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With full captions explaining how each species act in a group, communicate, hunt and feed, and rear its young, Monkeys is a brilliant examination in 150 outstanding color photographs of these remarkable primates. As our closest relatives in the animal world, monkeys have always fascinated and amused humans in equal measure. Monkeys is an outstanding collection of photographs showing these complex, intelligent animals in their natural habitat. Arranged in chapters covering anatomy, family, behavior, feeding, and young, Monkeys features a wide variety of monkeys and apes, including baboons, gorillas, Orang Utans, macaques, howler monkeys, spider monkeys, marmosets, gibbons, mandrills, and chimpanzees. The smallest monkey is the pygmy marmoset, which can be just 4.6 inches in length with a 6.8-inch tail and weighing just over 3.5 oz., while the massive Grauer's gorilla can weigh over 400 lbs.
Do you like ketchup? Well, Mason the Ketchup Monkey does! Mason loves to dip all kinds of food in his ketchup. One day, he decides to grow his own tomatoes and make his very own ketchup so he can share it with everyone in town. But what will happen to Mason's dream when his ketchup delivery truck breaks down?
A mysterious woman turns Tom, a nasty recalcitrant little boy into a monkey. His parents kick the monkey out of their house. He is later sold to a showman. After some time, the woman returns to ask Tom if he has been good. Receiving an affirmative response, she turns him back into a little boy, one who promised to be good for the rest of his days.
An analysis of the forces behind collectivism, and the steps which individualists can take to reassert themselves. Hailed as a 21st century Atlas Shrugged, this book deconstructs accepted dogma of both the political left and the right. The book includes mathematical analysis, fictional stories of a caveman economy and autobiographical sketches to make its points. Quite possibly the prescription for the destruction of civilization as we know it.
Tom Lutz is on a mission to visit every country on earth. And the Monkey Learned Nothing contains reports from fifty of them, most describing personal encounters in rarely visited spots, anecdotes from way off the beaten path. Traveling without an itinerary and without a goal, Lutz explores the Iranian love of poetry, the occupying Chinese army in Tibet, the amputee beggars in Cambodia, the hill tribes on Vietnam’s Chinese border, the sociopathic monkeys of Bali, the dangerous fishermen and conmen of southern India, the salt flats of Uyumi in Peru, and floating hotels in French Guiana, introduces you to an Uzbeki prodigy in the market of Samarkand, an Azeri rental car clerk in Baku, guestworkers in Dubai, a military contractor in Jordan, cucuruchos in Guatemala, a Pentecostal preacher in rural El Salvador, a playboy in Nicaragua, employment agents in Singapore specializing in Tamil workers, prostitutes in Colombia and the Dominican Republic, international bankers in Belarus, a teacher in Havana, border guards in Botswana, tango dancers in Argentina, a cook in Suriname, a juvenile thief in Uruguay, voters in Guyana, doctors in Tanzania and Lesotho, scary poker players in Moscow, reed dancers in Swaziland, young camel herders in Tunisia, Romanian missionaries in Macedonia, and musical groups in Mozambique. With an eye out for both the sublime and the ridiculous, Lutz falls, regularly, into the instant intimacy of the road with random strangers.
Tom and his toy monkey, Pippo, go out for a walk and fall into a mud puddle.
A book is rich in colorful illustrations for children and adults about farts, friendship, and family. Meet a little farting hero, a monkey named Tom. Put a SMILE on your child face! Scroll up and BUY NOW!
A young boy spends the day indoors with his toy monkey.
A young boy has fun playing in the garden with his toy monkey and wheelbarrow.