Just Dance (Whatever After #15)


Book Description

Here is the fifteenth magical installment of the New York Times and USA Today bestselling series of fractured fairy tales for fearless kids! Put on your dancing shoes! Believe it or not, there's a fairy named Maryrose LIVING in my house. And she's sending me and my brother, Jonah, through the magic mirror and into the story of The Twelve Dancing Princesses. There, we meet the twelve sisters who sneak out every night to go dancing. But Jonah and I have our own mission. It's up to us to find the enchanted object that will give Maryrose her fairy powers back. So now we need to: -Get our hands on an invisibility cloak -Follow the twelve princesses to their secret hideout. -Learn some VERY complicated dance steps. -And avoid being thrown in the dungeon. We better wiggle our way out of this magical mess or we'll never help our fairy friend in time!




Good as Gold (Whatever After #14), Volume 14


Book Description

The fourteenth book in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling series featuring fractured fairy tales for fearless kids! Is this story TOO long? Is this story TOO short? Nope, it's just right! Abby and Jonah get pulled into their magic mirror and land in the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. There's porridge to sample and beds to test out! But if they help Goldilocks, will they risk running into big trouble with the Bear family in their cottage? Sarah Mlynowski delivers another feminist fairy tale for modern kids in her enchanting, bestselling series.




Good as Gold (Whatever After #14)


Book Description

The fourteenth book in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling series featuring fractured fairy tales for fearless kids! Guess where we are this time? The magic mirror has sent me and my brother, Jonah (plus our puppy, Prince), into the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. Fun! There's porridge to taste, chairs to sit on, and beds to nap in. But Goldilocks is in a LOT of trouble, and if we can't help her, we might get stuck here forever! Now we have to: - Skateboard down a mountain - Convince the bear family NOT to eat us - Get one hundred gold coins - Escape the royal jail ...And find the one fairy tale character who can turn straw into gold... Wait... Rumpelstiltskin? What are YOU doing here?!




Just Dance


Book Description

When the magic mirror sends Abby and Jonah into the story of The Twelve Dancing Princesses to retrieve the crown ruby from the Kingdom of Douze, they follow the twelve sisters to the underground Dance Resistance Party where Abby learns she is not really a terrible dancer.




Abby in Neverland (Whatever After Special Edition #3)


Book Description

Follow Abby and Jonah as they embark on a thrilling journey through Neverland--meeting pirates, mermaids, the Lost Boys, Tinkerbell, and Peter Pan himself-- in this third Special Edition of the dazzling New York Times best-selling Whatever After series. Abby and Jonah are at home with Jonah's friends and their fairy friend, Maryrose, when they receive a visit from another fairy--a famous one. It's Tinkerbell! She's come to their window with none other than Peter Pan. It's exciting at first--but when Peter Pan announces that he needs new Lost Boys, he whisks away Jonah and Jonah's friends. It's up to Abby (and Maryrose) to follow them all into Neverland! She soon finds herself inside the beloved book Peter Pan. Even if Abby can convince Peter Pan to give her back Jonah and his friends, there's still the evil Captain Hook and his band of pirates to contend with. And can Abby trust anyone--even Tinkerbell? She'll have to rely on her courage--and a little bit of magic fairy dust--to make it back home from Neverland before all is lost! Full of fun extras like full-page illustrations, this Special Edition is a whirlwind adventure like no other!




Just Dance


Book Description

Rakesh was only twenty-three years old when he died after a three-year battle with leukemia. But he lives on in this memoir written by his aunt, Daksha M. Patel. She has collected the memories of family and friends as well as Rakeshs tweets and social media postings. Just Dance offers touching and charming stories that illustrate the short life a young man with heart and promise who positively affected the lives of all those around him. Patel tells about the extraordinary way he handled his three-year fight with acute lymphocytic leukemia and how he served as an exemplary example of faith and trust. It demonstrates how faith in God can help one through anything and everything in life. In Just Dance, Patel shares how Rakesh lived the life of a saint, exhibiting a sympathetic and caring attitude for friends and those who asked for his help. His legacy lives on through his dance team, a unit inspired by him.




Happily Ever After


Book Description

Drew Barrymore was a star by the time she was seven years old, a drug addict by twelve, and a has - been before her sixteenth birthday. But with the resounding success of such recent films as Ever After: A Cinderella Story, The Wedding Singer, Never Been Kissed (produced by Drew's production company, Flower Films) and Charlie's Angels, Drew Barrymore has reclaimed her place as one of Hollywood's hottest young actors. Her inspirational comeback from a highly publicized battle with drug and alcohol addiction has left this former child star wiser, happier, and more triumphant then ever. From her struggle to reenter Hollywood to her many acclaimed movies, from a strained relationship with her mother and a failed marriage to a newfound sense of peace and enduring love, HAPPILY EVER AFTER offers a fascinating look at the troubled Little Girl Lost and the beautiful woman she grew up to be! An unauthorized biography




Along The Way To Happily-Ever-After . . .


Book Description

You've said, "I Do," and you are married. So what's next, and where's happily-ever-after? T.N. Carpenter's humorous tall tales and personal short stories about marriage will assure you that you are not alone when facing the better, the worse, and the inevitably crazy times that married couples can experience throughout their marriage, and especially during the newlywed years. You will see that when there are ups and downs along the way to happily-ever-after, sometimes, you just have to be creative and have a sense of humor.T.N. Carpenter's seriocomic account of her first years of marriage illustrates how despite all the challenges that married couples can face, it is possible to still remain in love and committed to your marriage. And, it is even possible to find happily-ever-after.




Happily Ever After


Book Description

In this book, the author outlines how to imbibe the essence of the simple ingredients—mind, body and soul—in the magic potion to make Happily Ever After your conscious choice. She provides you with easy steps to seize the day and practice to vibrate at a higher frequency to attract anything you know you want in your life; may it be in terms of relationships, love, abundance, high performance or success. Be in a state of bliss and make all your dreams come true.




Don't Act, Just Dance


Book Description

At some point in their career, nearly all the dancers who worked with George Balanchine were told “don’t act, dear; just dance.” The dancers understood this as a warning against melodramatic over-interpretation and an assurance that they had all the tools they needed to do justice to the steps—but its implication that to dance is already to act in a manner both complete and sufficient resonates beyond stage and studio. Drawing on fresh archival material, Don’t Act, Just Dance places dance at the center of the story of the relationship between Cold War art and politics. Catherine Gunther Kodat takes Balanchine’s catch phrase as an invitation to explore the politics of Cold War culture—in particular, to examine the assumptions underlying the role of “apolitical” modernism in U.S. cultural diplomacy. Through close, theoretically informed readings of selected important works—Marianne Moore’s “Combat Cultural,” dances by George Balanchine, Merce Cunningham, and Yuri Grigorovich, Stanley Kubrick’s Spartacus, and John Adams’s Nixon in China—Kodat questions several commonly-held beliefs about the purpose and meaning of modernist cultural productions during the Cold War. Rather than read the dance through a received understanding of Cold War culture, Don’t Act, Just Dance reads Cold War culture through the dance, and in doing so establishes a new understanding of the politics of modernism in the arts of the period.