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Children's book that uses owl character to empower child to address the fear of the dark
About the Book The Owl with a Growl is a tale about a little newborn owl named Pete. Little Pete wants to learn all the things the bigger owls can do, but he quickly finds out that learning new stuff is hard work! This story teaches children to keep trying even when things are difficult, because with a little help, they will soon learn how to do things right. About the Author Karen Wu was born, raised, and educated in Minnesota. She also attended Pepperdine University where she studied law. She is the mother of three boys who have helped inspire her writings. In addition to writing, Karen is an artist and had paintings displayed in several galleries in Ojai, Santa Paula, and in Ventura, California, where she now resides.
The Owl Who Could Only Growl is a book about an owl who wakes up one morning and finds that his happy hoot has gone away and has been replaced by a grumpy growl.
'The Silent Owl' explores a world of danger, courage and the power of friendship through a story which holds readers spellbound.World War Two veteran David Price lives as a hermit in the woods to hide the destructive torment caused by his horrific memories of war. Then two ten-year-old pals befriend him and decide they can save his sanity. That decision leads to a dangerous adventure which places their very lives in peril. So can David find the courage to rescue them and even win back control of his own damaged mind?
Misty asked everyone how pine trees could make such yummy smells. None of the answers ever made any sense. One day she let her nose lead her to the answer in the Annan Woods where she began discovering secrets. Ve lives in the Annan Woods. He walks and talks like other animals. He likes to run through the meadow on sunny mornings like other animals, but he is not at all like other animals. By accident he wakes up one day with a very big problem. The only way he can explain his problem to the wise old Mr. Owl who is the wisest of all wise owls, is to show the wise old Mr. Owl his secret. The wise old Mr. Owl tells Ve about many things, including other animals in the Annan Woods who are different from those in their family, but special in their own way. As you read, you learn why Mother Nature gave striped skunks the terrible smelling oil that they spray. Wolvie's plan shows you how being different can be a very good thing. You will find yourself shaking your head and clapping as you read about the adventures in the Annan Woods. You can think about Ve's tail any way you like, and no one can say you are wrong.
For all its storied past and lofty reputation, poetry is really just the art of noticing, naming, and comparing the stuff of this world. Unlike the eye of modern science (which sees the world as a giant specimen for us to dissect), poetry fosters and nurtures life by finding wonder in the nooks and crannies of ordinary life. Suzanne Rhodes, a longtime poet and teacher, offers The Roar on the Other Side as an introductory guide for students (junior high and up). Clear and imaginative, this book makes poetry approachable. Focusing on the importance of sight and the necessity of practice, Rhodes easily communicates the joy of words to her readers and helps them see how good poetry binds all seemingly-contradictory things together. Students will emerge from this book with a good handle on the basics of writing poetry and a new appreciation for the awesome world in which we live.
A Snarl Theology calls God a merciful creator, a big-picture divinity, bigger than anything imaginable. Scripture confirms that in the restoration of the world and all its environs, there will be a settlement between God and his creatures. A covenant to set animals and us back as we were meant to be. "I will make a covenant for them on that day, with the beasts of the field, with the birds of the air, and with the things that crawl on the ground." (Hosea 2:20) Redemption is the divine act of follow-through regarding covenant--washing away our faults, defects, and foibles and taking us into the arms of the divine. Are animals rewarded with redemption, like us--with a full restoration? To imagine that God will not reward these martyred creatures, who play a significant role in human redemption, weakens the concept and promise of paradise. Animals are sentient beyond our understanding, residents in a universe where God communicates with everyone. This animal kingdom theology implies that animals, too, hear God's voice. A Snarl Theology's hope for animals to be our redemptive allies shouldn't cancel doctrine, upset dogma, or countermand Christianity. It should increase our love of God.
You know how your stomach growls when you're really hungry? That's how it started, except the growling wasn't coming from my stomach. It was coming from behind my eyeballs.... "Help!" I screamed. But my voice wasn't normal either. It was the voice of a small person. A very very very small person. Meet Daniel Funk, a regular guy who's stuck living in a house full of girls. Why couldn't he have a brother instead of all those sisters? That would be so cool. When Daniel shrinks to the size of the fourth toe on his left foot, he discovers that he actually does have a brother. A little brother. A very little brother. He's Pablo Funk, Daniel's tiny twin, who is a toeful of trouble. When Daniel and Pablo decide to have some fun at their sisters' party and let loose a giant hissing cockroach just to watch the girls scream, they find out that it's dangerous to be so small. Lin Oliver's hilarious new series, with Stephen Gilpin's comical illustrations, reveals that sometimes big-time fun comes in very small packages.
“Tip” Marugg’s The Roar of Morning has been widely praised as an intensely personal, often dreamlike literary masterpiece that balances Caribbean mysticism with the magical realism of Latin American fiction while reflecting the Calvinist sensibilities of the region’s Dutch colonial past. The story begins on a tropical Antilles night. A man drinks and awaits the coming dawn with his dogs, thinking he might well commit suicide in “the roar of morning.” While contemplating his possible end, the events of his life on Curaçao and on mainland Venezuela come rushing back to him. Some memories are recent, others distant; all are tormented by the politics of a colonialist “gone native.” He recalls sickness and sexual awakening as well as personal encounters with the extraordinary and unexplained. As the day breaks, he has an apocalyptic vision of a great fire engulfing the entire South American continent. The countdown to Armageddon has begun, in a brilliantly dissolute narrative akin to Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano and the writings of Charles Bukowski.