Added by: koji0777 | Karma: 58.05 | Kids, Fiction literature | 19 September 2010
10
Star Stories for Little Folks
A ripe imagination and the will to learn can make this book a delightful journey into the night sky to locate and identify the constellations. This is a child's book of star charts, it is informative and quite beautiful
Cup of Comfort Classic Edition: Stories That Warm Your Heart, Lift Your Spirit, and Enrich Your Life
Added by: koji0777 | Karma: 58.05 | Fiction literature | 19 September 2010
21
When life gets tough, sometimes a warm drink and a good book are the only solution. A Cup of Comfort supplies both in one: stories of just a few pages each that will leave you feeling as refreshed as if you've just sipped a cup of tea, and entirely caught up in the moments described by the stories. Small enough to tuck into a purse or coat pocket, this is the perfect book for your daily commute or coffee break. Recurring themes of generosity, compassion, and mysterious blessings are the only thing the stories have in common, as each is written by a different author in an entirely different style.
Eugene Myers is working on a novel about the end of the world. Meanwhile, he discovers his daughter doing porn online and his marriage is coming to an end. When he begins dreaming about people who turn out to be real, he wonders if his novel is real as well. Eugene Myers may just be the one to stop the apocalypse
Added by: Alexandrov | Karma: 18.46 | E-Books, Fiction literature | 19 September 2010
5
How to disappear completely
Sitting at the top of a Ferris wheel overlooking the Boston skyline, Josh’s life takes an unexpected turn, and things will never be the same. Along with the many surprises on his life’s new path, he’ll come to take life advice from a family of ducks, get in a bloody war with a dog, lose his job over a spilled drink, wake up in the hospital, apply to work at an adult-themed novelty bakery, and find out that people often aren’t what they seem.
Charlaine Harris has been a published novelist for over twenty-five years.
Though her early output consisted largely of ghost stories, later Charlaine latched on to the trend of writing mystery series, and soon had her own traditional books about a Georgia librarian, Aurora Teagarden. Her first Teagarden, REAL MURDERS, garnered an Agatha nomination. Then she decided to write the book she’d always wanted to write.