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A guide on how to design and make your own shoes from home.
A poor shoemaker becomes successful with the help of two elves who finish his shoes during the night.
Thomas Dekker's The Shoemaker's Holiday is one of the most popular of Elizabethan plays--entertaining, racy and vivid in its characterization. Revealing a vital portrait of Elizabethan London and the interaction of social classes within the city, its social commentary is on the whole optimistic, though darker tones are discernible. The play has had a lively history of performance on both the professional and amateur stage.
This is the story of a family that lives in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and runs a paper mill. Something happens when a storm hits the mill and a streak of lighting hits the pulping machine. They have a teenage boy who is in the high school band. He has a best friend in the band too, but he also inherited an enemy. There are strange things that keep happening. Of the two boys, one likes a cheerleader while the other likes a majorette. They run into their enemy. Strange things continue to happen. The football game doesn't go like it always does. There is a rivalry with the Shoemakers and the Mosleys that goes back years and is still going on. The family shows up for a cookout. The boys' friendship gets tested because of their different morals. There is talk of reopening the mill. There is trouble when the boys go back to school. Danny is asked to work at the mill. The boys tell Lewis Sr. their secret, and he tells the boys his secret. They decide to reopen the mill. The boys go to the last dance by themselves and have a better time than they thought. But the night turned out to be nothing but horrible. There's a fire, cookout, and a wedding aEUR" a lot of people with a lot of generosity. The mystery is no more.
THIS book contains 20 Czech and Slovak folk and fairy tales translated and retold in English by Parker Fillmore, with excellent illustrations and decorations by Jan Matulka. Drawn from original Slavic sources, and chosen for their variety of subject and range of interest with tales like: The Twelve Months, Zlatovlaska The Golden-Haired, The Shepherd's Nosegay, Smolicheck, The Nickerman's Wife, Batcha And The Dragon, Vitazko The Victorious and many more. Unlike stories from the Grimm brothers, here are fairy tales conceived with all the gorgeousness of the Slavic imagination; charming little nursery tales that might be told in nurseries the world over; folk tales illustrative of the wit of a canny people; and rollicking devil tales as surprising to the Anglo-Saxon imagination as they are entertaining. They are not in any sense academic translations, but vivid renditions by a man who, besides being a student of folklore, was an accomplished story-teller in his own right. The stories are further embellished by Jan Matulka’s exquisite illustrations which capture the essence of the region’s culture. Added to this Matulka commences each story with a vignette which have a distinct Picasso-esque style to them. So, get yourself a warm drink, snuggle in to a comfy chair and sit back and enjoy folklore and tales from the Heart of Europe.
Painter-storyteller Ari’s novel is a true original, with roots in Jewish mysticism and Yiddish folklore … extravagant, charming, and deeply serious in its matter-of-fact mingling of moral history, prophecy and magic.—Kirkus Reviews A Chagall painting brought to life, the novel traces the episodic journey of an orphaned 18th-century cobbler in search of the legendary Jewish rabbi and miracle worker, the Baal Shem Tov.
The shoemaker lives in a small cottage with his large family. Every day he toils away, making boots so his family can eat. The shoemaker's sickly youngest son, Aron, often sits beside him. The doctor has warned the shoemaker that little Aron might not live long enough to see next summer. The shoemaker longs to make more shoes to feed his family, but the cottage gets so dark, he must stop working before the sun goes down. One day the shoemaker and Aron spot something at the market—a beautiful oil lamp! Can the splendid lamp help the shoemaker—and save little Aron?