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By the final chapter of the Lake of Two Worlds, Emily has done a lot of growing up. But is she ready to let go of her final link to her childhood--and to the magical world she has grown to love so much?
It Takes a Forest (To Raise a Tree): A story of love and light, death and sadness. Follow the journey of one maple tree as it grows to understand its own life and the lives of those around it. It Takes a Forest (To Raise a Tree) is an inspiring read for all ages. "Wow! A tree hugger's delight. This story really spoke to me, much like Jonathan Livingston Seagull did, so many years ago..." P.D.Goddard, Book Lover "A delightful glimpse into the lifetime of a single tree, which reminds us how interdependent we all are, with each other and with nature." Peter James, Nature Photographer "I just got done reading It Takes a Forest and I'm at a loss for words. I love the themes that it relays from the perspective of this wise, young maple. I connected with it on a level I never expected myself to. I was interested and caught at the premise, but the substance seemed to fill my soul. Simply stunning. I feel like my vision is a bit clearer looking through the mind of a tree." Jaxon Anderson, Poet
"Mrs. Elsa Dora Drimley lived in a tall and crooked house at the edge of a tall and crooked cliff along an inlet on a northern shore. Her cat, Mulligan, was quite bitter about his name. Who would want to be named after stew? Mrs. Drimley was a practical sort of woman, though, and had served her husband one variation or another of stew, which Mr. Drimley affectionately referred to as his helping of mulligan, each and every night of their twenty-seven years together..."Mrs. Drimley has comfortably lived in the same house and has done the same things with the same person every day for the last twenty-seven years. Then, everything changes when two things happened almost at once: she becomes a widow and a fluffy grey kitten appears at her door. Facing life alone after a peaceful marriage, Mrs. Drimley welcomes the kitten into her home in exchange for the gift of three fish each day. She soon learns that this cat--and her new life--are anything but ordinary. Together, Mulligan and Mrs. Drimley navigate the treacherous path Mrs. Drimley must follow as she builds a new life full of community, creativity, and adventure she never knew she wanted.
A student and his teacher discover that, no matter what we may be going through, we are never all alone.
Buddy, a very young burro selected for his first trip into the Grand Canyon, is embarrassed when he sees that an old, clumsy pack frame is to be strapped to his back while his friend, Diego, has a handsome saddle placed on his back and is chosen to carry a person. Buddy feels his job is not an honorable or prestigious one. But after Diego injures his leg, medical supplies in Buddy's pack are used to help mend Diego's leg.
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