Father Fox's Pennyrhymes
Father Fox's Pennyrhymes is a 1971 children's book of poetry by Clyde Watson, with illustrations by her sister, Wendy Watson, published by the Thomas Y. Crowell Company. The book was a finalist for the National Book Award and was named among the Best Books of the Year by the American Library Association for 1972 and by The New York Times and School Library Journal for 1971.[1]
Footnotes
- Clyde Watson and Wendy Watson. Father Fox's Pennyrhymes (dust jacket, 2001 edition), Harper Collins Publishers, 2001.
gollark: For another thing, as I found out while reading a complaint by mathematicians about the use of Riemann integrals over gauge integrals, if you always take the point to "sample" as the left/right/center of each partition *and* the thing is evenly divided up into partitions, it's actually wrong in some circumstances.
gollark: For one thing, the sum operator is very bee there because it does not appear to be counting integers.
gollark: It's wrong and abuse-of-notationy however.
gollark: And this isn't even *used anywhere* except that one or two of the integration questions use this as an extra layer of indirection.
gollark: The sum there makes no sense, and I'm pretty sure this is actually wrong for some integrals.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.