Child of the Daystar


Book Description

The debut novel of the multi-genre Top 10 Amazon bestselling series. Raz i'Syul Arro has taken the art of war and made it a masterpiece.




Wings on Things


Book Description

"Wings! Wings! Wings! They are wonderful flying things . . ". Come join Marc Brown for a wacky, whimsical whirl through the world of winged things. Kids will learn about creatures and things that have wings. Brown's dazzling, bold art perfectly complements his easy-to-read rhyming text. Full color.




Wings and the Child


Book Description

E. Nesbit was one of the greatest children's novelists, in Wings and the Child, she writes about the importance of play in the lives of children. She believes that play alone can fully develop their imagination.







The Child's World


Book Description




Children and the Tundra


Book Description

The fifth volume in the ludicrously misinformative HOW Series. For many years the scientific and educational community has wondered and worried about the possibility that semi-sane scholar pretenders would find the means to put out a series of reference books aimed at children but filled with ludicrous misinformation. These books would be distributed through respectable channels and would inevitably find their way into the hands and households of well-meaning families, who would go to them for facts but instead find bizarre untruths. The books would look normal enough, but would read as if written by people who should at all costs be denied access to pens and pencils. Sadly, with the publication of this, the fifth volume in a proposed series of 377 reference books, that day has come. Children and the Tundra is actually two books in one, as Dr. Doris Haggis-on-Whey, due to space constraints, is forced to explain both the concept of children—a species she doesn’t trust for a second—and the tundra, in one book. She is, as always, joined in her crusade of lies by her husband, Benny, who is mostly useless.




The Child's Book of Nature


Book Description

In this little book, the author's object is to supply the parent and the teacher with the means of introducing the child into one department of natural science—that which relates to the vegetable world, or vegetable physiology. The work is divided into three parts: plants, animals, as well as air, water, heat, and light.







The Outlook


Book Description




From Fictionalism to Realism


Book Description

In ontology, realism and anti-realism may be taken as opposite attitudes towards entities of different kinds, so that one may turn out to be a realist with respect to certain entities, and an anti-realist with respect to others. In this book, the editors focus on this controversy concerning social entities in general and fictional entities in particular, the latter often being considered nowadays as kinds of social entities. More specifically, fictionalists (those who maintain that we only make-believe that there are entities of a certain kind) and creationists (those who believe that entities of a certain kind are the products of human activity) present themselves as the champions of the anti-realist and the realist stance, respectively, regarding the above entities. By evaluating the pros and cons of both these positions, this book intends to focus new light on a longstanding debate.