Johnny Tractor and His Pals


Book Description

Johnny tractor and the other pieces of farm equipment try to decide which of them is the most important to the farmer.




Johnny Tractor and His Pals


Book Description

Johnny tractor and the other pieces of farm equipment try to decide which of them is the most important to the farmer.




Johnny Tractor and His Pals


Book Description

A John Deere storybook for little folks.




Johnny Tractor and His Pals


Book Description

Johnny tractor and the other pieces of farm equipment try to decide which of them is the most important to the farmer.




Johnny Tractor and Friends


Book Description

Johnny Tractor and the other farm machines convince themselves they're not afraid of an abandoned old house.




Corny Cornpicker Finds a Home


Book Description

Corny Cornpicker is bought by a farmer who neglects him, and he wonders if he will ever see his friend, Johnny Tractor, again. A new farmer buys Corny and brings all the old friends back together again.




Johnny Tractor and His Pals


Book Description







Tractor Mac Saves Christmas


Book Description

Every year, the whole town looks forward to the Christmas tree lighting, but this year, a blizzard has struck. The snow starts to fall more and more heavily, and soon, Tractor Mac and his pals are snowed in at the barn. Farmer Bill and Sibley the horse are supposed to be on their way to the center of town with the tree, but when they get stuck in the blizzard and it looks like the ceremony will have to be called off, Tractor Mac saves them and the whole holiday celebration.




Pale Gray for Guilt


Book Description

From a beloved master of crime fiction, Pale Gray for Guilt is one of many classic novels featuring Travis McGee, the hard-boiled detective who lives on a houseboat. Travis McGee’s old football buddy Tush Bannon is resisting pressure to sell off his floundering motel and marina to a group of influential movers and shakers. Then he’s found dead. For a big man, Tush was a pussycat: devoted to his wife and three kids and always optimistic about his business—even when things were at their worst. So even though his death is ruled a suicide, McGee suspects murder . . . and a vile conspiracy. “As a young writer, all I ever wanted was to touch readers as powerfully as John D. MacDonald touched me.”—Dean Koontz Tush Bannon was in the wrong spot at the wrong time. His measly plot of land just so happened to sit right in the middle of a rich parcel of five hundred riverfront acres that big-money real estate interests decided they simply must have. It didn’t matter that Tush was a nice guy with a family, or that he never knew he was dealing with a criminal element. They squashed him like a bug and walked away, counting their change. But one thing they never counted on: the gentle giant had a not-so-gentle friend in Travis McGee. And now he’s going to make them pay. Features a new Introduction by Lee Child