Red Fire


Book Description

In August 1966, a 14-year-old boy in Beijing is thrust into violence and chaos as the Cultural Revolution begins to blaze across China. Fifty years later, Red Fire is the first intimate account from someone who lived through the turbulent events. Wei Yang Chao gives readers a riveting story told with real force and heartbreaking honesty.




A Fire Truck Named Red


Book Description

Everything old is new again in this lively intergenerational story about a boy and his grandfather fixing up a vintage toy fire truck.




My Little Red Fire Truck


Book Description

Caldecott Honor artist Stephen T. Johnson's new multiconcept novelty is a book and a toy in one. My Little Red Fire Truck gives practice telling time while its sturdy moving parts provide hours of fun -- and allow readers to see how it would be to work on a real fire truck!




Red Fire


Book Description

Searching the world for the other half of his soul, the woman who can release him from his immortal prison, Ajax Petrakos finally finds her in Shay Angel, the youngest of a powerful demon-hunting clan who draws the deadly attention of Ajax's worst enemy. Original.




Big Red Fire Engine


Book Description

Describes the big red fire engine and how it puts out a fire.




Red Fire


Book Description

Red Fire: Volume 1 By: Bernard Ye-Ha Kim For decades, the world lived on a knife's edge. The two nuclear superpowers, capitalist America and communist Soviet Union stared each other down, thousands of nuclear weapons ready at the push of a button to annihilate all life on earth. And suddenly in 1969 in the midst of the Vietnam War the mushroom cloud appears for the first time in 25 years. The world braces for the apocalypse. But it is not WWIII. The homes of the United States are safe, children not running duck and cover drills and the bombers not flying. No, the target of the Soviets are their fraternal communist allies, Mao's China, the two locked in a desperate struggle to which the nuclear taboo is the only choice to pursue lest the ancient Middle Kingdom falls to the Russian Bear. Bernard Ye-Ha Kim takes you into this frightening alternate timeline and the even more frightening reality that had just been avoided, nations shifted, nuclear winter dawning over the world, and the death of idealism as both the capitalist West and communist East face the destruction their plans have wrought. Step up to the thrilling terror of what could of been in REDFIRE.




The Market and Temple Fairs of Rural China


Book Description

During the early communist period of the 1950s, temple fairs in China were both suppressed and secularized. Temples were closed down by the secular regime and their activities classified as feudal superstition and this process only intensified during the Cultural Revolution when even the surviving secular fairs, devoted exclusively to trade with no religious content of any kind, were suppressed. However, once China embarked on its path of free market reform and openness, secular commodity exchange fairs were again authorized, and sometimes encouraged in the name of political economy as a means of stimulating rural commodity circulation and commerce. This book reveals how once these secular "temple-less temple fairs" were in place, they came to serve not only as venues for the proliferation of a great variety of popular cultural performance genres, but also as sites where a revival or recycling of popular religious symbols, already underway in many parts of China, found familiar and fertile ground in which to spread. Taking this shift in the Chinese state’s attitudes and policy towards temple fairs as its starting point, The Market and Temple Fairs of Rural China shows how state-led economic reforms in the early 1980s created a revival in secular commodity exchange fairs, which were granted both the geographic and metaphoric space to function. In turn, this book presents a comprehensive analysis of the temple fair phenomenon, examining its economic, popular cultural, popular religious and political dimensions and demonstrates the multifaceted significance of the fairs which have played a crucial role in expanding the boundaries of contemporary acceptable popular discourse and expression. Based upon extensive fieldwork, this unique book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Chinese religion, Chinese culture, Chinese history and anthropology.




Red Fire


Book Description

From legendary Western author Max Brand comes a collection of stories about a slave, a jewel thief, and a captive. In “Master and Man,” Bobbie is a black man who can outride, outfight, and outshoot any white man in the mountain desert. His unwavering moral code serves as a model for his often cruel and dissolute white master. “A Lucky Dog” is a tale of the desperate flight of a jewel thief named Hagger from the man he robbed. In Colorado, facing a battle with winter cold and snow, he comes upon an isolated cabin and its sole occupant, a weakened bull terrier left there to starve to death. The man and dog come to depend on each other—to a point where Hagger would make any sacrifice and endure any hardship just to keep the dog alive. In the title story, “Red Fire,” Paul Torridon, called White Thunder by the Cheyenne Indians, and his girlfriend, Nancy Brett, are being held prisoner by the Cheyenne because they believe he can cure illness and bring rain. While Roger Lincoln, a frontiersman who has known Torridon since the early days of his feud with the Brett clan, devises a plan for their escape, Torridon’s captors take every precaution they can to keep him imprisoned, even if it means killing him rather than losing him. Skyhorse Publishing is proud to publish a broad range of books for readers interested in fiction that takes place in the old West. Westerns—books about outlaws, sheriffs, chiefs and warriors, cowboys and Indians—are a genre in which we publish regularly. Our list includes international bestselling authors like Zane Gray and Louis L’Amour, and many more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.




The Red Fire Engine


Book Description

"Red Fire Engine races through town and bumps over a bridge. He can see smoke. The hay barn is on fire! Red Fire Engine comes to the rescue and puts out the flames."(from back cover).




White Light Red Fire


Book Description

Inspired by Braveheart, a late 13th-century Scottish warrior who led the Scots in the First War of Scottish Independence against King Edward I of England. “White Light - Red Fire” is a story about a strong aggressor looking to conquer a smaller nation. The story is however situated in a different time and place. The aggressor desires the natural resources of the land. A red stone, othium, is inert until in the hands of an old alchemist who can turn the dull red rock into a weapon of power and destruction. In the Second Age the stone had powered great craft to conquer the planet and explore the outer worlds. The Council of Five became all powerful but reached too far and a greater power had to intervene. Now in the Third Age the alchemist returns with world domination again his ambition. Only the brave can resist the conquest and only a power for good, gifted to one man, can stop the destruction.