Zenon

Zenon
Author: Marilyn Sadler
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: Grandparents
ISBN: 9780689805141

Because Zenon creates trouble at her space station home somewhere in the Milky Way, her parents send her to her grandparent's farm on Earth to work for the summer.

Stuck on Earth

Stuck on Earth
Author: Marilyn Sadler
Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers
Total Pages: 97
Release: 2012-01-25
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 0307800229

21st Century #4 Meet Zenon Kar. She’s your typical elementary school kid, except she lives on a space station in 2049! In book #4, Zenon’s teacher, Mr. Peres, leads her fifth-grade class on a very special field trip off of Space Station 9. But when she gets separated from the group, Zenon finds out what it’s like to be stuck on Earth! The Zenon books are written and illustrated by the award-winning husband and wife team who created P.J. Funnybunny and Alistair.

Zenon

Zenon
Author: Richard Cobbold
Publisher:
Total Pages: 318
Release: 1847
Genre: Church history
ISBN:

Zenon Kar: Spaceball Star

Zenon Kar: Spaceball Star
Author: Marilyn Sadler
Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers
Total Pages: 96
Release: 2012-02-29
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 0307800253

Meet Zenon, a futuristic fifth grader who lives in a space station high above Earth. Her humorous stories are all reality-based, so kids can identify with her situations. In book #2, Zenon is thrilled when she makes the spaceball team! Unfortunately, she’s not so good at it. But does that mean she should quit? Created by past recipients of the IRA Classroom Choice Award.

Zenon Vantini

Zenon Vantini
Author: Pamela Sambrook
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2021-01-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0718895762

In this remarkable study, Pamela Sambrook rescues from obscurity the contribution of a former member of Napoleon’s Imperial Guard to the development of specialist hotels and catering in the formative years of the railway network in England and France. In doing so, she interrogates what lies behind some of Zenon Vantini’s very real achievements, legacies and disasters. She asks how far he was driven by his familial background in Elba and his involvement in the political turmoil of early-nineteenth-century France, and to what extent his whole life was known to those around him. Vantini’s extraordinary life encapsulates the change between two very different worlds – the old imperial past and the new age of entrepreneurial risk-taking. Never shaking off his old political loyalties, he believed resolutely that the mobility afforded by railway travel would change Europe fundamentally. In the long view he was a component part in the very early years of an industry which arguably changed England and Europe more than did even his hero, Napoleon. Scholars and casual readers of British and European social history will be fascinated by his story.