Becka and the Big Bubble - Becka goes to New York City


Book Description

Becka & the Big Bubble is a Children’s Rhyming Picture Book Series about an adventurous girl named BECKA who explores a new city/country in each book. At the beginning, Becka blows a big bubble that magically whisks her away. Her best friend Ben cheers her on and often climbs aboard. Together they journey to a new land where the bubble POPS! They explore, meet people, see sights, try new things, and find a bubble ride home to her loving family. “Becka goes to New York City” In her 7th Adventure: Becka and Ben fly on past the US Open and POP! Eye candy in time square, huge toy stores, central park, and a sea of people in the subway that lead them to Lady Liberty for a lesson in independence – go USA!




Becka and the Big Bubble - Becka goes to Boston


Book Description

Becka & the Big Bubble is a Children’s Rhyming Picture Book Series about an adventurous girl named BECKA who explores a new city/country in each book. At the beginning, Becka blows a big bubble that magically whisks her away. Her best friend Ben cheers her on and often climbs aboard. Together they journey to a new land where the bubble POPS! They explore, meet people, see sights, try new things, and find a bubble ride home to her loving family. “Becka goes to Boston” In her 8th Adventure: Becka and Ben fly over Cape Cod and POP into a tea party! Add in some seafood, Faneuil Hall, a crazy marathon and we just might find a bubble ride home by cruising down freedom trail!




Becka and the Big Bubble


Book Description




Not THAT Rich


Book Description

"He had class, he had style, and he certainly was not fresh off the boat. He was fresh off a private jet." Hunter and Trisha Wang, like the majority of their classmates, are trying to balance AP classes, Ivy League applications, numerous extracurriculars, and tumultuously juicy social lives, all while living in their affluent, suburban bubble. Will Hunter get into Stanford and still be able to maintain his relationship with the "it girl" Sierra Jones? Will Trisha find love with outsider Ray Martinez and figure out what's going on with her influencer best friend, Pamela Shah? Will billionaire newcomer Jack Zhou figure out how to fit in? And who exactly is The Stranger? Welcome to Winchester High, a prestigious college preparatory school where students live seemingly perfect, privileged lives. In Not THAT Rich, we find that things are not always what they seem and, no matter how much money, power, or influence you think you have, high school will always be complicated.




The Ones We Burn


Book Description

A blood-witch's mission to assassinate the prince she is betrothed to is compromised by the discovery of a deadly plague--and the beautiful princess intent on stopping it.




Becka and the Big Bubble: Becka Goes to San Diego


Book Description

Becka and The Big Bubble is a rhyming picture book about a confident young girl with a vision for adventure. She blows a magic bubble which carries her all around and beyond her town to where her bubble eventually pops...Follow Becka in the books that follow to all parts of the world! Egypt, India, North Pole, San Francisco...




In the Key of New York City


Book Description

Against the advice of family and friends, a middle-aged couple leaves their home and jobs in North Carolina to pursue a long-held desire: to live in New York City. As they struggle to find work and forge friendships in a city of strangers, Rebecca decides to take her mother's advice to "make a home wherever you land." She finds it in surprising ways: in overheard conversations on park benches and subway stations, in songs and cries sifted through apartment walls, in the oil-spilled rainbow colors of the pigeons who mate on the window air conditioner, and in encounters with street people dispensing unexpected wisdom. The 9/11 attacks and a serious cancer surgery turn her attention inward: to memories of marital affairs and separation, the deaths of mentors and friends, and to the books and poems that have always sustained her. Inner and outer landscapes merge, her life touching the lives of the now-familiar strangers. Alternating between brief vignettes and sustained narratives, Rebecca McClanahan tracks the heartbeat of New York, finding in each face she meets the cumulative loss, joy, and stubborn resilience of a city that has claimed her for its own.




Good and Mad


Book Description

Journalist Rebecca Traister’s New York Times bestselling exploration of the transformative power of female anger and its ability to transcend into a political movement is “a hopeful, maddening compendium of righteous feminine anger, and the good it can do when wielded efficiently—and collectively” (Vanity Fair). Long before Pantsuit Nation, before the Women’s March, and before the #MeToo movement, women’s anger was not only politically catalytic—but politically problematic. The story of female fury and its cultural significance demonstrates its crucial role in women’s slow rise to political power in America, as well as the ways that anger is received when it comes from women as opposed to when it comes from men. “Urgent, enlightened…realistic and compelling…Traister eloquently highlights the challenge of blaming not just forces and systems, but individuals” (The Washington Post). In Good and Mad, Traister tracks the history of female anger as political fuel—from suffragettes marching on the White House to office workers vacating their buildings after Clarence Thomas was confirmed to the Supreme Court. Traister explores women’s anger at both men and other women; anger between ideological allies and foes; the varied ways anger is received based on who’s expressing it; and the way women’s collective fury has become transformative political fuel. She deconstructs society’s (and the media’s) condemnation of female emotion (especially rage) and the impact of their resulting repercussions. Highlighting a double standard perpetuated against women by all sexes, and its disastrous, stultifying effect, Good and Mad is “perfectly timed and inspiring” (People, Book of the Week). This “admirably rousing narrative” (The Atlantic) offers a glimpse into the galvanizing force of women’s collective anger, which, when harnessed, can change history.




The Harlequin


Book Description




Leaving Rock Harbor


Book Description

An unforgettable coming-of-age story and a luminous portrayal of a dramatic era of American history, Rebecca Chace’s Leaving Rock Harbor takes readers into the heart of a New England mill town in the early twentieth century. On the eve of World War I, fourteen-year-old Frankie Ross and her parents leave their simple life in Poughkeepsie to seek a new beginning in the booming city of Rock Harbor, Massachusetts. Frankie’s father finds work in a bustling cotton mill, but erupting labor strikes threaten to dismantle the town’s socioeconomic structure. Frankie soon befriends two charismatic young men—Winslow Curtis, privileged son of the town’s most powerful politician, and Joe Barros, a Portuguese mill worker who becomes a union organizer—forming a tender yet bittersweet love triangle that will have an impact on all three throughout their lives. Inspired in part by Chace’s family history, Frankie’s journey to adulthood takes us through the First World War and into the Jazz Age, followed by the Great Depression—from rags to riches and back again. Her life parallels the evolution of the mill town itself, and the lost promise of a boomtown that everyone thought would last forever. Of her acclaimed novel Capture the Flag, the Los Angeles Times said, "Chace’s writing resembles a generation of New York writers heavily influenced by John Updike: Rick Moody, A. M. Homes, Susan Minot, and, more recently, Melissa Bank." With its lyrical prose and compelling style, Leaving Rock Harbor further establishes Chace’s position in that literary tradition.