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A dog responds to many different bells ringing until finally hopes are fulfilled when the dinner bell rings.
Okey-Dokey Ding-a-Ling’s ridiculous rhymes are guaranteed to get tongues wiggling and bellies giggling. The silly story offers a surprise with each turn of the page, including animal cameos from waving penguins and smooching frogs to dining dinosaurs and swinging chimpanzees! Rhythmic text and alliteration are perfect for reading aloud, and with lift-the-flap, pull-tab, and pop-up pages, Okey-Dokey’s interactive elements are sure to encourage exploration in young readers.
Annotation Looks at Ding Ling's life and work prior to the founding of the People's Republic of China.
Remember the days when phone booths stood on every street corner? If you had to make a call, you'd step inside the little booth, lift the phone off the hook, put a coin in the slot, listen for the click, push the buttons, and hear it ring? And for only 25 cents, in the quiet of the booth, you could call your grandmother, or let the office know you were running late, or get directions for a birthday party. . . This is the story of one of the last remaining phone booths in New York City, the Phone Booth on the corner of West End Avenue and 100th. Everyone used it — from ballerinas and girl scouts, zookeepers and birthday clowns, to cellists and even secret agents! The Phone Booth was so beloved that people would sometimes wait in line to use it. Kept clean and polished, the Phone Booth was proud and happy . . . until, the day a businessman strode by and shouted into a shiny silver object, "I'll be there in ten minutes!" Soon everyone was talking into these shiny silver things, and the Phone Booth stood alone and empty, unused and dejected. How the Phone Booth saved the day and united the neighborhood to rally around its revival is the heart of this soulful story. In a world in which objects we love and recognize as part of the integral fabric of our lives are disappearing at a rapid rate, here is a story about the value of the analog, the power of the people's voice, and the care and respect due to those things that have served us well over time. With his delightful, witty, and boldly colored illustrations that evoke Miroslav Sasek's mid-century modern aesthetic, Max Dalton simply and elegantly captures the energy and diversity of New York City and its inhabitants. A beauty to behold and a pleasure to read, The Lonely Phone Booth is sure to be a favorite among children and parents alike, and the real Phone Booth, which is still standing at West End Avenue and 100th Street, is worth a field trip!
The President of the United States, at the request of the Premier of the People's Republic of China, dispatches Buzzer Louis and the Cats of the CIA to help track down the brains behind Ar-Chee's opium smuggling ring. You see, Ling Ting Tong, a brilliant, multi-lingual porcupine, is known to be hiding in the Chinese capital. Having captured Mr. Ling's front man, Ar-Chee the panda, in Moscow, it's now up to the clandestine CIA cats to find Ling Ting Tong and put an end to the smuggling of opium from Afghanistan for resale along the Pacific Rim and in Moscow.
Two of China's greatest 20th century writers renegotiate woman's sense of self and place