Storyverse Greenhill Rising


Book Description

The second Shakespearean war has come, as Abigail returns, and starts to murder gods. Asking her follower's old hideout which happens to be Tessa, William and Snow's current storyverse school, Abigail possesses a rich brat called Blade. Dark powers will rise in the dead of night, and Tessa will lose the light in her eyes!




Storyverse and the Return of Shakespeare


Book Description

The second Shakespearean war has come, as Abigail returns, and starts to murder gods. Asking her followers old hideout which happens to be Tessa, William and Snows current storyverse school, Abigail possesses a rich brat called blade. Dark powers will rise in the dead of night, and Tessa will lose the light in her eyes!




Storyverse and the Long Weekend from Hell


Book Description

The second Shakespearean war is reaching its end game! Terrifying powers arising from the depths of the storyverse, and it is tessa's first year mount colour Academy of the story arts Abigail 's terrifying power will be seen in full, the clock Lord will rise, and it will all end with a simple piece of cloth




Storyverse and the Greenhills Memory


Book Description

Let me cut right to the chase with this one, William loses his memory at the hands of Tessa's future grandmother, and the group get lost in a snowstorm in a terrifying field of snow monsters. Thankfully they are stranded with a space born brother and sister but a plot to steal the rings of everything is afoot! Not to mention Williams without his memory and Tessa has to fly a time ship blind. Things are heating up in the storyverse and there there heading to an eruption! What will happen next?




Storyverse the Haunted Script


Book Description

Tessas house has been attacked by the spectre of Abigail! Her little sisters were the target, So what will Tessa do now? Especially when a movie script comes to life in a nearby studio, And Tessa has to fight her way out! What will happen when Tessa is inside a story that is being written, with their only hope of escape being dangerous goods smuggled in by shapeshifter posing as there boss!!!!!




Storyverse into Shaddow


Book Description

William Greenhill has been begged by the royal family of aquilla to save their youngest daughter… dark forces are amassing including the greenough Clan byproduct of the greenhill clan. Everything eventually converges on the royal family of aquilla and their hide out. With this terrifying power on the loose, can anything save the little girl whose life is about to turn to ruins?




Storyverse and the Time Ghosts Curse


Book Description

Tessa storm has just finished her first year at story the school and has a made her first two friends. But she is about to find out a terrifying secret, snow is the air of Abigail and the forbidden books have returned! If the Forbidden Books meet Abigail 's heir the forbidden queen could rise again... Also a Time Ghost is running around the boat waiting for the right time to strike. How will Tessa William and Snow make it out of an invasion of Abigail 's followers all across Sea Angel Academy!




Storyverse and he Ring of Everything


Book Description

Tessa storm has just found out that she is an interpreter, not to mention the granddaughter of the almighty temperance! But life on cloud 9 won't be all sunshine and rainbows for Tessa… with the expectations of her grandmother behind her, and the coming of a grandmother's former best friend and now forbidden Lord Abigail Shakespeare, things are about to heat up around the entire Storyverse! Tessa is gonna have to make friends fast, or she's going to be destroyed fast. Who smuggled the forbidden book on to Sea Angel Academy and who... Who is forging the Ring of Everything, the most powerful fictional artifact in the Storyverse!!!




The Palgrave Handbook of Children's Film and Television


Book Description

This volume explores film and television for children and youth. While children’s film and television vary in form and content from country to country, their youth audience, ranging from infants to “screenagers”, is the defining feature of the genre and is written into the DNA of the medium itself. This collection offers a contemporary analysis of film and television designed for this important audience, with particular attention to new directions evident in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. With examples drawn from Iran, China, Korea, India, Israel, Eastern Europe, the Philippines, and France, as well as from the United States and the United Kingdom, contributors address a variety of issues ranging from content to production, distribution, marketing, and the use of film, both as object and medium, in education. Through a diverse consideration of media for young infants up to young adults, this volume reveals the newest trends in children’s film and television and its role as both a source of entertainment and pedagogy.




Debating Disney


Book Description

With stakes in film, television, theme parks, and merchandising, Disney continues to be one of the most dominant forces of popular culture around the globe. Films produced by the studio are usually blockbusters in nearly every country where they are released. However, despite their box office success, these films often generate as much disdain as admiration. While appreciated for their visual aesthetics, many of these same films are criticized for their cultural insensitivity or lack of historical fidelity. In Debating Disney: Pedagogical Perspectives on Commercial Cinema, Douglas Brode and Shea T. Brode have assembled a collection of essays that examine Disney’s output from the 1930s through the present day. Each chapter in this volume represents the conflicting viewpoints of contributors who look at Disney culture from a variety of perspectives. Covering both animated and live-action films as well as television programs, these essays discuss how the studio handles social issues such as race, gender, and culture, as well as its depictions of science and history. Though some of the essays in this volume are critical of individual films or television shows, they also acknowledge the studio’s capacity to engage audiences with the quality of their work. These essays encourage readers to draw their own conclusions about Disney productions, allowing them to consider the studio as the hero—as much as the villain—in the cultural deliberation. Debating Disney will be of interest to scholars and students of film as well as those with an interest in popular culture.