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Go Back to School with a Laugh! Too School for Cool is a collection of illustrated jokes about the one thing all kids know and love: school! Get your children excited (or at least ready to laugh) about a new school year or just a regular-old school day with this collection of funny jokes for the school-age set. Here's a silly one: What do elves learn in school? The elf-abet! Too School for Cool is part of the Illustrated Jokes series from Brenda Ponnay. Other titles include: Fart-tastic Knock Knock Red, White and Blue Knock Knock, Boo Who? Knock Knock, Moo Who? It's Snot Fair! Knock Knock, Lettuce In! Knock Knock, Blub Blub!
Go Back to School with a Laugh! Too School for Cool is a collection of illustrated jokes about the one thing all kids know and love: school! Get your children excited (or at least ready to laugh) about a new school year or just a regular-old school day with this collection of funny jokes for the school-age set. Here's a silly one: What do elves learn in school? The elf-abet! Too School for Cool is part of the Illustrated Jokes series from Brenda Ponnay. Other titles include: Fart-tastic Knock Knock Red, White and Blue Knock Knock, Boo Who? Knock Knock, Moo Who? It's Snot Fair! Knock Knock, Lettuce In! Knock Knock, Blub Blub!
Twelve-year-old Lane Cisco has good friends, a secret boyfriend, and the position of sixth-grade captain at Rio Chama Middle School, but life gets complicated when her off-beat cousin Angelina arrives for an extended visit.
"Pete just can't decide which outfit to wear to school! He has so many options to choose from. Fans of Pete the Cat will enjoy Pete's creativity in choosing the coolest outfit"--
Bloo tries to make Mac cool, but the plan backfires when his friend becomes too cool to hang out with Bloo.
The antics and adventures of cool boy Earl include riding on the Milky Way, growing a rose from his fingernails, and swinging with gorillas.
Every ghoul knows that the best part of going to school is hanging with your ghoulfriends everyday. Write about all of your school faves in this freaky-chic journal, from meals in the Creepateria to after-school destinations. Share the journal with your ghoulfriends, and plan everything from party outfits to the beast ways to celebrate each of your freaky flaws. With claw-some games and defrightful quizzes and activities, this must-have school journal is full of fangtastic fun.
Fifteen-year-old Shiraz Bailey Wood's days are filled with hanging around outside Claire's Accessories, her parents work crap jobs, and her school is pretty much loser central. But this loveable British dreamer with a brain and a heart of gold is beginning to feel there might be a lot more to life than minimum wage and the bling of a souped-up car.
New backpacks? Check! Besties Pizza and Taco are ready to head back to school, but are they ready to meet the cool new kid? B.L.T. wears sunglasses--even in school! He's not even worried about being late to class. SO COOL! I mean, "whatever." Pizza and Taco quickly pick up on what's cool--and what's not--by watching B.L.T.'s every move. Will that spell t-r-o-u-b-l-e for Pizza and Taco with their teacher, Mr. Apple? This hilarious young graphic novel--with chapters--will tickle the funny bones of kids ages 5-8 and bolster their reading confidence. Young graphic chapter books are a great step on the way to graphic novels and longer chapter books. Readers will also love the first three books in the series: Pizza and Taco: Who's the Best? Pizza and Taco: Best Party Ever! Pizza and Taco: Super-Awesome Comic!
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of cool have informed the American ethos since at least the 1970s. Whether we strive for it in politics or fashion, cool is big business for those who can sell it across a range of markets and media. Yet the concept wasn't always a popular commodity. Cool began as a potent aesthetic of post-World War II black culture, embodying a very specific, highly charged method of resistance to white supremacy and the globalized exploitation of capital. Way Too Cool follows the hollowing-out of "coolness" in modern American culture and its reflection of a larger evasion of race, racism, and ethics now common in neoliberal society. It revisits such watershed events as the 1960s Civil Rights Movement, second-wave feminism, the emergence of identity politics, 1980s multiculturalism, 1990s rhetorics of diversity and colorblindness, 9/11, and Hurricane Katrina, as well as the contemporaneous developments of rising mass incarceration and legalized same-sex marriage. It pairs the perversion of cool with the slow erasure of racial and ethical issues from our social consciousness, which effectively quashes our desire to act ethically and resist abuses of power. The cooler we become, the more indifferent we grow to the question of values, particularly inquiry that spurs protest and conflict. This book sounds an alarm for those who care about preserving our ties to an American tradition of resistance.