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Dawn the Sakora, a beautiful rare and exotic cat that talks, who is the current incarnation of the ancient Egyptian Goddess Bastet, has wound up her recent visit to Israel. She can fly like a bat and now plans to visit India to make new friends with the cats and children there. Dawn is a welcome visitor everywhere, as she is a compelling, wise and loyal pet and friend. Should you meet her and betray your friend by confessing that she talks, she will abandon you forever. Through the centuries, Dawn has visited India before. She knows about the magical sights and yoga holy men, the Rishi gods in the Himalya Mountains, and the different cities tourists explore. In this picture book, illustrated with photos, Dawn will visit: Taj Mahal and tell that story, Bombay; Mumbai; New Delhi, Rishikesh, and many sports complexes and tourist sites. She participates in Indian holidays and even finds a new boyfriend, handsome Blackie.
This is a droll, fractured fairy tale account of life in a fringe apartment house featuring as many characters as in Dickens' "Nicholas Nickleby", but it's definitely not Dickensian. It's rather macabre, fiction noir, and funny.
Dredged up from ancestral memory or via revelation, Mary Khazak Grant presents four stories "fleshing out" the origins of the four primary "races" of Mankind. As part of a new theology deemed "Scientism" by the author, they attempt to reconcile evidence from the Sciences with the Bible as well as Native American creation myths. The book is in the vein of fiction best expressed by Ursula Le Guin. It is revelatory: inspired imagination, mystical, and archetypal.
This ebook is a download from the author's popular, topical blog, www.sensesoapbox.wordpress.com. It will sometimes astonish you with its audacity. At times, there is a dystopian view of the future for America, but, in keeping with the best of all futurist literature, this book is right on the mark, or "spot on".
This jail house memoir takes you on a visit, along with the "perpetrator, first-time offender" of a prison facility in the heart of a Long Island county in New York. Told in the first person, it paints a vivid and gripping picture of the terrible ordeal faced during 112 days of incarceration in the medical block of a women's detention center, Carmen Road. Due to family dysfunction, our gal's family refuses to bail her out. Without a prior criminal record, she is, nevertheless, subjected to strip search 92 times. During her stay, an attempt is made on her life. She witnesses many bizarre incidents and things, some seemingly supernatural. The hostile African-American ladies, the intense and domineering German-American "Alphas" all take their turns in teaching this female "Candide" what Life is really all about. Severely tried and disillusioned, the protagonist finally gains freedom by pleading guilty and being sentenced--just to get out, though innocent.
When the world began there were five pterosaurs, friends of Toft, a Neanderthal. They had super powers and did not age. As time passed, they became a part of Mankind's history, ending as the inspiration for a Pharaoh to build the famous Sphinx of Ancient Egypt on top of a Pterosaur bone!
Juvenile: el-hi, 5-8th grade social studies - Neolithic man to Modern Era. Inventions and Discoveries. Illustrated, Chapter Questions, Glossary, Timeline, Bibliography. This is the first in a series.
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