Monday's Troll

Monday's Troll
Author: Jack Prelutsky
Publisher: GreenWilBk
Total Pages: 48
Release: 1996-04-15
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN:

A collection of seventeen poems about such unsavory characters as witches, ogres, wizards, trolls, giants, a yeti, and seven grubby goblins.

Troll

Troll
Author: Johanna Sinisalo
Publisher: Open Road + Grove/Atlantic
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2007-12-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1555847374

This internationally acclaimed winner of the Finlandia Award is “a brilliant and dark parable about the fluid boundaries between human and animal” (The Boston Globe). Angel, a young photographer, comes home from a night of carousing to find a group of drunken teenagers in the courtyard of his apartment building, taunting a wounded, helpless young troll. He takes it in, not suspecting the dramatic consequences of this decision. What does one do with a troll in the city? As the troll’s presence influences Angel’s life in ways he could never have predicted, it becomes clear that the creature is the familiar of man’s most forbidden feelings. A novel of sparkling originality, Troll is a wry, beguiling story of nature and man’s relationship to wild things, and of the dark power of the wildness in ourselves. “[An] imaginative and engaging novel of urban fantasy . . . The stuff of ancient legend shadows with rather unnerving precision the course of unloosed postmodern desire.” —Chris Lehmann, The Washington Post Book World

Jethro and Joel Were a Troll

Jethro and Joel Were a Troll
Author: Bill Peet
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Total Pages: 36
Release: 1987
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780395539682

Jethro and Joel, a two-headed troll, goes on a rampage through the countryside.

Bulletin

Bulletin
Author: Hull House (Chicago, Ill.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 202
Release: 1902
Genre:
ISBN:

Newsletter

Newsletter
Author: University of Michigan Computing Center
Publisher:
Total Pages: 626
Release: 1980
Genre: Computation laboratories
ISBN:

Reading and Writing

Reading and Writing
Author: Wendy Wren
Publisher: Nelson Thornes
Total Pages: 160
Release: 1998
Genre: English language
ISBN: 0748735933

This photocopiable book provides a resource for the Literacy Hour, the National Curriculum for English and the Scottish Guidelines for English Language 5-14. Covering the key requirements for text-level work (comprehension and composition), it provides sections of structured lesson-plans on the main genres (narrative, non-fiction, poetry and plays), 90 linked copymasters which include extracts from books and poems, continuing and end-of-section assessments, and National Literacy Strategy and Scotland 5-14 planners.

Troll Nation

Troll Nation
Author: Amanda Marcotte
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2018-04-24
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1510737464

“Amanda Marcotte drains the swamp and reveals a Republican Party hijacked by grifters and frauds.” ?David Daley The election of Donald Trump in 2016, like most of his campaign, came as a shock to many Americans. How could a man so lacking in capacity, so void of any intellectual heft, become the president of the United States? How did Trump, a man with no detectable personal qualities outside of resentment and the will to dominate, appeal to millions of Americans and win the highest office in the land? The American right has spent decades turning away from reasoned discourse toward a rhetoric of pure resentment—it’s this shift that laid the groundwork for Trump’s ascendency. In Troll Nation, journalist Amanda Marcotte outlines how Trump was the inevitable result of American conservatism’s degradation into an ideology of blind resentment. For years now, the purpose of right wing media, particularly Fox News, has not been to argue for traditional conservative ideals, such as small government or even family values, so much as to stoke bitterness and paranoia in its audience. Traditionalist white people have lost control over the culture, and they know it, and the only option they feel they have left is to rage at a broad swath of supposed enemies ? journalists, activists, feminists, city dwellers, college professors ? that they blame for stealing “their” country from them. Conservative pundits, politicians, and activists have abandoned any hope of winning the argument through reasoned discourse, and instead have adopted a series of bad faith claims, conspiracy theories, and culture war hysterics. Decades of these antics created a conservative voting base that was ready to elect a mindless bully like Donald Trump.