The Magic Cave


Book Description

The Harris twins, Alan and Samantha, relocated from their beloved home town of Glenville Place to Vance Falls. Along with their new friend, Mark, they set off on an adventure to find the rumored cave. However, their adventure did not end when they found the cave, but became even more exciting when they entered. Join Alan, Samantha and Mark on their adventures inside The Magic Cave.




Ali Baba and the Magic Cave


Book Description







The Adventures of Billy & Willie and the Magic Cave- Dinosaur Island


Book Description

This book is a story about two friends and their pet beaver going on a camping trip and stumbling upon a magic cave and being granted their dreams of traveling the world and more. Only one catch they are transformed into bears and the beaver is transformed into a bus and the magic journeys begin.




Magic Cave


Book Description

Magic Cave is magical, only certain people will be allowed in, but many gather there from around the world. If your tongue is English, then while you are there you hear English spoken by all. If you speak Swahili all present will appear to be speaking Swahili. Each expression the cave changes from modern to western fire chat to African hut. Each of the individuals in the cave have different stories to tell, all universal to a spiritual approach to life, and how each has issues to consider on a very personal level. It is hoped that those reading it will come away with a sense of peace and right with the world, before going back into their normal life filled with apparent chaos on the physical levels each of us have developed for themselves. No judgement but understanding and compassion.




The Magic School Bus in the Bat Cave


Book Description

Bats are living at Tim's house ... but where did they come from? Ms. Frizzle and her class are on the case.




Periwinkle and the Cave of Courage


Book Description

Illustrations By: Tara Larsen Chang Inside you is the power to do anything Once every hundred years, the courage of humanity begins to fail. It takes a coordinated effort from the entire magic community to restore the Cave of Courage so that we can all bravely face the challenges in our lives. This century, Mother Nature has chosen a dwarf, a leprechaun, a gnome, a troll, two brownies, and four fairies to participate. With four fairies involved usually no challenge would be too difficult, but now they must rely on the help of others, something that not everyone is good at ... What if you discovered you had magical fairy powers? Meet the girls of The Fairy Chronicles, otherwise normal girls like you who are blessed by Mother Nature with special gifts. Their extraordinary adventures will change the world!




Maroo of the Winter Caves


Book Description

Maroo, a girl of the late Ice Age, must take charge after her father is killed, and lead her little brother, mother, and aged grandmother to the safety of the winter camp before the first blizzards strike.




Wrong Way Around Magic


Book Description

Chip and his sister, Wilma, look through a pair of field glasses the wrong way and are magically transported back to eleventh-century China. By the author of The Trouble with Magic. Original.




Native


Book Description

Essays by “Jerusalem’s version of Charles Bukowski . . . Just as aware and critical—of his city, his family, Israel, the Arabs, but most of all of himself” (NPR). Sayed Kashua has been praised by the New York Times as “a master of subtle nuance in dealing with both Arab and Jewish society.” An Arab-Israeli who lived in Jerusalem for most of his life, Kashua started writing with the hope of creating one story that both Palestinians and Israelis could relate to, rather than two that cannot coexist together. He devoted his novels and his satirical weekly column published in Haaretz to telling the Palestinian story and exploring the contradictions of modern Israel, while also capturing the nuances of everyday family life in all its tenderness and chaos. With an intimate tone fueled by deep-seated apprehension and razor-sharp ironic wit, Kashua has been documenting his own life as well as that of society at large: he writes about his children’s upbringing and encounters with racism, about fatherhood and married life, the Jewish-Arab conflict, his professional ambitions, travels around the world as an author, and—more than anything—his love of books and literature. He brings forth a series of brilliant, caustic, wry, and fearless reflections on social and cultural dynamics as experienced by someone who straddles two societies. “One of the most celebrated satirists in Hebrew literature . . . [Kashua] has an acerbic, dry wit and a talent for turning everyday events into apocalyptic scenarios.”—Philadelphia Inquirer “What is most striking in these columns is the universality of what it means to be a father, husband and man.”—Toronto Star