 ...