Bone Adventures by Jeff
Smith
For the youngest fans of the bestselling graphic novel series
BONE, Jeff Smith has created two hilarious tales to delight beginning readers.
In Finders Keepers, the Bone cousins find a coin -- finders
keepers! -- but the boys can't agree on how to spend it. Fone Bone wants an
apple and bananas they can share. Smiley Bone wants an ice cream cone with a
pickle on top. And Phoney Bone wants to build a giant statue... of himself!
Whose idea will win out?
In Smiley's Dream Book, Smiley Bone walks through the woods
on a beautiful morning. During his journey, he meets a flock of friendly and
playful birds. Smiley is having such a good time that he must find a
fantastical way to keep up with his new friends as they soar into the big, blue
sky.
These wonderfully funny tales, told with lively artwork and expressive word
balloons, will engage young readers like the best Sunday comics. – Amazon.
The Art of Alice in Wonderland by Stephanie
Lovett Stoffel (Author)
A collection of works by different artists who have offered
their interpretations of Alice and her topsy-turvy world. – Amazon.
Mirror Kingdoms: The Best of Peter S. Beagle by Peter
S. Beagle (Author)
When New York Times Bestselling writer Tad Williams described
Peter S. Beagle as a 'bandit prince out to steal reader's hearts' he touched on
a truth that readers have known for fifty years. Beagle, whose work has touched
generations of readers around the world, has spun rich, romantic and very funny
tales that have beguiled and enchanted readers of all ages.
Undeniably, his most famous work is the much loved classic, The Last Unicorn,
which tells of unicorn who sets off on quest to discover whether she is the
last of her kind, and of the people she meets on her journey. Never prolific,
The Last Unicorn is one of only five novels Beagle has published since A Fine
and Private Place appeared in 1960, and was followed by The Folk of the Air,
The Innkeeper's Song, and Tamsin.
During the first forty years of his career Beagle also wrote a small handful,
scarcely a dozen, short stories. Classics like 'Come Lady Death,' 'Lila and the
Werewolf,' 'Julie's Unicorn,' 'Professor Gottesman and the Indian Rhinoceros,'
and the tales that make up Giant Bones. And then, starting just five years ago,
he turned his attention to short fiction in earnest, and produced a stunning
array of new stories including the Hugo and Nebula Award winning follow up to
The Last Unicorn, 'Two Hearts,' WSFA Small Press Award winner 'El Regalo,' and
wonderful stories like the surrealist 'The Last and Only,' the haunting 'The
Rabbi's Hobby' and others.
Mirror Kingdoms: The Best of Peter S. Beagle collects the very best of these
stories, over 200,000 words worth, ranging across 45 years of his career from
early stories to freshly minted tales that will surprise and amaze readers.
It's a book which shows, more than any other, just how successful this bandit
prince from the streets of New York has been at stealing our hearts and
underscores how much we hope he’ll keep on doing so. – Amazon.
The Elizabethans by A.
N. Wilson
A time of exceptional creativity, wealth creation, and
political expansion, the Elizabethan age was also more remarkable than any
other for the Technicolor personalities of its leading participants. Apart from
the complex character of the Virgin Queen herself, A. N. Wilson’s The
Elizabethans follows the stories of Francis Drake, a privateer who not only
defeated the Spanish Armada but also circumnavigated the globe with a drunken,
mutinous crew and without reliable navigational instruments; political intriguers
like William Cecil and Francis Walsingham; and Renaissance literary geniuses
from Sir Philip Sidney to Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare. Most
crucially, this was the age when modern Britain was born and established
independence from mainland Europe, both in its resistance to Spanish and French
incursions and in its declaration of religious liberty from the pope and laid
the foundations for the explosion of British imperial power. – Amazon.
The Tsaddik of the Seven Wonders by Isidore
Haiblum (Author)
Paperback original. Cover art by David Johnston. "The
first Yiddish science fiction novel ever."
The Annotated Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan
Swift (Author), Issac
Asimov (Editor)
Jonathan Swift's classic satire is annotated and profusely illustrated in an edition that includes discussions of Swift's life and politics and the medicine, geography, and astronomy of his times.
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