Polka the Dotted Pig


Book Description

Polka the Dotted Pig was born with different color skin than his brothers and sisters. The animals on the farm didn't give Polka a chance to be their friend because he wasn't like everyone else. After hurting Polka's feelings and driving him away, they eventually realize that they were wrong to judge the pig with the colorful dots.




Zucca the Polka-Dot Piglet


Book Description

One day ten years ago, Mrs. Pigley had delivered nine little piglets. They were all beautiful and normal looking, except one. He knew he was ugly and was bullied by all his siblings and other animals. He was thrown into a natural catastrophe with other animals, and he became the leader. There were many mishaps, but he conquered them all. God made us all, but his own rejected him. He turned out to be very smart. Don't always look at the outside. Get to know the inside of someone first.




The Ferocious Beast with the Polka-Dot Hide


Book Description

After outsmarting the beast that was planning to eat him, a piglet stays on to cook for the beast.










The Polka Dotted Pig


Book Description




The Nothing


Book Description

Luna feels like she’s trapped in a life most people would kill for—adoring fans, all the clothes a girl could want, and even some power. But that doesn’t mean that it’s perfect—with managers pushing her further away from who she is and into what they want her to be. Until one lonely night on the rooftop of one of her tour stops in Nashville, Tennessee, she meets Jax—an army vet who seems to know something about life that she doesn’t. Jax is still adjusting to life outside of war. Finding work and a place to belong outside of the military is nearly impossible, until an old friend finds him a security gig for an up-and-coming artist. She’s nothing like he expects. Two souls find their way to something bigger than the two of them.




There's a Pig In My Fridge!


Book Description

Join author, Rachel Ondrias, on another imaginary adventure as she finds herself face to face with a great big purple polka-dotted pig in her very own kitchen. There will be rainbow-colored boats and more polka-dotted pigs before the story is over. Cleverly written in rhyme, There's a Pig in My Fridge! is a favorite for the young reader.




My Husband's Under Here Somewhere


Book Description

Hoarders collect to excess, filling bathtubs, closets, kitchens, garages, storage sheds—floor-to-ceiling—to render their living spaces uninhabitable. They’re so consumed they lose jobs, family and friends, homes, health, and occasionally their lives. To the rest us, these people seem bizarre or mentally ill, and we view their challenges with impatience, frustration and simplistic answers. Yet a true fix isn’t so simple. My Husband’s Under Here Somewhere, however, strives to unearth them. Morbidly fascinating tales abound as the lives of hoarders who amass animals and collectors who spin out of control are examined. The science behind hoarding—including its link with Obsessive-Compulsive disorders—as well as promising forms of treatment, meet with consideration. Our materialistic culture, one that’s obsessed with with having more and more, further informs the narrative. Certain types of stockpiling stem from challenging life experiences. A fellow who’d been imprisoned in a Russian Gulag spent the remainder of his days amassing keys. Jodin, a resistance fighter during World War II, is a consummate saver of twine. For her, a possession of such insignificance once meant the difference between extinction and survival. As a boy, Norman’s father insisted the house be kept as neat as a pin. Should anything fall out of place—absolutely anything—and he got beaten. So nowadays, he thoroughly enjoys his messes and views them as a way to get even. Ordinary hoarders and extreme collectors notwithstanding, they’re also found among the rich and famous. Peter the Great kept a human zoo of freakish oddities, and also enjoyed excising his subjects’ teeth, adding them to his vast assemblage. The hapless Collyer brothers crammed their Manhattan brownstone to the brim and accidentally entombed themselves within it. Unable to part with his shorn locks and nail clippings, Howard Hughes stored them away for “safekeeping.” Then there’s China’s remarkable Emperor Qin. After he conquered all surrounding kingdoms, he constructed 270 palaces to live in. As if that weren’t enough, he built roads and dug irrigation canals alongside, standardized laws, established a system of weights and measures, created a form of currency, and then formalized the use of written characters. While not a hoarder by today's’ standards, he was, quite possibly, the first to promulgate the axiom, “He who dies with the most toys wins.” Eccentricity, wealth and death aside, each of the aforementioned had way too much stuff, which is a problem familiar to most of us. Dare to quest for answers as to why this is so, and our acquisitive culture must be examined. Harnessing humor and compassion, My Husband’s Under Here Somewhere does precisely that. As the first of its kind, this book of narrative non-fiction looks at hoarding and collecting as part of a continuum. And, while many self-help decluttering books and hoarding-related memoirs, as well as works dealing with Obsessive-Compulsive Hoarding already exist, none of them focus on the psycho-spiritual ramifications of suffocating to death beneath heaps of possessions. Hopefully, this publication will appeal to hoarders and collectors, as well as family, friends and neighbors impacted by the hoarder’s behaviors. It’s also for clinicians and public agencies in search of positive ways to respond. Lastly, it's for curious folks who seek to understand.




At Large and At Small


Book Description

In At Large and At Small, Anne Fadiman returns to one of her favorite genres, the familiar essay—a beloved and hallowed literary tradition recognized for both its intellectual breadth and its miniaturist focus on everyday experiences. With the combination of humor and erudition that has distinguished her as one of our finest essayists, Fadiman draws us into twelve of her personal obsessions: from her slightly sinister childhood enthusiasm for catching butterflies to her monumental crush on Charles Lamb, from her wistfulness for the days of letter-writing to the challenges and rewards of moving from the city to the country. Many of these essays were composed "under the influence" of the subject at hand. Fadiman ingests a shocking amount of ice cream and divulges her passion for Häagen-Dazs Chocolate Chocolate Chip and her brother's homemade Liquid Nitrogen Kahlúa Coffee (recipe included); she sustains a terrific caffeine buzz while recounting Balzac's coffee addiction; and she stays up till dawn to write about being a night owl, examining the rhythms of our circadian clocks and sharing such insomnia cures as her father's nocturnal word games and Lewis Carroll's mathematical puzzles. At Large and At Small is a brilliant and delightful collection of essays that harkens a revival of a long-cherished genre.