Nuts for Boys to Crack

Nuts for Boys to Crack
Author: John Todd
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2009-10
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781599252322

This book is filled with stories that will cause boys and young people to think about the heavenly meaning found in earthly stories. This book, like all John Todd's works, will both entertain and inform. Todd loved children and he sought always to speak their language without being silly and childish. He always had eternity in view and desired that all who read his books would be brought into a saving relationship with Jesus Christ.

Erema

Erema
Author: R. D. Blackmore
Publisher: The Floating Press
Total Pages: 531
Release: 2011-09-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1775454908

Although R.D. Blackmore is most strongly associated with romantic fiction set in the bucolic English countryside, this novel deviates significantly from his typical formula. Set in the harsh desert environment of the Western U.S. in the mid-1800s, Erema follows the travails of a young British girl and her father who get lost while looking for an old family friend. Will Erema survive to clear up the suspicious circumstances besmirching her father's good name?

Erema; Or, My Father's Sin

Erema; Or, My Father's Sin
Author: R. D. Blackmore
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 633
Release: 2023-09-18
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3387062486

Reproduction of the original. The publishing house Megali specialises in reproducing historical works in large print to make reading easier for people with impaired vision.

A Boy's Town

A Boy's Town
Author: William Dean Howells
Publisher: New York Harper 1890.
Total Pages: 308
Release: 1890
Genre: Amusements
ISBN:

Describes the typical adventures of a mid-nineteenth-century boy from his third to eleventh years.

A Boy's Town

A Boy's Town
Author: William Dean Howells
Publisher: Jazzybee Verlag
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2020
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3849657515

The question of the identity of 'A Boy's Town', has excited almost as much interest, in a certain section of our country, as the long-discussed question of the birthplace of Homer. That Mr. Howells is his own Boy there can be no doubt. But Mr. Howells, according to the biographies, was born at Martin's Ferry in 1837. The family moved to Hamilton when he was three years of age, to Dayton when he was nine, and to Columbus—probably the scene of the opening chapters of “The Shadow of a Dream”—when he was fourteen. Each of these Western cities now claims the honor of being immortalized by the Boy, although the Dayton Herald declared, that if Dayton was pictured it was Dayton with a halo of poetry about it; not the commonplace Dayton which the unimaginative citizen of Dayton now beholds. Wherever the Town maybe, and whoever may be the Boy, the tale is one which will appeal to all the boys of all the towns in the land, notwithstanding the curious fact that the Boy does not seem to be called "Tom" — a name to which all the best boys in all the standard boys' books of the present day invariably answer, from Tom Brown of Rugby and Oxford, in England, to Tom Bailey of Rivermouth, in New Hampshire, and to Tom Sawyer of Hannibal, in Missouri. Mr. Howells' Boy, whose name is not mentioned at all, was quite as much of a boy as any of these — a thorough boy, from the top of his bare head to the soles of his bare feet—"a Boy from Boy Town"—and every grown-up boy among his readers will find some one of his own peculiar characteristics, and many of his own particular tastes, embodied in this Boy of Mr. Howells', and will wonder how Mr. Howells found him out.