If I Could Float on a Cloud, Where Would I Go?


Book Description

In this story—Experience a world of unique and creative imagination, through the eyes of a young boy, whom is living with cancer and is bed stricken. Connect with him through his personal adventures while traveling on a cloud and through his incredible strength, in his cancer struggle. Uncover this epic journey beyond your own imagination—Explore a world of beauty, play, curiosity, wonder and peace. Each child’s illness in this story, is for you to contemplate—to figure out, what he or she may have; for you as the reader, must read from cover to cover, to reveal the truth inside. Discover, for your own inner being, what an incredible strength through faith and strong-will, can be—to persevere through anything! Read, the Second Edition of, “If I Could Float On A Cloud, Where Would I Go?” and decide for yourself, the true meaning to life, itself.










The Works of John Ruskin: Modern painters of leaf beauty. Of cloud beauty. Of ideas of relation. Of ideas of relation (part 2)


Book Description

Volume 1-35, works. Volume 36-37, letters. Volume 38 provides an extensive bibliography of Ruskin's writings and a catalogue of his drawings, with corrections to earlier volumes in George Allen's Library Edition of the Works of John Ruskin. Volume 39, general index.







Geis of the Gargoyle


Book Description

A gargoyle finds himself caught between a rock and a hard place in this Xanth adventure that “should delight Anthony’s many fans” (Publishers Weekly). As a gargoyle, Gary Gar has one job in Xanth: to protect the Swan Knee River from the pollution flowing in from Mundania. But more dirt plus less rain will crack any gargoyle’s stony composure. So Gary does what any good Xanthian would do: He seeks the help of the Good Magician. But payment for his service is high. Gary must find a philter for the water, while taking on human form to tutor a wild human child, with help from the surly Sorceress Iris, and—even though time is of the essence—taking Hiatus, a known troublemaker, along for the ride. It won’t be easy, especially when they’re all transported back to the dawn of time. And if they can’t figure out what’s going on in the past, there may be no future for Xanth—come hell or high water . . . “Ephemeral amusement for pun-struck Xanthonauts.” —Kirkus Reviews




Weather


Book Description

Children learn about weather with easy-to-do, innovative activities and games.