The Bear, the Bat, and the Dove: Three Stories from Aesop


Book Description

Read Along or Enhanced eBook: In this collection of three lesser known Aesop Fables, you will learn why bats fly at night, why you should pick your friends carefully, and why even a tiny ant could be your guardian angel.




The Bear, the Bat, and the Dove


Book Description

Retellings of three classic fables reveal the importance of loyalty as a bear threatens two friends, a bat must choose sides in a battle between birds and animals, and an ant repays a dove for saving his life.




Aesop's Fables


Book Description

A collection of animal fables told by the Greek slave Aesop.




Continuum Encyclopedia of Animal Symbolism in World Art


Book Description

Animals and their symbolism in diverse world cultures and different eras of human history are chronicled in this lovely volume.




Peace Tales


Book Description

A collection of folktales from cultures around the world, reflecting different aspects of war and peace, with notes for story tellers and discussion leaders, and suggestions for storytelling.







Batshift Crazy


Book Description

The shift is getting deep in New Orleans… Gaston Bellevue has been single for one hundred years. He's a bat-shifting vampire who has amassed a fortune, runs a B and B for supes, and is living his best death in The Big Easy. When his drunken bat collides with a windshield and he finds himself locked in a cage at an animal sanctuary, death as he knows it is about to turn batshift crazy. Maeve O'Meara is the last bat shifter left in New Orleans…or so she thinks. When an adorable vampire bat is delivered to the Wings of Love Sanctuary in the middle of the night, she expects to find the creature there the next day. Instead, she finds tall, pale, and handsome Gaston in its place. Maeve is terrified of vampires, but something about Gaston is so familiar. She can't help but be drawn to the mysterious man. Until she's charged with a murder he probably committed. Or did he? Can Gaston get his shift together and prove they're both innocent? Or have his shenanigans finally reached the end…of a stake?




Something Happened: A Collection


Book Description

SOMETHING HAPPENED is a collection of storiesÑ11 short stories, 1 poem, 1 novella, and 1 one-act playÑfilled with ghosts, aliens, serial killers, and vampires, along with that age-old purveyor of terror: the human mind. The stories in this collection feature a man whose mind drives him to extreme lengths just to have someone to talk to, a young manÕs journey from answering a plea for help from a stranger to becoming part of a much bigger drama, a centuries-old vampire's encounter with the most notorious serial killer in history, a female contractor killer's dilemma over her next assignment, a 12-year-old boyÕs bike ride down a notoriously haunted alley, and a young woman whose avid interest in aliens and UFO lore leads her unknowingly into a dangerous situation. These stories along with the others in this collection are sure to have readers avidly turning their pages to find out whatÕs going to happen in the next story and if the characters will get out of alive in the end.




The Brush of the Dove's Wings


Book Description

In the fall of 1907, Teddy Roosevelt occupied the oval office, the Cubs won the World Series, the Lusitania made her maiden voyage, and Oklahoma was admitted as the Union’s 46th state. Amidst all this, life in the rural farming community of LaFontaine, Indiana was calm and serene—until it wasn’t. Sarah, the matriarch of the Whitcome clan, leans on her faith in God and draws from her reservoir of wisdom to help her husband, Doctor Ben Adams, their children, and neighbors navigate the triple dramas of mystery, murder, and matrimony. The continuing saga of life in the close-knit small town will have you laughing at the antics of the children and quirky townsfolk while, at times, reaching for a handkerchief to commiserate as they struggle over loss and grief.




Tibetan Folk Tales


Book Description

It is found among the old, old histories of the Tibetans that a female demon living among the mountains in Northern India mated with a monkey from the forests of Tibet, and from this union sprang the Tibetan race of people. The greater part of their literature is of a sacred nature, telling of their creation, of the formation of the world, of Buddha and his miraculous birth and death, of his reincarnations and the revisions of his teachings. A kind of almanac, a little astronomy, plans for casting a horoscope, and many books filled with religious teachings and superstitions, including the worship of devils and demons, are about all that can be found. The 49 little stories in this book are told as the people sit around their boiling tea made over a three stone camp-fire. They are handed down from father to son, from mother to daughter, and though often filled with their superstitious beliefs, through them all run a vein of humor and the teachings of a moral truth which is quite unexpected. These tales were gathered by Dr. A. L. Shelton on his trips among the Tibetans, around their camp-fires at night, and in their black tents high up in the mountains. Every country has its folk-lore tales that have always been a joy and pleasure to the children, not only of their own land, but of other lands as well. May these stories add a little to this pleasure and enjoyment everywhere, in whatsoever tongue they may be translated or in whatever land they may be read. Flora Beal Shelton 1925