Max's Wild Goose Chase


Book Description

A humorous book about a very naughty English Springer Spaniel who raises havoc with the waterfowl along the Chagrin River.




A Wild Goose Chase Christmas


Book Description

A quilt, a secret message, a dog, and a possible treasure make for an unforgettable Christmas!




Previously Loved Treasures


Book Description

A HEARTWARMING SOUTHERN SAGA ...from a USA Today Bestselling Author of Women's Fiction. Recently widowed Ida Sweetwater's son is missing and she's determined to find him even if it costs her everything she owns. Emptying out her bank account she hires a detective to search for the boy. When the money runs out Ida turns her cozy home into a boarding house to make ends meet. Although there is no trace of the missing son, the detective turns up a granddaughter Ida never knew she had. Anticipating the girl's arrival, Ida goes in search of a used bedroom set and discovers the Previously Loved Treasures shop. The delightfully strange proprietor, Peter Pennington, knows she is coming and knows what she wants. In addition to anticipating people's needs, and offering bargain prices, Peter hands out sage advice. When a pocket watch belonging to one of the residents goes missing for a second time he warns of danger—but will Ida’s granddaughter listen and will she heed his advice? Previously Loved Treasures is an uplifting story that resonates with Crosby’s heartwarming albeit quirky characters and the joy of Catherine Ryan Hyde’s Pay-it-Forward philosophy. If you've read The Twelfth Child you won't want to miss this exciting sequel that solves the mystery of the missing bonds.




Satirizing Modernism


Book Description

Satirizing Modernism examines 20th-century novels that satirize avant-garde artists and authors while also using experimental techniques associated with literary modernism. These novels-such as Wyndham Lewis's The Apes of God, William Gaddis's The Recognitions, and Gilbert Sorrentino's Imaginative Qualities of Actual Things-were under-recognized and received poor reviews at the time of publication, but have increasingly been acknowledged as both groundbreaking and deeply influential. Satirizing Modernism analyzes these novels in order to present an alternative account of literary modernism, which should be viewed neither as a radical break with the past nor an outmoded set of aesthetics overtaken by a later postmodernism. In self-reflexively critiquing their own aesthetics, these works express an unconventional modernism that both revises literary history and continues to be felt today.




THE CUPID CHRONICLES


Book Description

THE CAMERONS OF COLORADO The third book in an irresistible family trilogy by the acclaimed author of The Taggarts of Texas! From the bestselling author of THE TAGGARTS OF TEXAS! Comes THE CAMERONS OF COLORADO Cupid, Colorado. This is ranch country, cowboy country—a land of high mountains and swift, cold rivers, of deer, elk and bear. The first Cameron came to Colorado more than a hundred years ago, and Camerons have owned and worked the Straight Arrow Ranch—the largest spread in these parts—ever since. Horse rustling! In Cupid!—where the locals take their horses "real serious and real personal." Julie Cameron, for instance, believes hanging's too good for horse thieves. They ought to be drawn and quartered! And she's out to single-handedly bring down the gang, an ambition that doesn't make undercover cop Max Mackenzie's job any easier. Still, it's a great reason to cozy up to the prettiest gal in town…. For kids and kisses, tears and laughter, wild horses and wilder men—come to the Straight Arrow Ranch, near Cupid, Colorado. Come meet the Camerons.




Genre


Book Description




The Big Whatever


Book Description

When Billy Glasheen picks up a trashy paperback he finds in his cab, its plot seems weirdly familiar. One of the main characters is based on him . . . Only one person knows enough about his past to have written it—Max, his double-crossing ex-partner in crime. But Max is dead. He famously went up in flames, along with a fortune in cash, after a bank heist. If Max is somehow still alive, Billy has a score to settle. And if he didn’t get fried to a crisp, maybe the money didn’t either. To find out, Billy has to follow the clues in the strange little book—and rapidly discovers he’s not the only one on Max’s trail. The Big Whatever is the fourth instalment of Peter Doyle’s acclaimed series, which has grown into an epic underground history of postwar Australia, where crooks, entertainers, scammers, corrupt cops and politicians all rub shoulders, chasing their big paydays.




Saving Max


Book Description

Max Parkman is perfect in his mother's eyes. Until he's accused of murder. Attorney Danielle Parkman can't deny her son's behavior has been getting worse—drugs and violent outbursts have become a frightening routine. But when she receives the diagnosis from a top-notch adolescent psychiatric facility that Max is deeply disturbed—and dangerous—it seems too devastating to accept. Until she finds Max, weapon in hand, at the bedside of a fellow patient who has been brutally stabbed to death. Separated from Max and trapped in a maelstrom of doubt and fear, Danielle's mothering instincts snap sharply into focus. The justice system is bearing down on her son, so she must use her years of legal experience to find out the truth, no matter what that might be. But has she, too, lost touch with reality? Is her son truly a killer? Previously published.




Max Morgan-The Blue Crystal Cave


Book Description

The second book in a trilogy, Max Morgan: The Blue Crystal Cave tells the continuing story of 12-year-old Max, an orphan trying to discover who he really is and how he can escape the horrors of the orphanage where he's forced to live. At the orphanage he meets a young ghost, who shows Max long-buried secrets from his past that he never knew existed. What he finds is the dark world of his vampire ancestors. Armed with that knowledge, Max seeks his grandfather for guidance, and to protect them both from bloodthirsty vampires. Using his newfound information and powers, Max sets off on a journey where he meets a sorceress, pirates and creatures of the dark. As Max's powers mature, he feels closer to the father he never knew, who was once a ruthless and feared vampire.




Carnival of Repetition


Book Description

Although published many decades ago, William Gaddis's The Recognitions is only now beginning to receive the critical attention it deserves. Carnival of Repetition, the first full-length study of the novel, is a sophisticated analysis that places it in a new literary and cultural context . This novel of the 1950 s is unlike anything else from that decade. It harks back to the works of high modernism (exemplified by Joyce's Ulysses) and looks forward to postmodern fiction (especially as practiced by Barth, Pynchon, and DeLillo). Imitation is its major theme, one that Gaddis pursues on many levels, across several continents, into mazes of arcane knowledge and bogus scholarship, and even into the novel's structure through the repetition of prior texts and the interplay between literal and disguised quotation. Through an endless play of repetition, Gaddis con­founds the reader's recognition of similarity and difference. Johnston uses the theories of Bakhtin and Deleuze (and others, such as Julia Kristeva) to map out a context for this most unusual and difficult work. From Bakhtin, he appropriates the concepts of "carnivalesque" fiction and dialogism (or a plurality of independent voices, no one more important than another). From Deleuze, he borrows the idea of the simulacrum, a copy that presupposes no original and that becomes meaningful through a process of infinite repetition. With these instruments, Johnston analyzes the labyrinth of copy and counterfeit that Gaddis constructs in his novel.