When three Martians are sent to conquer Earth, they fall in love with everything about the planet--fast food, video games, rock 'n' roll, and humans--so instead of conquering Earth, the Martians befriend three kids and save the human race.
A soulful mystery for fans of Thirteen Reasons Why and Paper Towns When Nicole Castro, the most beautiful girl in her wealthy New Jersey high school, is splashed with acid on the left side of her perfect face, the world takes notice. But quiet loner Jay Nazarro does more than that—he decides to find out who did it. Jay understands how it feels to be treated like a freak, and he also has a secret: He’s a brilliant hacker. But the deeper he digs, the more danger he’s in—and the more he falls for Nicole. Too bad everyone is turning into a suspect, including Nicole herself.
Nine-year-old Matthew and his best friend, Jeremy, have been terrorized by bullies. Jeremy was terribly injured and hospitalized. Matthew was determined to return to the area they were attacked to find Jeremy’s book bag when he was chased by those same bullies. While running from them, he falls into a puddle of muddy water with broken glass, cutting his skin all over his body. He finds his way home and falls into a deep sleep. He wakes up to all sorts of new changes with superpowers, which he used all for good and became Kid Hero until Angela and Dalton, two bad laboratory technicians, needed Matthew’s blood to attain his superpowers. Matthew finds his self being bullied in a whole new way.
Indexes popular fiction series for K-6 readers with groupings based on thematics, consistant setting, or consistant characters. Annotated entries are arranged alphabetically by series name and include author, publisher, date, grade level, genre, and a list of individual titles in the series. Volume is indexed by author, title, and subject/genre and includes appendixes suggesting books for boys, girls, and reluctant/ESL readers.
"Jake Avery is a brilliant chemistry professor, gorgeous and screwing up royally. He leaves first wife Angela and baby girl to marry Helen. She's a professor too - and as beautiful as Jake is handsome. Helen's also ruthless, hyper-competitive and will sell her soul to obtain money for her scientific research, even if those with the deep pockets are Rapture-believing evolution deniers. Jake has to figure out how to put a brake on his downward spiral before he's completely nano-sized"--Lulu.com.
An ex-cop is drawn into a twisted game of violence and voodoo when she’s arrested for a murder she didn’t commit in this Southern romantic thriller. Ex-cop Angela Donahue has traded a life of mystery and danger for one of tranquility when she ended her career with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. But when she’s arrested for the murder of a man she’s never even heard of, she realizes that her old life isn’t as far behind her as she’d hoped. And neither is the man who once betrayed her heart… Upon receiving news of her arrest, undercover operative Dylan Montana returns from Angela’s past, determined to clear the name of the woman he still loves. With staggering evidence against her and threats growing more deadly, Angela has no choice but to trust a man she swore she’d never trust again. But in a whirlwind of deceit, violence, and murder, if Dylan wants to reclaim her heart, he’ll have to save her life first. “Voodoo, danger and romance all combine to construct an on the edge of your seat thriller!”—RT Reviews
Who Wrote the Book of Love? is acclaimed novelist Lee Siegel's comedic chronicle of the sexual life of an American boy in Southern California in the 1950s. Starting at the beginning of the decade, in the year that Stalin announced that the Soviet Union had developed an atomic bomb, the book opens with a child's first memory of himself. Closing at the end of the decade, when Pat Boone's guide to dating, 'Twixt Twelve and Twenty, topped the bestseller list, the book culminates just moments before the boy experiences for the first time what he had learned from a book read to him by his mother was called "coitus or sexual intercourse or sometimes, less formally, just making love." Between the initial overwhelmingly erotic recollection and the final climactic moment, all is sex—beguiling and intractable, naughty and sweet. Who Wrote the Book of Love? is about the subversive sexual imaginations of children. And, as such, it is about the origins of love. Vignettes from the author's childhood provide the material for the construction of what is at once comic fiction, imaginative historical reportage, and an ironically nostalgic confession. The book evokes the tone and tempo of a decade during which America was blatantly happy, wholesome, and confident, and yet, at the same time, deeply fearful of communism and nuclear holocaust. Siegel recounts both the cheer and the paranoia of the period and the ways in which those sentiments informed wondering about sex and falling in love. "Part of my plan," Mark Twain wrote in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, "has been to try to pleasantly remind adults of what they once were themselves, and of how they felt and thought and talked." With the same motive, Lee Siegel has written what Twain might have composed had he been Jewish, raised in Beverly Hills in the 1950s, and joyously obsessed with sex and love.
We were prepared for an earthquake. We had a flood plan in place. We could even have dealt with zombies. Probably. But no one expected the end to be quite so... sticky... or strawberry scented. Yahtzee Croshaw (Mogworld, Zero Punctuation Reviews) returns to print with a follow-up to his smash-hit debut: Jam, a dark comedy about the one apocalypse no one predicted. * The hilarious new novel by the author of Mogworld! * Croshaw's Zero Punctuation Reviews is the most viewed video game review on the web! * For lovers of bizarre horror and unforgettable characters! "[Croshaw is] able to pull off slapstick comedy in print, and that's no easy feat." –ComicsAlliance