Moni the Goat Boy


Book Description

After he reluctantly agrees to keep another boy's secret in exchange for the life of one of the goats he tends, Moni loses his cheerful disposition and love of singing until he finally decides to reveal the truth.




Moni the Goat Boy, and Other Stories


Book Description

"Moni the Goat Boy, and Other Stories" by Johanna Spyri is a collection of German tales that have become popular with children around the world. The volume contains: Moni the Goat Boy, Without a Friend, and The Little Runaway. Each tale takes readers into the German countryside and allows them to fall in love with the simple, charming culture portrayed in these magical little tales of adventure.




Moni Odigitria


Book Description

This volume presents the final report on the excavation of two Prepalatial tholos tombs and their associated remains at Chatzinas Liophyto near the Moni Odigitria (monastery) in south-central Crete. The grave goods and burial remains include pottery, metal objects, chipped stones, stone vases, gold and stone jewelry, sealstones, and human skeletal material. The results of the associated survey of the upper catchment of the Hagiopharango region are also reported. The book finishes with a reappraisal of our understanding of the early settlement of the Hagiopharango and a Greek summary.




Moni the Goat Boy and Other Stories: Moni the Goahout a Friend; The Little Runaway


Book Description

Outside of the province of the Märchen, which constitutes so rich a field in German literature, there is no writer better known or better loved in the young German-speaking world than Johanna Spyri. Her stories, written "for children and those who love children," are read and reread as something that never grows old. The secret of this charm lies, above all, in the author's genuine love of children, as shown in her sympathetic insight into the joys, the hopes, and the longings of childhood, and in her skillful selection of characteristic details, which creates an atmosphere of reality that is rare in books written for children. Johanna Heusser Spyri was born in the little Swiss town of Hirzel, canton of Zürich, in 1827, and died in Zürich in 1901. She wrote especially for young people, her writings dealing mostly with Swiss mountain life and portraying the thrifty, industrious nature of the people. The stories are sometimes sad,—for the peasant's life is full of hardships,—but through them all a fresh mountain breeze is blowing and a play of sunlight illumines the high Alps.




Har-Moni's Story


Book Description

Author Joy Lee Larocque, impressed from early childhood with a highly creative imagination, presents her interpretation: "The Magic of the Bahamas"




Weak Thing in Moni Land


Book Description

Weak Thing In Moni Land—The Cutts' story is dramatic, humorous and compelling. Hazi Talk! That's what the Moni people of Irian Jaya, Indonesia, call the Christian message. It is the gospel that Bill and Gracie Cutts spent a lifetime proclaiming as missionaries of the Christian and Missionary Alliance. Suffering from congenital deformities, Bill had every excuse not to become a misionary in the rugged interior of Irian Jaya. But instead he and Gracie carried on a ministry that was truly apostolic—accompanied by miracles and divine providence. But the overwhelming message is that God can use the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty. And as He chose to use the Cuttses for His purposes, He would be delighted to use you if you are fully surrendered to Him.




Moni der Geissbub


Book Description




The Star Festival


Book Description

2021 Freeman Book Awards Honorable Mention - Children's Literature The Best Children's Books of the Year 2022, Bank Street College STARRED REVIEW! "Hadley has created a remarkable debut that flows elegantly, interweaving the two tales in a way that is readable and fun...An exquisite choice for all collections."—School Library Journal starred review A multigenerational retelling of a Japanese legend. Tanabata Matsuri, the Star Festival, celebrates a popular folktale: The Emperor of the Heavens separates his daughter, Orihime, from her love, Hikoboshi, all year—but on this day the two stars finally reunite on a bridge across the Milky Way. For Keiko, her mama, and her grandmother, Tanabata is about making tanzaku wishes, taking in the colorful decorations, and eating delicious food like nagashi somen and shaved ice. But when Obasaan gets lost in the crowd, Keiko and Mama must make their own bridge to find her again—and see if their tanzaku comes true.