Baby Einstein: Baby Noah - World Animals


Book Description

Lush photographs of animals from all over the world introduce children to the wonders of nature and stimulate their interest in the world around them. Baby Noah builds on children's natural curiosity by teaching them where different animals live, what they eat, and how they play.




The Regression Of Baby Noah


Book Description

Some dreams come true. Some books foretell a future. For 57-year-old Noah, his life was a misery. He desperately wanted to be a baby - nappies and all. But being single and alone made that an impossibility. The one thing a baby simply had to have was... a parent. Noah wanted a mummy. Recent PhD graduate, Lisa has been offered the chance to study regression along with the possibility of going even further and perhaps reducing the physical size of an adult baby until they are an actual baby. Can she do it? And what part does a years-old amateur manuscript play in the drama that unfolds? A story of wishful thinking and the reality of infancy that comes back again.




Noah and the New Baby


Book Description

Noah and Mom play together all the time, until the new baby arrives. Join Noah as he learns to love his new little playmate, discovering that adventures are just as grand with three. Noah and the New Baby is part of a series of storybooks developed and co-written by Dr. Sharie Coombes, Child and Family Psychotherapist. These books contain advice and reassurance for children and parents managing common childhood worries.




Noah's Child


Book Description

From one of the world's biggest selling authors comes another million-copy worldwide bestseller: A beautiful and tender fable seen through the eyes of a Jewish child living in Belgium under the Nazi occupation. It is 1942 and the Jews are being deported from Belgium. Separated from his parents, seven-year-old Joseph must go into hiding. He is taken in the dead of night to an orphanage, the Villa Jaune, where the benign and enigmatic Father Pons presides over a motley assortment of children. With the ever-present threat of the Gestapo growing closer, Joseph learns that the secret of survival is to conceal his Jewish heritage. Soon Joseph also discovers that Father Pons has a secret of his own: he is risking his life not only for the boys in his care, but for the Jewish faith itself. Sensitive, funny and deeply humane, Noah's Child is a simple fable that reveals the complexities of faith, bravery and the human condition.




A Child Called Noah


Book Description

This diary charts the life experiences of Noah (an autistic child), his brother, and above all his anguished parents as they try to come to grips with Noah's illness and their own despair.







Baby Einstein: Jane's Animal Expedition


Book Description

The adventurous Jane wants to learn about animals. So she takes off in her little red plane in search of them. But where do animals live:? The desert? The rain foreset? The ocean? Children will enjoy traveling around the world with Jane and meeting the many different creatures she discovers in each habitat.




Baby Einstein


Book Description




Baby Noah


Book Description

Help build Baby's vocabulary by asking him or her to describe the animals they see in this book.




Baby Dinosaurs on the Ark?


Book Description

A scientific look at creationism from a former creationist A significant number of Americans, especially evangelical Christians, believe Earth and humankind were created in their present form sometime in the last 10,000 years or so—the rationale being that this is (presumably) the story told in the book of Genesis. Within that group, any threatening scientific evidence that suggests otherwise is rejected or, when possible, retrofitted into a creationist worldview. But can this uncomfortable blend of biblical literalism and pseudoscience hold up under scrutiny? Is it tenable to believe that the Grand Canyon was formed not millions of years ago by gradual erosion but merely thousands of years ago by the Great Flood? Were there really baby dinosaurs with Noah on his ark? Janet Kellogg Ray, a science educator who grew up a creationist, doesn’t want other Christians to have to do the exhausting mental gymnastics she did earlier in her life. Working through the findings of a range of fields including geology, paleontology, and biology, she shows how a literal interpretation of the book of Genesis simply doesn’t mesh with what we know to be reality. But as someone who remains a committed Christian, Ray also shows how an acceptance of the theory of evolution is not necessarily an acceptance of atheism, and how God can still be responsible for having created the world, even if it wasn’t in a single, momentary, miraculous event.