Ears (Includes Headphone Component, Piercing Facts Flap, and Swimmers Ear simple fold).Parts of the Ear (further research needed).Hair (Includes Hair Do’s and Don’ts Flap Book and Hair Scare Tab Book).The Care and Keeping of You Lapbook includes these mini-books: The Care and Keeping of You Lapbook Printables Thanks to Wende for preparing this The Care and Keeping of You Lapbook. You’ll find answers to questions about your changing body, from hair care to healthy eating, bad breath to bras, periods to pimples, and everything in between. The Care and Keeping of You features tips, how-tos, and facts from the experts. This lapbook includes printable activities based on the book The Care and Keeping of You by Valorie Schaefer. This won’t cost you anything, but it helps us to keep the site running. We sometimes use affiliate links in our content.
0 Comments
When I discovered Oliver Jeffers’ books 10 years ago, I hadn’t read a children’s book since my own childhood. Jeffers never shies away from life’s big questions or from an unbelievable premise and it’s his mix of wisdom and humour that has contributed to his success as an author and illustrator. For instance, in This Moose Belongs to Me, the main character, Wilfred, learns that humans cannot really own a wild animal, even if said animal is excellent at providing Wilfred with shelter from the rain. That’s a line he often walks, perilous as it is, but he maintains it steadily. While wiping away my tears, I thought that the film beautifully demonstrated what I love about Jeffers’ books: they exist in a world that’s cute and whimsical, but also so insightful and filled with occasionally devastating earnestness. Recently I watched Here We Are: Notes for Living on Planet Earth, an animated film based on Oliver Jeffers’s picture book by the same name. It is their good fortune that they are not enslaved, but they lose everything to the pirates and arrive in Murano destitute. Jane and Vincent plan to separate from the party and travel to Murano to study with glassblowers there, but their ship is set upon by Barbary corsairs while en route. In Valour and Vanity, master glamourists Jane and Vincent find themselves in the sort of a magical adventure that might result if Jane Austen wrote Ocean's Eleven.Īfter Melody's wedding, the Ellsworths and Vincents accompany the young couple on their tour of the continent. Acclaimed fantasist Mary Robinette Kowal has enchanted many fans with her beloved novels featuring a Regency setting in which magic-known here as glamour-is real. The Grandmother-Granddaughter Conspiracy, by Marissa LingenĪnd don't forget to search this ebook store for more entries in the "Megapack" series - covering Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, Mysteries, Westerns, Cthulhu Mythos, and many other subjects. The Application of Discipline, by Jason Andrew The Big Trip Up Yonder, by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. We werent able to calculate a reading time for this book. Tiny and the Monster, by Theodore Sturgeon The 15th Science Fiction MEGAPACK: 70 Classic and Modern Science Fiction Tales. The Life Work of Professor Muntz, by Murray Leinster Zora and the Land Ethic Nomads, by Mary A. Scithers and John Gregory Betancourt, Milton Lesser, John Russell Fearn, Harry Harrison, Isaac Asimov, Ayn Rand, and many more. Dick, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Jason Andrew, Henry Kuttner, Cynthia Ward, George H. The Fourth Science Fiction Megapack selects 25 more modern and classic science fiction stories, by talented authors new and old. The Fourth Science Fiction MEGAPACK ® by Isaac Asimov, Philip K. Another 100 million years and Earth is a single, huge supercontinent and one vast, warm ocean. In 100 million years, Earth is a global hothouse, brimming with life. Only the hardiest, most adaptable species are able to survive. In five million years, Northern Europe and North America are covered by ice sheets. Warrior terabytes disable victims by spraying chemicals at them. Toratons, descendents of tortoises, are the biggest animals ever to walk the Earth. It cannot fly, but the carakiller is the Amazon's swiftest predator. What creatures will roam the land or swim in the oceans? The Future Is Wild brings to life a world of amazing creatures and sets them loose in our imagination.īased on fundamental biological and evolutionary principles, they could - and may yet - exist: 5 million years from now. Imagine the world in the far distant future - a world without humans, a world so different from ours that, until now, it's been impossible to consider. 