While staying with their mother's cousin Jangles on an estate on the island of Hawaii, Steff and her sister Paulie are determined to find a missing artifact in order to save Jangle's job.
While visiting their cousins Belinda and Melinda, who work at a camping resort and tell people about Jesus, Steff and her younger sister Paulie investigate a theft and other suspicious occurrences.
Steff and Paulie stay at a retirement golf community with Mother Quigg and her son. A phantom gardener has been secretly caring for the park's plants, and the sisters suspect Mother Quigg--until plants start disappearing. Is Mother Quigg a thief? The theme is "honor your father and your mother".
When Tillie Gibson inherits control of her uncle Wallace's rebar company, she is as surprised as everyone else. While his window, Dee, knows nothing about the business, his stepson, Austin Neff, has more than a passing interest in its success. Every day Tillie sits in the president's chair, new and more startling discoveries unravel before her. From drug dealing, bogus contracts, and unwelcome visitors to the return of her deep feelings for Austin, tillie is at her wit's end. Someone wants Wallace's company to fail. Someone wants Tillie out for good.
While staying with their aunt, Steff and her younger sister Paulie discover that someone really is after the valuable old clock that Aunt Opal keeps hidden amid all the other stuff that is crammed into her house.
When Tillie Gibson inherits control of her uncle Wallace's rebar company, she is as surprised as everyone else. While his window, Dee, knows nothing about the business, his stepson, Austin Neff, has more than a passing interest in its success. Every day Tillie sits in the president's chair, new and more startling discoveries unravel before her. From drug dealing, bogus contracts, and unwelcome visitors to the return of her deep feelings for Austin, tillie is at her wit's end. Someone wants Wallace's company to fail. Someone wants Tillie out for good.
While staying with their aunt, Steff and her younger sister Paulie discover that someone really is after the valuable old clock that Aunt Opal keeps hidden amid all the other stuff that is crammed into her house.
Vacationing with their families on an island in the middle of a big lake, two children discover many wonderful things to explore. The young cousins use their five senses to discover what is special about this part of God's creation. Illustrated.
Now the two children travel with their families on a backpacking trip in the mountains. Readers are introduced to the sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and textures of this majestic part of God's world. Illustrated.
Identifies and summarizes thousands of books, article, exhibition catalogues, government publications, and theses published in many countries and in several languages from the early nineteenth century to 1981.
First published in 1958, The Salvager is both a narrative history of Great Lakes shipping disasters of 1880–1950 and the life story of Captain Thomas Reid, who operated one of the region’s largest salvaging companies during that era. The treacherous shoals, unpredictable storms, and sub-zero temperatures of the Great Lakes have always posed special hazards to mariners—particularly before the advent of modern navigational technologies—and offered ample opportunity for an enterprising sailor to build a salvage business up from nothing. Designing much of his equipment himself and honing a keen eye for the risks and rewards of various catastrophes, Captain Reid rose from humble beginnings and developed salvaging into a science. Using the actual records of the Reid Wrecking and Towing Company as well as Reid’s personal logs and letters, Mary Frances Doner deftly tells the stories not only of the maritime disasters and the wrecking adventures that followed, but also of those waiting back on shore for their loved ones to return.
Steff and Paulie stay at a retirement golf community with Mother Quigg and her son. A phantom gardener has been secretly caring for the park's plants, and the sisters suspect Mother Quigg--until plants start disappearing. Is Mother Quigg a thief? The theme is "honor your father and your mother".
While staying with their mother's cousin Jangles on an estate on the island of Hawaii, Steff and her sister Paulie are determined to find a missing artifact in order to save Jangle's job.
While visiting their cousins Belinda and Melinda, who work at a camping resort and tell people about Jesus, Steff and her younger sister Paulie investigate a theft and other suspicious occurrences.
Art in Odd Places 2011: RITUAL Ceremony. Habituation. Myth. Obsession. Superstition. Liturgy. Art in Odd Places (AiOP) is a thematic, annual festival that presents visual and performance art in public spaces along 14th Street in Manhattan, NYC each October. In 2011, over sixty artists and performers created public art interventions as part of Art in Odd Places 2011: RITUAL. This richly illustrated catalogue is both a document of, and critical extension on, the diverse projects that were presented. Including commentary by leading practitioners in contemporary art and urban design including: AiOP Founder and Director, Ed Woodham, co-curators Kalia Brooks and Trinidad Fombella, Juliana Driever, Victoria Marshall, Adam Brent, Ernesto Pujol, and Linda Mary Montano. AiOP is an artist-led initiative that uses 14th Street as a laboratory to locate cracks in public space policies, question the dehumanization of the urban landscape, and celebrate the theater of civic space.
Beautiful new editor of Urban Oasis, first published in 1979. The book has been entirely redone in order to expand upon and continue the story of the social and architectural history of Parkview, Julius Pitzman's last and largest neighborhood in St. Louis. New maps, text, historic photos and directory have been added. Book is hardcover with color dust jacket.
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.