On the road to Grandma's house, there are so many vehicles to see. How many vehicles can you find? This book focuses on alphabetic principle and decoding skills. Paired to the nonfiction title Earth’s Landforms.
Upside Down Idiots is a feel good story about the travels of Jack Mohr, crazy, wonderful times with his twin brother Robbie, and four forever amazing friends. Together, their adventures take them from the creative depths of readings with genius’s, sky-filled pyrotechnic displays, paper routes, house painting, the Snobb Report, sushi-boats, genomic discoveries, sex on the beach, exotic boating adventures on the San Francisco Bay. And the loveliest of palindromes is Ava – who introduces Jack to fresh experiences, the club scene, and a new romance. Jack was their lifeline to the everyday world and forever an Upside Down Idiots Club emeritus. Robbie told Jack, “I hope our brains will always be connected through common pathways we understand, and our hearts will remain together no matter how far our brains get disconnected.”
Rick and Brendas lives were changed forever when Rick went to the doctor to get a prescription refill. The doctor unexpectedly decided to perform a prostate exam. When he did, he felt a suspicious lump. Weeks later, a biopsy confirmed that Rick had prostate cancer. As a couple, they found their lives changed in unexpected ways following robotic surgery. They decided to share an intimate glimpse into their lives after surgery so other couples would be more prepared than they were. If you are thinking about surgery, or if you just had surgery, you will want to read about their experiences and the life lessons they learned along the way.
Back in print, Kathryn Davis’s riveting debut about the indelible pacts and hidden hatreds of sisterhood Labrador is the story of two unforgettable sisters. Willie, the eldest, is willful, beautiful, and wayward; to Kitty, the youngest, she is the radiant center around which everything revolves. Kitty, too, is willful, but in the brooding manner of the inveterate loner. She is the one who is visited by an angel, Rogni, who reshapes her beliefs by telling her eerie, enigmatic fables that defy time and place, parables about bears, martyrs, and imprisoned daughters that seem to contain warnings about betrayals and violence to come. In the pared-down landscape of the far north, where the girls’ grandfather has his home, Kitty escapes the orbit of her sister and begins to come to terms with the demons—and the enchantments—that have been her birthright from the start. In Labrador, Davis’s first novel, one finds the hallmark lyricism and startling narrative swerves, the layered atmospherics, the fierce intelligence and wit, and above all the wild and transformative qualities of her imagination that have defined her work ever since.