1 New York Times Bestseller Goodreads reviews for The Woman in the Window: The. Twisty and powerful, ingenious and moving, The Woman in the Window is a smart, sophisticated novel of psychological suspense that recalls the best of Hitchcock. The Woman in the Window: The Hottest New Release Thriller of 2018 and a No. What is real? What is imagined? Who is in danger? Who is in control? In this diabolically gripping thriller, no one-and nothing-is what it seems. But when Anna, gazing out her window one night, sees something she shouldn’t, her world begins to crumble-and its shocking secrets are laid bare. Then the Russells move into the house across the way: a father, a mother, their teenage son. She spends her day drinking wine (maybe too much), watching old movies, recalling happier times. Īnna Fox lives alone-a recluse in her New York City home, unable to venture outside. It isn’t paranoia if it’s really happening. Aschkensays book transcends ideological limitations and gives the reader an interesting and valuable insight into female biblical characters and the manner. Finn - SIGNED UK FIRST EDITION BOOKįor readers of Gillian Flynn and Tana French comes one of the decade’s most anticipated debuts, to be published in thirty-six languages around the world and already in development as a major film from Fox: a twisty, powerful Hitchcockian thriller about an agoraphobic woman who believes she witnessed a crime in a neighboring house. One day his beautiful and tender-hearted sister, Gwennie, falls in love. Naef grew up despising himself, and throughout his life he has refused to look in a mirror. His only saviours were his mother and sister. In his little fishing village he grew up tormented and teased, abused and violated by the villagers. He has a club foot, twisted spine, too-big teeth and walks with a limp. It is a very different type of M/M erotica and *utterly* brilliant. ‘Truth in the Dark’ is a Dreamspinner e-book by Amy Lane. In one moment of magic, he is given the body of his dreams-and he discovers that where flesh meets spirit and appearance meet reality, sometimes the only place to find truth is in the darkness of a lover’s arms. Knife is unprepared for the form the island’s curse takes on his own misshapen body. Aerie-Smith offers Gwen a trousseau and some hope, if only Knife will keep him company on his island for the span of a year and perform one “regrettable task” at year’s end. Aerie-Smith has been cursed to walk upright in the form of a beast, and his beloved village suffers from the same spell. Her suitor’s cousin offers him a way out, but it won’t be easy. When Gwennie is obliged to turn a suitor down because she fears to leave her brother to the brutality of their village, Knife is desperate for anything to ensure her happiness. The only thing beautiful in his life is his sister. Knife’s entire existence has been as twisted as his flesh and his face. She does get to see what’s happened with Liam and Chubs, and, of course, there are developments that challenge her notions of what’s been told to her. Liam and Chubs are out there, and she hopes they’re safe after all, she wiped Liam’s mind clean of memories of the two of them together in the hope she could keep him away from the dubious work of the League.īut the twists and turns keep coming, for readers and for Ruby and the other kids with special abilities. In this book, she’s training with the Children’s League, where she doesn’t really want to be, but hoping that she can somehow figure out what will be best. Ruby and her friends don’t get many breaks. The pace of this story seems to never slow. This second book in a gripping dystopian series picks up the action from the first, The Darkest Minds, and just keeps running. but he hopes that this group of teens will become the new Lost Ones. And rest of the Lost Boys have been killed. Tink leads a fairy army that barely holds them at bay. It's a war zone under siege by a horde of pirates with a merciless new leader who will stop at nothing to steal the land's magic. When the group is then spirited away by a foul-mouthed Tinker Bell, they discover that Neverland is not some fun-filled hideaway. And he needs Bee and the others to come back with him. The truth is Paco's not just a lost teen, he's a Lost Boy from Neverland. So when a stranger named Paco saves her life, Bee invites him to join their crew, thinking he's another lost teen. Neverland has become a war zone and it’s up to a new group of lost teens to set things right in this gritty YA graphic novel series from #1 New York Times bestselling Australian author Tom Taylor and powerhouse Australian comic artist Jon Sommariva!īee and her fellow runaways are their own found family. The story is mesmerizing, and since it is Moira’s and told by her, we must read between the lines and try to follow her bouncing thoughts to places she doesn’t really mean to lead us. She is all too human, and all too afraid of her own emotions and those of others she is virtually unknown to everyone who should know her best, including her younger sister, who only sees and worships her from a distance. I found Moira quite unlikeable at times, and so vulnerable and alone at others that I could not help understanding and loving her. When the book begins, we find Moira Stone sitting at the bedside of her younger sister, Amy, who is in a coma from an accident, and there is the immediate sense that there is something troubling in this sibling relationship that will be revealed and that the accident will be more than just that to Moira herself. She was a gift from my friend Candi, and one I took far too much time to open. If I haven’t already told you, I am in love with the poetic, lyrical sorcery of Susan Fletcher. Still, even in these adverse reading circumstances, it was magic every time I opened the covers. It deserved a slow, consistent read and a mind clear of all that jingle-jangling. I stretched the reading of this book over almost a month, grabbing a chapter while doing the laundry, resting between the packing of boxes, or trying to forget how long the wait has been for my furniture to arrive at my new home. |