Asia Citro has an M.Ed in Science Education and was a classroom science teacher for many years before deciding to stay home full time after the birth of her daughter. She lives near Seattle with her wonderful husband, two awesome children, and two destructive cats. She started writing Fun at Home with Kids in February of 2013 and has since spent many late nights experimenting with new play recipes, sensory materials, and science experiments. She is the author of 150+ Screen-Free Activities for Kids: the best and easiest playtime activities from FunAtHomeWithKids.com, The Curious Kid's Science Book: 100+ Creative Hands-on Activities for Ages 4-8, A Little Bit of Dirt: 55+ Science and Art Activities to Reconnect Children with Nature, and the chapter book series Zoey and Sassafras. Her work has been featured on Apartment Therapy, The Chicago Tribune, Today, Disney Baby, MSN, King 5 TV, and Highlights, among others. To read about her most recent late night discoveries or to see more photos of her adorable kids at play, visit www.funathomewithkids.com. Marion Lindsay has always loved stories and pictures, so it made perfect sense when she decided to become a children's book illustrator. She has been awarded the Egmont Best New Talent Award. When she's not illustrating children's books, Marion paints glass and makes jewelry. Find out more at marionlindsay.co.uk. Marion lives and works in Gloucestershire, England.
Praise for DRAGONS AND MARSHMALLOWS (Zoey and Sassafras, Book 1):
..".Citro gracefully balances her story's scientific and
fantasy elements." -- Publishers Weekly
..".the imaginative premise and the incorporation of STEM
elements make this an attractive and engaging choice." --
Booklist
..".tales for young audiences that model the scientific
method are nice to see." -- Kirkus Reviews
..".a delightful beginning reader. I will definitely
recommend this to kids and I look forward to the other books in
this series." -- Mel Barnes, University Bookstore
"Zoey and Sassafras are our heroes! My kids love unravelling
their mysterious circumstance, and they even made their own
"thinking goggles." Zoey is an awesome role model." -- Megan Lingo,
Reading Teacher and Educational Therapist at Chickadee
Lit
"Citro takes the "girl helping animals" trope of beginning
chapters to a whole new level. Filled with scientific language and
experiments, including a helpful glossary,
Zoey is encouraged to make mistakes, fail, and get up and keep
trying. There's no lack of child appeal either; both boys and girls
will delight in the magical creatures
and brisk storytelling and will be eager to try some of their own
scientific experimentation, even if they can't find a dragon!"--
Jennifer Wharton, Jean Little Library
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