Chapter book readers will love reading about the adventures of their favorite Big Red Dog! Clifford wants to go on a whale watch with Emily Elizabeth and her friends. But Jetta is afraid he'll scare the whales away. After Clifford swims away, the kids see some whales in trouble. Who will save them? It's good old Clifford to the rescue! With entertaining stories and full-color art, Clifford Big Red Chapter books are just right for Clifford fans who are ready to read on their own.
Peekaboo!I see your eyes!Peekaboo!I see your nose!Peekaboo!I see your mouth!Peekaboo!I see you!This adorable hand puppet has a cloth book sewn to the palm. Parents can read the simple story and act it out at the same time!
Clifford learns the importance of keeping promises in this easy-to-read story that is based upon an episode of the Clifford PBS-TV series. Clifford, Cleo, and T-Bone are having fun gathering leaves into piles. When T-Bone has to leave, Clifford and Cleo offer to watch is pile for him until he returns. But the temptation to jump into T-Bone1s pile is too great, ad soon T-bone1s leaves are scattered everywhere! Clifford and Cleo rescue ever leaf and restore T-Bone1s pile. When T-Bone returns, they all enjoy the leaf piles together.
This book is about a woman who has a learning disability. She was a foster child to her own grandmother, and this woman was on pills and didn't know she was getting addicted to the pills. In the story, she went through so many emotions and was misunderstood by so many people. In church you would call it a testimony, but in life you would say the struggle is real. You will see that she had to overcome so many obstacles in her life but, at the same time, achieve wisdom and strength and the ability to know what love is and what family means. She will rise from the hole that she dug herself into and face the biggest hurdle that she is trying to achieve in her life. And she will rise from the storm.
A biography and collection of stories from 1924-1927 of writer Josephine Van De Grift, columnist for the Akron Beacon Journal and reporter for the Newspaper Enterprise Association. Her column "Demi-Tasse and Mrs. Grundy" won praise from her readers nationwide. A well-loved writer in her day, Josephine Van De Grift, later known as Mrs. William Rigby, began her writing career early in her teen years. She went on to become a successful society page editor for the Akron Beacon Journal in Akron, Ohio between 1924-1927, when she passed away suddenly at the age of 32 after childbirth complications. Her passing devastated her readers. Her followers begged her husband Bill to one day make a book of all her stories, but none was ever made - until now. Almost a century later, her great-granddaughter, Kristin (née Carter) Groulx, also a writer, historian and genealogist, has taken the time to thumb through saved newspaper clippings and put them to paper in one book for Josephine's beloved readers to see and remember her by.
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.