Now in PDF. Play I-spy with your toddler and they'll learn about life on the farm. Hunt for farmyard favorites and much more with your toddler - they'll love playing I-spy and spotting animals and machines in farmyard scenes. Your child will want to return to the book again and again, as they try to spot all the different things from a sleeping sheepdog, a tractor and a cow, to Dotty the ladybird who's hiding in every scene. Read it together and help them turn the pages as they solve riddles and spot fun surprises. With over 300 fabulous objects to find your toddler will love learning about life on the farm.
Little Hide and Seek: Farm features farm animals and baby animals, tractors, equipment and other fun things to discover on the farm. Young readers will love searching for the hiding chicks and other farm animals, developing picture and word association skills as they go.
SHINE Young So young So young and full of life, full of life. You were a star preparing to shine so bright, And there were no mysteries You could not solve with your beautiful mind, No heart you could not warm with your precious love. Young So young So so young You would have changed the world If you had given the time to shine. But death has no conscience When it takes into its clutches and When it kisses away the smile from faces; When it tries to shroud the light of stars Which once shone so bright, But although he took your body He must find that your pure beautiful soul still shines. Sadie Ralph is the wife of Anslem Ralph and the mother of four beautiful girls. They live in Antigua. The passion of her heart is to see the Body of Christ comes into spiritual maturity and becomes a reflection of its Heavenly Father's love.
This stunning new picture-and-word book features dozens of beautiful full-page photographs, each showing a collection of objects in a single category, such as sports, animals, clothing, and music. On every spread, children can play hide-and-seek, searching the main picture for specific objects that are named and pictured at the side. Along the way, they'll learn lots of new words and have fun discovering the surprises hidden in the pictures.
Those personal accounts resurrect the essential experience of children's work, play, education, family relations, and coming of age from their own perspectives. Steering a middle path between the myth of wholesome farm life and the reality of work that was often extremely dangerous, Riney-Kehrberg shows both the best and the worst that a rural upbringing had to offer midwestern youth a time before mechanization forever changed the rural scene and radio broke the spell of isolation. Down on the farm, truancy was not uncommon and chores were shared across genders. Yet farm children managed to indulge in inventive play---much of it homemade---to supplement store-bought toys and to get through the long spells between circuses.
Hide and Seek: Things That Go is all about vehicles and transport - what can you find? In Hide and Seek: Things That Go, go on a hunt for favorite vehicles of the road, water, air and tracks with your toddler - they'll love playing i-spy and learning all about new and exciting diggers, planes, trucks, cars, and boats. Your child will want to return to this eBook again and again as they try to spot all the different vehicles, including Benjie Bus, who is hiding somewhere on every page! Read Hide and Seek: Things That Go together and help your child solve riddles and spot fun surprises. With over 300 fabulous vehicles to find, your toddler will love learning about things that go!
An entirely new interpretation of modern American portraiture based on the history of sexual difference. Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture, companion volume to an exhibition of the same name at the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, traces the defining presence of same-sex desire in American portraiture through a seductive selection of more than 140 full-color illustrations, drawings, and portraits from leading American artists. Arcing from the turn of the twentieth century, through the emergence of the modern gay liberation movement in 1969, the tragedies of the AIDS epidemic, and to the present, Hide/Seek openly considers what has long been suppressed or tacitly ignored, even by the most progressive sectors of our society: the influence of gay and lesbian artists in creating American modernism. Hide/Seek shows how questions of gender and sexual identity dramatically shaped the artistic practices of influential American artists such as Thomas Eakins, Romaine Brooks, Marsden Hartley, Georgia O'Keeffe, Charles Demuth, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Andrew Wyeth, Andy Warhol, Robert Mapplethorpe, and many more—in addition to artists of more recent works such as Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Glenn Ligon, Catherine Opie, and Cass Bird. The authors argue that despite the late-nineteenth-century definition and legal codification of the “homosexual,” in reality, questions of sexuality always remained fluid and continually redefined by artists concerned with the act of portrayal. In particular, gay and lesbian artists—of but not fully in the society they portrayed—occupied a position of influential marginality, from which vantage point they crafted innovative and revolutionary ways of painting portraits. Their resistance to society's attempt to proscribe them forced them to develop new visual vocabularies by which to code, disguise, and thereby express their subjects' identities—and also their own. Bringing together for the first time new scholarship in the history of American sexuality and new research in American portraiture, Hide/Seek charts the heretofore hidden impact of gay and lesbian artists on American art and portraiture and creates the basis for the necessary reassessment of the careers of major American artists—both gay and straight—as well as of portraiture itself.
DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "The Farm's Little People" by Annie Thomas Fréchette. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.
This thought-provoking book offers short readings on a wide variety of topics prompted by Dr. Ed Cook's engagement with culture and the Christian faith. In the age of sound bites and instant gratification, we sometimes forget that elements of our life deserve more consideration than can be expressed in tweets, posts, and Facebook status updates. The chapters are short, the writing is pithy, and the pages will prompt readers to develop and contemplate their own questions regarding this brave new world in which we find ourselves at the start of the twenty-first century. Just as in life, the joy is often in the journey rather than the destination. The richness of this reading experience may often be found in the questions contemplated rather than in answers discovered. So read, enjoy, and think a bit. You may not agree with everything presented but remember, no offense is intended because, after all, what's offered is just a thought.