Daddy Depot
Author | : Chana Stiefel |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 42 |
Release | : 2017-05-16 |
Genre | : Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | : 1250058899 |
"A picture book about a girl who imagines a megastore where she can exchange her dad for a new one"--
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Author | : Chana Stiefel |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 42 |
Release | : 2017-05-16 |
Genre | : Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | : 1250058899 |
"A picture book about a girl who imagines a megastore where she can exchange her dad for a new one"--
Author | : Chana Stiefel |
Publisher | : Feiwel & Friends |
Total Pages | : 40 |
Release | : 2017-05-16 |
Genre | : Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | : 1250167574 |
Come to Daddy Depot: The Dad Megastore! From Acrobats to Zookeepers, we have the perfect dad for you! Exchange your old dad for a brand-new one . . . TODAY! Lizzie loves her dad, but he tells the same old jokes, falls asleep during story time, and gets distracted by football while Lizzie does her ballet twirls. When she sees an ad for a store called Daddy Depot, she decides to check it out—and finds dads of all kinds! Will Lizzie find the perfect dad? Join her on this sweet and silly adventure that celebrates fathers with lots of love.
Author | : Minda A. McLintock |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 162 |
Release | : 1915 |
Genre | : Women Physicians as Authors |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Clyde Bolton |
Publisher | : NewSouth Books |
Total Pages | : 194 |
Release | : 2010-07-01 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1603060634 |
Clyde Bolton has long been a dean of the Southern sportswriting community. Now this popular columnist focuses his beguiling prose on his boyhood memories in his delightful memoir, Hadacol Days. The title is taken from a high school cheer: “Statham Wildcats on the Ball, They’ve Been Drinking Hadacol.” The Statham in the cheer refers to Statham High School, Statham, Georgia, now as long gone as Hadacol, but equally effervescent in the author’s nostalgic but clearheaded look back at what life was like in small Southern towns of the 1940s and 1950s.
Author | : Matt Handford |
Publisher | : Xlibris Corporation |
Total Pages | : 198 |
Release | : 2020-03-12 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1796092207 |
British actress Kate Robertson is living the dream: she’s got a successful acting career, a mansion in Beverly Hills, great friends, and a hunky boyfriend. Once she gets her dream role in the remake of the science fiction classic Memories, Kate gets very excited. However, since she and director Ken Lyons are both connected to a Los Angeles criminal gang known as los Diablos, her self-centered co-star John Farrell becomes a full-fledged member of a rival gang known as the Sharks. Once they discover that the two remaining gangs in the city - the Volgograd Bratva and the Hong Kong Triad - merge with each other with the goal of ruling the Los Angeles criminal underworld for themselves, the cast and crew of Memories must put their differences aside in order to avoid being exterminated in the Battle for Los Angeles.
Author | : Gerald Carley |
Publisher | : iUniverse |
Total Pages | : 170 |
Release | : 2006-03 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0595389694 |
This is not a novel. It is a history of an American family. The story begins in Upper Wallop, Hampshire, England, continues to New England in the early 1600's, and finally to the frontier after the Louisiana Purchase, to a region that had once been Spanish West Florida, and which to this day is referred to as the Florida Parishes of Louisiana. Interestingly, in the 300 plus years over which this migration occurred, they only lived in four places: Newbury, Massachusetts, Chester, New Hampshire, Kentwood, Louisiana, and Fluker, Louisiana. The members of the Kent family that eventually settled in Fluker were pioneers, instrumental in founding towns, creating businesses and jobs, and were dominant participants in the development of the social and economic fabric of the local society. These Fluker Kents were a big family, and lived life to the fullest, and deserve to be remembered. This book exists so that their descendants might know who these people were, and how they lived.
Author | : Jacqueline Diamond |
Publisher | : K. Loren Wilson |
Total Pages | : 221 |
Release | : 2024-04-11 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : |
Amnesia cost the doctor two years of his life. Is this strange woman really his wife, and is he the father of her baby girl? Dr. Hugh Menton vanished for two unexplained years. Since he was found injured with no memory of that time, he’s picked up the pieces of his life, but something’s missing. Then waitress Meg Avery arrives at his medical clinic with her toddler daughter and a wild tale. She claims he’s her missing husband, a former drifter named Joe. Hugh’s paternal instincts kick in even before a DNA test proves the child is his. And he can’t deny a strong attraction to Meg. But they come from different worlds, and he’s nothing like the man she fell in love with. Even if they find the answers to Hugh’s disappearance, can these three people ever be a family? By the USA Today bestselling author of the Safe Harbor Medical series. “An excellent story, an excellent plot... I really like the way this author writes.”—A-Wish-Upon-a-Star, online reviewer
Author | : William M. Tuttle Jr. |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 382 |
Release | : 1993-09-16 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 019987882X |
Looking out a second-story window of her family's quarters at the Pearl Harbor naval base on December 7, 1941, eleven-year-old Jackie Smith could see not only the Rising Sun insignias on the wings of attacking Japanese bombers, but the faces of the pilots inside. Most American children on the home front during the Second World War saw the enemy only in newsreels and the pages of Life Magazine, but from Pearl Harbor on, "the war"--with its blackouts, air raids, and government rationing--became a dramatic presence in all of their lives. Thirty million Americans relocated, 3,700,000 homemakers entered the labor force, sparking a national debate over working mothers and latchkey children, and millions of enlisted fathers and older brothers suddenly disappeared overseas or to far-off army bases. By the end of the war, 180,000 American children had lost their fathers. In "Daddy's Gone to War", William M. Tuttle, Jr., offers a fascinating and often poignant exploration of wartime America, and one of generation's odyssey from childhood to middle age. The voices of the home front children are vividly present in excerpts from the 2,500 letters Tuttle solicited from men and women across the country who are now in their fifties and sixties. From scrap-collection drives and Saturday matinees to the atomic bomb and V-J Day, here is the Second World War through the eyes of America's children. Women relive the frustration of always having to play nurses in neighborhood war games, and men remember being both afraid and eager to grow up and go to war themselves. (Not all were willing to wait. Tuttle tells of one twelve year old boy who strode into an Arizona recruiting office and declared, "I don't need my mother's consent...I'm a midget.") Former home front children recall as though it were yesterday the pain of saying good-bye, perhaps forever, to an enlisting father posted overseas and the sometimes equally unsettling experience of a long-absent father's return. A pioneering effort to reinvent the way we look at history and childhood, "Daddy's Gone to War" views the experiences of ordinary children through the lens of developmental psychology. Tuttle argues that the Second World War left an indelible imprint on the dreams and nightmares of an American generation, not only in childhood, but in adulthood as well. Drawing on his wide-ranging research, he makes the case that America's wartime belief in democracy and its rightful leadership of the Free World, as well as its assumptions about marriage and the family and the need to get ahead, remained largely unchallenged until the tumultuous years of the Kennedy assassination, Vietnam and Watergate. As the hopes and expectations of the home front children changed, so did their country's. In telling the story of a generation, Tuttle provides a vital missing piece of American cultural history.
Author | : Robert E. Skinner |
Publisher | : Poisoned Pen Press Inc |
Total Pages | : 312 |
Release | : 1999 |
Genre | : Music-halls (Variety-theaters, cabarets, etc.) |
ISBN | : 1615952292 |
Night-club owner and occasional sleuth Wesley Farell--a man of mixed heritage--is hurled into a world of intrigue and murder, forcing him to confront the past when he agrees to help Carol Donovan escape the control of feared syndicate boss Archie Badeaux.