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This is the story of Jimmy who is eleven years old and in sixth grade. The book chronicles how a three day weekend became a four day weekend thanks to a snow storm Monday night.It starts snowing 8 a.m. on Monday. The superstition is if you put a spoon under your pillow or an ice cube in the toilet, it increases the chance for a snow day, or a day off from school due to inclement weather. By 4pm we have 16 inches of snow, and buddy Kenny and I are challenged to a snow ball battle with neighbors and brothers, Jeff and David. We take twenty minutes to build walls of snow and a pile of snow balls. We begin the battle which last five minutes until David gest hit in the face, begins crying and runs in the house. At 5:30 p.m. I have chili and hot chocolate with Mom, Dad and sister Jody. When finished eating, Jody and I wash and dry the dishes when it happens! On the radio, it is announces schools are closed to the two feet of snow that has fallen. We jump up and down for joy!President's Day weekend, three days, has now become four days. The next day is spent shoveling snow for money, sledding, and Kenny and I getting our picture in the local paper. The weekend is a time of football, ice hockey, hanging out with family and friends, watching the Philadelphia Flyers hockey game, and playing in the snow! Snow days are a gift from the universe!
Snow day! School’s closed! And somewhere out there, a snowball fight is waiting to happen! Comedian and future Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon brings the high action and high comedy of winter’s most riotous kid rite of passage to life in brisk, uproarious verse. Snow bunnies and Fallon fans of all ages will recognize the runny noses, snowball assaults, toboggan shields, and hand-me-down snowsuits that are essential ingredients of cold-weather fun.
On a cold, snowy day, Jimmy and Puppy visit the garden, clear off the bird feeder, and shake snow off the tree branches
This is a book filled with laughter, fun and curiosity for its readers. It tells the story of Jimmy, his brothers and friends growing with the freedom to explore in Kalida, Ohio, a community comprised of people who participated together to improve the lives of everyone. Family and friends make up the central theme. They all knew each other so the sense of support and confidence always prevailed. This is a biographical look at a small town during the 1950's. It shows how the residents of Ohio, Putnam County, and nearby areas lived. The fun they shared playing at Big Bend and the stories about the church socials, Pioneer Days and the county fairs will make you laugh out loud. The lives of these young boys will entertain you. Family vacations filled with fishing, swimming and the make do rental cabins are comical. This story portrays how one family lived their lives and how the community was the backdrop for Jimmy's innocent freedom.
Through adventures with forest friends and predators, Jimmy BlueSquirrel has learned all about being scared, becoming brave and growing up. Now Jimmy must learn about the meaning of illusions and the power of truth, about livung with the heart-break of misrepresented truth and its harsh, life changing consequences.
Buffalo, long the world's champion scapegoat city, is lionized and becomes an Aspen for the 21st century, a world center for humanism, food and recreation, through a billion dollar media scam involving, fictionally, prominent real-life Buffalo-born media celebrities.
Gem was unhappy. But she remembered times when she was happy. Those were times when she had had the man of her dreams. He was everything to her and he had given her love like she had never had it before. She thought this love was going to last forever, but then she got pregnant and that changed everything. He had previously told her he didn't want a child, but she had thought that once he found out, his love for her would prevail and they would be happy forever. But she was wrong. Now fifteen years later he was back and he told her that in order for everything to be as they previously were, she would have to correct the mistake she had made in the past. Gem was now obsessed with him and was now willing to do whatever it took to get him back into her life, even if it meant committing the ultimate crime...murder. Even if it meant killing Jimmy, her one and only son, the one she thought was the reason for her unhappiness.
In the year 1925, James McIntosh was born into humble beginnings, in a two-room structure that would soon house a family of seven. His home was a stone's throw from the beach in Broughty Ferry, then a thriving fishing village on the east coast of Scotland. This was a time of strict social obedience and even stricter social mores. Children were to be seen and not heard. They were expected to obey the man of the house without question or cavil. Thus did Jimmy find himself put to the bagpipes by his father and then packed off to the army as a naive teenager. He left behind brothers, sisters, and friends, as well as the familiar streets, buildings, and shoreline of his boyhood. Forced to depart the only environment he had ever known, he now had to face the big bad world alone, and off he went with his suitcase and pipes in hand, not knowing what fate awaited him. Never one to give in easily, Jimmy determined to see it through, to make the best of his lot. He saw action during WWII and, after demob, proceeded to carve out a life for himself and his family. Though lacking formal education, he never stopped studying and working to be the best at his music. He sought out the finest instructors and became a successful competitor in world-class competitions. He soon became a mentor to dozens of piping students and helped them do the same. Never satisfied to "rest on his laurels," Jimmy was always looking for new projects to share his knowledge and passion. One of those was establishing the world's first piping professorship at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He traveled internationally, giving recitals, teaching, adjudicating, and organizing piping schools. Such was the success of his work that he was recognized by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, who, at Buckingham Palace, presented him with an MBE for his services to bagpipe music. In this memoir, Jimmy paints a picture in words of his lifelong dedication to his art, the people he met along the way, and the ups and downs in his life, both personal and professional. He writes as if you are sitting in the room with him, chatting by the fire. This touching memoir provides a link with the past, and through one man's vivid telling of his story, we learn how we can enrich our own.