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Football and Rugby are loved by billions of people. There was a need for a football/footy/rugby/soccer coloring book. This book hopes to fill the big void created by lack of any coloring book in this space. It will reduce your stress and tension when your team ends up losing a game or two. Please gift “The Footie Coloring Book” to your friends who are still following other games like cricket, etc. Make coloring great again by coloring all images in this book.
A coloring book to remind us all that Fantasy Football doesn't have to be taken so seriously.
When you buy this book you get an electronic version (PDF file) of the interior of this book. The perfect coloring book for every child that loves football. 40 coloring pages filled with football players. Art is like a rainbow, never-ending and brightly colored. Feed the creative mind of your child and have fun! Each picture is printed on its own 8.5 x 11 inch page so no need to worry about smudging.
This ready-to-color illustrated soccer/football coloring book is for adults and children of all ages who love this team sport played by over 250 million people in over 200 countries making it the world's most popular sport. Benefits - Make your work look great using colored pencils, pens, markers or crayons - Illustrations on separate pages to protect your colorful masterpiece - Artist name & date box on back of each illustration - Share and give your colored art work to friends, family and loved ones as gifts or precious keepsake - Full color examples on back cover - Enjoy therapeutic, stress relieving effect coloring can bring - Relax, unwind and spend time together Just hit the buy button and start your coloring journey now!
Cincinnati Magazine taps into the DNA of the city, exploring shopping, dining, living, and culture and giving readers a ringside seat on the issues shaping the region.
Barry Oliver's three-part 'Regression Trilogy' is a fabulous story of a very special DayCare centre - Buttons and Blocks - where most (but not all) of the clients are adults who have been regressed to infants and toddlers. Danger, intrigue and adventure find each of our protagonists as we learn more about the mysterious technology that can give what adult babies have always wanted - physical regression to infancy. But is it all that we would hope for? The three books are: The Rehab Regression The Daycare Regression The Reporter Regression 184,000 words
Barry Oliver's gripping first book - The Rehab Regression - now continues with a new story centered once more on the Buttons and Blocks daycare center. The Daycare Regression Summer and Elise are in their senior year of college and best friends. Elise is studying social work, while Summer plans on going into early childhood education. Currently, Summer has a most unique part-time job at a daycare center called Buttons & Blocks which partners with a drug rehab center called Forever Free. Together, they offer a 100% cure for their drug-addicted clients by physically regressing them into infants and toddlers still in nappies with no memory of their drug-addicted past. To prove this incredible claim to her skeptical friend, Summer regresses Elise into a 2-year-old girl for one day. Elise is immediately hooked. She enjoys the experience of being in the body of a young child so much that she asks to return again and again. But what happens when the power to cure is misused for the power to silence its critics? Elise soon finds herself trapped in a toddler’s body unable to return, as one by one, the people who would help her escape are themselves transformed into helpless babies. She must try to figure out who is behind this and if they can be stopped — all while trying to escape the trappings of early childhood including the inexorable regression of her own mind into that of an actual 2-year-old child. That’s a lot for a mere toddler to accomplish. Will she run out of time? As it turns out, help sometimes comes from unexpected directions.
Tim Lansing is a reporter running for his life. After exposing the powerful Mansford mafia family and nearly (but not quite) sending its leader, Julius Mansford to prison, Mr. Lansing must run from town to town barely a step ahead of his hunters. Tim’s latest move lands him in the small college town of Centerville, home to a drug rehabilitation center called Forever Free. The last thing Tim wants is to draw attention to himself, but the investigative reporter in him cannot resist looking into stories of missing persons last seen admitted to Forever Free. He expects to find the center does not offer a 100% cure as advertised, but rather the missing clients have returned to their drug use and either died or moved away. The rehab Director Donald Miles, however, has other plans for the meddling reporter and decides to make a “therapeutic” intervention. Tim wakes up one day in the body of a 15-month-old baby; a toddler with the charming nickname of Timmy Turtle, living at a daycare center—Buttons & Blocks. Life in diapers, pacifiers, bottles, and cribs is quite a radical change for the 35-year-old reporter, but Tim decides to play along until he can figure out just what the heck happened to him, an event he has no memory of. Through careful observation and well-placed questions, Tim is able to determine the relation between Forever Free and Buttons & Blocks—they are transforming adult drug addicts into infants and toddlers with little or no memory of their previous lives. Tim is able to play along, that is, until he is introduced to a lovely family that wants to adopt him. He decides it is time to escape. But there is a problem. Assuming Tim can figure out how to return to his adult self, he will immediately be hunted by the mafia again. Does he risk a life on the run that will ultimately end in his murder, or does he choose the life of Timmy Turtle with two great parents and adoring siblings? Forces beyond his control will force Tim to take action, and neither Tim’s life nor the world of Buttons & Blocks will ever be the same again.