Who doesnt love a day at the beach? When you add this book to your collection, you open up a world of wonder for your reader. They will read about the fun things one does at the beach. They will also learn about some of the animals that make the beach their home.
Farms are busy places even though they're in quiet, rural locales. Kids will gain insight into the daily workings of the farm, as well as meet some of the animals that live on farms.
A hike into the mountains is an amazing adventure. Your readers will discover the different animals they might see and what they might do on a visit to the mountains. This is a perfect book to inspire your students to get active and to love reading.
Farms are busy places even though they're in quiet, rural locales. Kids will gain insight into the daily workings of the farm, as well as meet some of the animals that live on farms.
This stimulating series focuses on the places and events that are familiar to most kids. Readers get a vivid introduction to what they'll learn, see, and do during these events. Simple vocabulary directly correlates to the full-color photos, helping readers make connections and build reading confidence. Repetition of certain phrases will help your readers predict what is coming next and soon reading will become a regular part of their lives.
Gunn's a sucker when it comes to beautiful ladies, and crafty Jason Coker decides to take advantage of the famous gunman's weakness for women. Herding together the buxom barmaids of a brawling cantina, Coker sends Gunn a message: surrender your guns or I'll rough up the girls. The threat riles up Gunn's temper something fierce. And when his head gets hot, he's got no choice but to shoot it off!
Gunn's a sucker when it comes to beautiful ladies, and crafty Jason Coker decides to take advantage of the famous gunman's weakness for women. Herding together the buxom barmaids of a brawling cantina, Coker sends Gunn a message: surrender your guns or I'll rough up the girls. The threat riles up Gunn's temper something fierce. And when his head gets hot, he's got no choice but to shoot it off!
The Bible is not one book. It is a compilation of sixty-six books, or writings. And even though these were written by some forty different authors over a period of 1500 years, there is an integrated message that runs throughout the Bible. Unfortunately, we often get our exposure to the Bible piecemeal. For the church goer, each week a small sliver of the biblical text is reviewed, without a mechanism that puts all of these pieces into an integrated whole. What we read or hear can seem disjointed. How is the book of Leviticus connected to the book of Hebrews? How is John’s reason for writing his Gospel related to Psalm 2? How do we connect the covenant ceremony of Genesis 15 with the cross—much less understand that ceremony to begin with? Why is the book of Ruth included as part of the Bible? What does it have to do with anything? Or better yet, why do we have the book of Esther—where God is not mentioned at all? What makes each of these important? How are they related, or are they? In short, how is God’s story—God’s revelation—unified? That’s where A Forty-Day Study of the Biblical Story comes in. It looks at how each of the elements of the Bible contribute to an integrated whole. And the lens used to see Scripture in a unified way is Jesus. Everything we look at is done in the context to how it relates to Jesus and how it contributes to the Bible’s unified message. We learn why an obscure Galilean carpenter has become the center of all of history.
The race for riches along the Columbia River brought more than trappers--hired guns and assasins also competed with each other for territory. Into this land of adventure and treachery comes Jared Flynn, a man running from his tragic past. Hot on his trail is his brother Malcolm, content to live among the Sioux before he journeyed west, to hunt down and kill his brother Jared.
Nancy Stafford leaves St. Louis with her husband and son, drawn to the promise of a new life in Texas, but when her family is killed by Comanche Indians, she is left alone, determined to build a home and life in honor of her family's memory.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.