Camilla the Not-So-Quick Chameleon


Book Description

The Caramel Tree Readers Level 4 series offers delicious leveled readers for children aged 7 to 9. The diverse original stories have a word count of approximately 2,000 words and Lexile measures between 400L to 700L. The stories in this series vary with narrative in first or third person, and they have increased character dialogue, which allows students to develop character studies. Camilla the chameleon wishes she could join the other Lizardville kids as they rush off to school, but she is too slow. One day, Camilla is the only one who can go on a dangerous mission to find a missing student, but will she ever be able to go to school?




Camilla Chameleon


Book Description

Camilla is a strange girl who can disappear but she learns that it is good to be different.




Melody of the Heart


Book Description

When Christian music superstar Evan Worthy's brothers want out--off the road and it's up to him to provide a home for all of them. Who can care for his family like Evan? When he hires Matt's online friend's sister to cook and clean, can his brother's keep the secret of his identity from his greatest fan? Cam has been the caretaker for her sisters and cancer stricken father for many years. When she loses her job and is offered a housekeeping position by her sister's online friend, she jumps at the chance. Just cooking in the huge, well-stocked kitchen delights her. Caring for this bunch means keeping Kiri and Matt from teenage temptation, watching Keith and Sydney fall madly in love and hoping, wishing that the third Beers brother, her mysterious online pen-pal, might develop feelings of his own. Will Evan choose a life off the road for his brothers' sake or will Cam be the one who can make a home all of them?




The Girl's Own Annual


Book Description

Some volumes also include extra numbers.




The Chameleon House


Book Description

There’s the not-quite twenty-year old journalist, with the world open to her but not knowing what to do with it, who finds herself at the Baviaan’s Drift Bugle under the watchful eye of an old acquaintance of her father’s; an older woman with her young lover, caught in Johannesburg traffic during ‘load shedding’, the new leveller; and a young boy who finds a painful intimacy with his mother’s boyfriend through the beatings he receives from him. And then there are the four friends sharing a house in London, where the only thing they have in common is that they have all left home. But do they really know anything about each other? The short story – the perfect fit for modern attention spans – is finally receiving the attention it deserves. It started in 2013, when Alice Munro won the Nobel Prize for Literature, and Lydia Davis the Man Booker International Prize. In 2014, both the Mail & Guardian Literary Festival in Johannesburg and the Open Book Festival in Cape Town featured panel discussions on short stories. The literary establishment, it seems, has finally caught up with readers’ hunger for these contained, miniature worlds. Into this mix comes the fresh, new voice of South African writer Melissa de Villiers, with her debut collection, The Chameleon House. In her powerfully condensed, poetic style, De Villiers manages to say a lot with few words. Often it’s what remains unsaid that tells us the real story. The Chameleon House is a remarkable debut by a voice to keep both ears open for. The collection demonstrates that no matter where in the world we find ourselves, our hearts are never far from home.




Camilla Chameleon


Book Description

Camilla McNilly is a somewhat strange-looking but talented girl.




Wild Animals and Leisure


Book Description

Wild animals form an integral component of the human leisure experience. They are a significant part of the leisure industry and are economically valuable entities. However, as sentient beings, animals also have rights and welfare needs, and, like humans, may also have their own leisure desires and requirements. This collection provides an in-depth analysis of the rights and welfare of humans and wild animals as the two relate to one another within the sphere of leisure studies. It examines a wide array of animals, such as wolves, elephants, dolphins and apes, in a diverse range of leisure settings in international locations, from captive wild animals in zoos, hunting, swimming with dolphins and animals used as educators and for tourist entertainment. This book provides a forum for future considerations of wild animals and leisure and a voice for animal welfarist agendas that seek to improve the conditions under which wild animals interact with and are engaged with by humans.







Odyssey


Book Description

Collection Of Short Stories.




Calmer Chameleon


Book Description