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A subject dear to children’s hearts is in the spotlight as Leslie Patricelli’s beloved baby character returns. Everybody does it: Kitty, Doggie, Daddy — even Mommy! And when Leslie Patricelli’s beloved bald baby does it while running, it sounds like a train. This frank and very funny look at a certain noisy body function is perfectly suited to the youngest of listeners, while their giggling older siblings will be happy to read it aloud.
A collection of brief essays and poems promoting temperance or relating biogrpahical episodes from the lives of temperance leaders, including Frances E. Willard, and Mrs. Lillian M. N. Stevens, successive presidents of the National WCTU. Several stories are about pets the temperance leaders had.
If only Toots hadn't been so angry with her father. If only she hadn't run home by herself. If only she hadn't seen the fairy on the ceiling. . . . But then again, if things had been different, Toots's whole world wouldn't literally have been turned upside-down. And she would never have had the most amazing adventure. . . . A rare, special book, Toots and the Upside-Down House combines fantasy and adventure with the real, everyday issues of love and loss. This is a dazzling debut novel, one that children--and parents--will return to again and again.
This is a hysterical read-aloud picture book that shows children it's okay to pass a little gas.
Excerpt from Toots and Other Stories: Old Fashioned Stories and Jingles for New Fashioned Little Folk Toots; Little Chinchilla, Who Wrote to Toots from London; Tommy Norcross Sewall, a Friend of Toots; "A Home on the Rolling Deep"; The Three Little Nodrog Boys; Big Brownie; The Little House Near the Garrison; "The Very Latch the Indians Lifted"; On the Way to Trillium Spring; "My Brother Tommy Knows 'most Everything"; Teddy; Old Flip Mug and "Temperance" Plate; The Neal Dow Plate Given to Miss Willard; Parson Smith's Tea-set; Dumpy; "Eagle's Nest," the Pretty Cottage in the Catskills; Frances E.Willard Feeding Little Skippy; "Together They Whisper and Nod"; The Willard Fountain; A Cold Water Girl; "My Jolly Jonquils"; "When the Sun Looks Down on Them"; Mrs. Lillian M. N. Stevens; Where Lillian Made Her Flag About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
Funny, suspenseful, tender, and wise—the story of a man who took to the woods, and the woman who found him there Soon after his fortieth birthday, Macon “Toots” Henslee left his home, his job, and his marriage to live in a tree house. Lots of people—his wife especially—thought that he had lost his mind, but from his perch atop a Tennessee riverbank, Toots could see plainly the insanity of his old life. He had become a man who said and did the opposite of what he wanted to say and do—what could be crazier than that? Nine years later, Toots is out fishing one morning when he catches sight of a nervous young woman hiding behind a sycamore. Sally Ann Shaw is an aspiring country singer in trouble—the kind of trouble that comes with a briefcase full of stolen drug money and a pair of hired thugs in hot pursuit. A hermit’s tree house is the perfect hiding place, but in such close quarters, Toots and Sally Ann have more than gangsters to fear. For a man who gave up everything to start life over again and a woman in desperate need of a hero, love may be the most dangerous game of all. Hailed by the New York Times as “a tale written with zest and read with pleasure,” Toots in Solitude is a novel as eccentric, endearing, and irresistible as its unforgettable main character.
Baby’s big smile is about to get toothier. Ouch. Baby’s mouth feels funny. Something is happening, and it’s not just that a puddle of drool keeps escaping. There it is — a new tooth! And where there’s one, there are soon to be more. From discovering what’s good to bite (and what’s not) to mastering the art of the toothbrush, Baby’s dental adventure is sure to give little teething buddies something to chew on.
A little red train named Toot wishes that he were as big and fast as some of the other trains, but when an emergency arises, Toot finds out that being small has its advantages.