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When Rosie enters her talking parakeet Winky Blue in a radio quiz contest on the top of the Empire State Building, he gets disqualified but helps in the search for a missing gerbil.
When Rosie enters her talking parakeet Winky Blue in a radio quiz contest on the top of the Empire State Building, he gets disqualified but helps in the search for a missing gerbil.
When the Royal Rascals television show makes plans to film an episode in Oakdale, Rosie hopes her parakeet, Winky Blue, can become a star.
Rosie and her friends enter their pets in a pet contest but when a magician fumbles a trick, Rosie's prize-winning parakeet disappears for good.
Rosie plans to make her parakeet Winky Blue famous forever through a series of television commercials, but her hopes are crushed when he is lost on the way into New York City.
A traditional Cree Indian story about how a mouse burned its teeth when it tried to free the sun from a snare.
Winky Lewis and Susan Conley, a photographer and a writer in Portland, tried an experiment. At the start of every week for a year, Winky sent Susan a photograph: of their children, of the street where they live as neighbors, and of other green places in Maine. By the end of that week Susan sent a tiny story back that talked to the photograph. Stop Here, This Is The Place tells the story of a year in which children's arms and legs get longer, and traces of babyhood fade--a year that feels interminable to a ten-year-old looking forward and fleeting to that ten-year-old’s mother, who can always stop here, go back and remember. This delightfully evocative gift book is a reminder to stop and enjoy the precious time we have with our kids while we have them. Through Susan's recollections of moments from her childhood and the ongoing lives of her children, we’re reminded of our own childhoods, and of the necessity to stop and pay attention, to hold on.
As welterweight boxer Eddie Cero makes his way home through a dark Philadelphia alley, he steps in on two punks beating up an older man. It s a favor that s going to turn Eddie s life upside down. Sal Giambroni buys Eddie a round and offers him a part-time gig helping with his private-detective work. Despite Eddie s reluctance, a few days on the job reveal that he has a knack for snooping and then he stumbles onto a cold case involving a missing soul singer. A music lover with a budding interest in the singer s attractive, talented sister, Eddie finds himself involved in a violent, twisted story of betrayal and intrigue, power and passion all set to the beat of rock and roll. David Fulmer s acclaimed Storyville series brought us a New Orleans teeming with jazz. The Dying Crapshooter s Blues took fans to Atlanta and the blues. The Blue Door now brings us the vibrant city of Philadelphia and the early days of its famous soul."
A hilarious and heartwrenching story about surviving middle school--and an unthinkable diagnosis--while embracing life's weirdness. Ross Maloy just wants to be a normal seventh grader. He doesn't want to lose his hair, or wear a weird hat, or deal with the disappearing friends who don't know what to say to "the cancer kid." But with his recent diagnosis of a rare eye cancer, blending in is off the table. Based on Rob Harrell's real life experience, and packed with comic panels and spot art, this incredibly personal and poignant novel is an unforgettable, heartbreaking, hilarious, and uplifting story of survival and finding the music, magic, and laughter in life's weirdness.
A woman and her young son travel by car through the southern and midwestern United States in this heartbreakingly spare novel-in-dialogue. As the mother drives, she and the boy, Roy, trade impressions of the landscape and of life, in the process approaching an understanding of each other and their shared inner landscape. "Mom, can we drive to Wyoming?" "You mean now?" "Uh-huh. Is it far?" "Very far. We're almost to Georgia." "Can we go someday?" "Sure, Roy, we'll go." "We won't tell anyone, right, Mom?" "No, baby, nobody will know where we are." "And we'll have a dog." "I don't see why not." "From now on when anything bad happens, I'm going to think about Wyoming. Running with my dog." "It's a good thing, baby. Everybody needs Wyoming." —from Wyoming