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Money Mama introduces her three pigs, each of which has a trait that helps people manage their money.
A funny twist on the traditional tale, The Three Little Pigs. The pigs are in their usual trouble with a somewhat bad wolf but there is a focus on character building in this story.
It's a simple story that helps younger children learn and master the basic money skills of saving, sharing and spending."
NEW REVISED BOOK TAKES ON VIOLENCE IN CHILDREN'S LITERATURE Once upon a time... the big bad wolf eats little pigs, and maybe grandma too, and ends up burned, boiled, killed or even shot... Finally, a positive & friendly version! Funny, Entertaining, & Inspiring NO MORE BIG BAD WOLF NO MORE NEGATIVE IMAGES NO MORE BULLYING NO MORE VIOLENCE NO MORE NIGHTMARES Meet the 3 little pigs like you have never seen before! The 3 little pigs, LeLe, CeCe & BeBe take you on a whimsical journey of spending, saving, budgeting & learning good manners too. But there's a sudden unpredictable twist... a lonely wolf comes to town & surprises everyone! Then something unexpected happens! Delightfully appealing - colorful & funny illustrations entertain readers with rhythm & rhyme. GREAT FOR ALL AGES! For more fun visit www.CharacterAvenue.com
Every Catholic teen will be evangelized in the coming year. That is a fact. The question is this: Who will evangelize our teens, and to what will they be converted? Ironically, most "evangelization" is being done not by the Church but by contemporary American culture. A variety of voices are vying for the attention and allegiance of our youth. Many of those voices, often electronically piped into our unsuspecting households, proclaim relevantly, creatively, and persuasively a message contrary to our Catholic faith. Yet the Church possesses a message that addresses the most significant hunger of every teen's heart. We have exactly what young people are searching for. We struggle, however, in constructing an environment that teens find attractive, and we often fail to proclaim the Gospel in a creative and culturally relevant manner. Make It Real: A Practical Resource for Teen-Friendly Evangelization is all about building evangelistic ministry that not only is worth teens' time but also addresses the issues that are real in their lives. This book provides fresh, clear, and test-driven principles for building an effective and teen-friendly ministry for evangelistic outreach. The fully designed sessions help the busy youth worker implement dynamic and spiritually powerful evangelistic gatherings.
Offers aspiring authors of novels and screenplays advice on using the classic themes of universal folklore and mythology to structure their works, and provides examples from well-known fiction and films.
Mama Pig announces that her three little pigs are building houses of their own. B.B. Wolf can smell bacon! After reading in the Daily Pig Press that Mama's pigs were leaving home, BB knew this was his chance at going after that feast!
A letter received in the fall of 1850 prompts Rebecca Harrigan’s family to join a wagon train and head for the Oregon Territory in the spring of 1851. One hundred seventy-five days later, the Harrigans reach Oregon City, the capitol of the Oregon Territory. This tale relates the Harrigan’s first two years of living in the Oregon Territory. After the free land that lured them west is staked and claims filed, the work begins. Building a house, privy, barn and other outbuildings is priority. Winter will soon be upon them and shelter is needed for the family and its animals. A cooperative effort is established of neighbors so everyone is sheltered by the first snowfall. Rebecca soon learns how to keep house as well as help her father in the fields. She is ‘growing up’ and is not sure she likes the new responsibilities. There is much laughter and joy, as well as pain and sorrow, in the Oregon Territory.
A collection of traditional tales, nursery rhymes, songs, literary excerpts, poems, finger games, recipes and more.
"Damn good" fiction is dramatic fiction, Frey insists, whether it is by Hemingway or Grisham, Le Carre or Ludlum, Austen or Dickens. Despite their differences, these authors' works share common elements: strong narrative lines, fascinating characters, steadily building conflicts, and satisfying conclusions. Frey's How to Write a Damn Good Novel is one of the most widely used guides ever published for aspiring authors. Here, in How to Write a Damn Good Novel, II, Frey offers powerful advanced techniques to build suspense, create fresher, more interesting characters, and achieve greater reader sympathy, empathy, and identification. How to Write a Damn Good Novel, II also warns against the pseudo-rules often inflicted upon writers, rules such as "The author must always be invisible" and "You must stick to a single viewpoint in a scene," which cramp the imagination and deaden the narrative. Frey focuses instead on promises that the author makes to the reader—promises about character, narrative voice, story type, and so on, which must be kept if the reader is to be satisfied. This book is rich, instructive, honest, and often tellingly funny about the way writers sometimes fail their readers and themselves.