Hi, these are in good condition, some may have a name or stamp inside;
Battle of the Bunheads (Bad News Ballet, No 2) by Jahnna N. Malcolm
The bad news is that Courtney Clay and the Bunheads are in the gang's winter dance class. The good news is that world-famous ballerina Alexandra Petrovna is coming to dance at the Deerfield Academy. The gang and the Bunheads are competing to see who will be her flower-bearer during her performance. Mary Bubnik gets the nod from an unlikely source: the Bunheads, who want to see her fail. Mary's the worst dancer in the gang! In this second book in the Bad News Ballet series, kindness brings a surprising reward. As Mary tells her friends, "I suppose it's possible to be happier than this, but I'm not sure how."
Who Framed Mary Bubnik? (Bad News Ballet, No 4) by Jahnna N. Malcolm
Who Let Those Girls Into Ballet Class? (No Way Ballet, Book 1) by Suzanne Weyn
Stop those Ballerinas! It all started when Charlie's mother had the brilliant idea that Charlie should take ballet lessons at the local mall. And if that wasn't bad enough, Charlie's mother convinced some other parents that their kids should take ballet, too. Charlie knows the other girls blame her for this mess, and now they won't talk to her. Can life get any worse? Charlie doesn't think so, but she's in for a big suprise when the first ballet class starts!
A Twist of Fate (No Way Ballet, No 2) by Suzanne Weyn
When ten-year-old Lindsey worries that she may have to go to live with an aunt in Boston and leave her widowed father alone, her friends from school and ballet class support her in various ways.
Emma's Turn (No Way Ballet, No 3) by Suzanne Weyn
Eleven-year-old Emma slights her new friends in the suburbs because she is excited about seeing her recently divorced father during her ballet class's field trip to Manhattan to see "The Nutcracker," but several disappointments help her put her new life in a better perspective.
Stage Fright (No Way Ballet, No 4) by Suzanne Weyn
Charlie hopes that a sprained ankle will keep her from having to perform in a ballet recital.
Can David Do It? (Ballet One, No 4) by Sandy Asher
Ballet for Drina (Drina, No 1) by Jean Estoril
This first installment of the Drina series, a collection of books first published in England in 1957, expresses all the wistfulness and determination of a devoted balletomane as she struggles for her place at the barre and in the world of dance. From her earliest years, orphan Drina has loved movement and dance, but her grandmother-guardian has always discouraged her. When Drina enters a new school, and meets a girl named Jenny, her yearnings are more intense than ever. Jenny, who dislikes ballet, studies at the Selswick School, and only by lobbying hard does Drina, too, start lessons. By the time the story ends, readers learn the source of Drina's grandmother's hesitation, melodramatic and satisfying for all its incredibility. Drina's old-fashioned willfulness and her desire to dance will be joyfully embraced by ballet fans. Ages 8-12.
Drina Dances Alone (Drina, No 3) by Jean Estoril
Cammy Takes a Bow by Karen Strickler Dean
Noelle of the Nutcracker by Pamela Jane
At Christmas time a beautiful ballerina doll who longs to dance is discovered in a toy store and coveted by two little girls: Ilyana, who wants to love her, and Mary Jane, who doesn't want Ilyana to get her. An American Bookseller Pick of the Lists.
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