Lucy and Emma Celebrate Their Birthdays


Book Description

Emma is hosting a birthday party for her classmates. It’s a spectacular party in a fancy ballroom with disco lights and delicious food. Now it’s time for Lucy to have her own birthday party. But will hers be anywhere near as good? Danish author Line Kyed Knudsen (born 1971) had her debut with "Pigerne fra Nordsletten" in 2003. In 2007 she was awarded the Pippi grant from Danish publishing house, Gyldendal. She writes books for children and young adults, and also teaches writing techniques.




Happy Birthday Emma


Book Description

Pop, Spin, and Shake your way to the most awesome birthday party ever! The perfect personalized unicorn birthday card or gift for girls! This playful personalized storybook is positively giggle-worthy and a magical way for your child to celebrate their special day. Interactive and immersive from start to finish, this book contains 100 birthday-themed stickers including an oversized personalized sticker for the birthday girl!




Stepping Heavenward


Book Description




Emma


Book Description

In her reign as queen, Emma both helped Kamehameha IV prevent the extinction of the Hawaiian people during the end of colonial rule and dedicated much of her philanthropic efforts to Hawai'i's education and health care.




Stepping Heavenward


Book Description

"Stepping Heavenward" by E. Prentiss is a fictional account of a young girl, Kate, and her day-to-day activities, interwoven with her quest to better her life. Watching her godly mother, with whom she becomes easily irritated at times, Kate learns about striving for excellence. Though Kate is a work of fiction, readers have seen themselves in her and have been inspired to strive to do better and live a good, Godly life.




Lucy's Birthday


Book Description

Colors, shapes, and numbers are explored as Lucy celebrates her birthday. Includes toy squares that fit into openings in the pages.




Impostor's Lure


Book Description

A federal prosecutor’s disappearance launches a high-stakes case for FBI agents Emma Sharpe and Colin Donovan. From the bestselling author of Thief’s Mark. When prosecutor Tamara McDermott is a no-show at a Boston dinner party, newlyweds Emma and Colin are suspicious. Matt Yankowski, head of HIT, Emma and Colin’s small, elite Boston-based team, is a friend of Tamara’s, and he needs them to find her. In London, a woman who was supposed to meet Emma’s art-detective grandfather to talk about forgeries is discovered near death. Her husband has vanished. The couple’s connection to Tamara adds to the puzzle. As the search intensifies, a seemingly unrelated murder leads Emma, Colin and HIT deep into a maze of misdirection created by a clever, lethal criminal. Emma must draw on her expertise in art crimes and Colin on his experience as a deep-cover agent as the investigation takes a devastating turn—one that tests the strengths of their families and friendships as well as their FBI colleagues like never before. “Neggers fashions a colorful landscape shaded with just enough darkness to create the brooding atmosphere in which her heroes best thrive . . . Reels you straight in and doesn’t let go.” —The Providence Journal










Southern Women at the Seven Sister Colleges


Book Description

From the end of Reconstruction and into the New South era, more than one thousand white southern women attended one of the Seven Sister colleges: Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, Mount Holyoke, Bryn Mawr, Radcliffe, and Barnard. Joan Marie Johnson looks at how such educations—in the North, at some of the country’s best schools—influenced southern women to challenge their traditional gender roles and become active in woman suffrage and other social reforms of the Progressive Era South. Attending one of the Seven Sister colleges, Johnson argues, could transform a southern woman indoctrinated in notions of domesticity and dependence into someone with newfound confidence and leadership skills. Many southern students at northern schools imported the values they imbibed at college, returning home to found schools of their own, women’s clubs, and woman suffrage associations. At the same time, during college and after graduation, southern women maintained a complicated relationship to home, nurturing their regional identity and remaining loyal to the ideals of the Confederacy. Johnson explores why students sought a classical liberal arts education, how they prepared for entrance examinations, and how they felt as southerners on northern campuses. She draws on personal writings, information gleaned from college publications and records, and data on the women’s decisions about marriage, work, children, and other life-altering concerns. In their time, the women studied in this book would eventually make up a disproportionately high percentage of the elite southern female leadership. This collective biography highlights the important part they played in forging new roles for women, especially in social reform, education, and suffrage.