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This is a memoir of the life and times of the artist John Bell, Jr. as presented by his daughter, Lisa Bell-Wilson. John Bell Jr. was afficted with cerebral palsy but overcame his physical limitations to become a successful artist. John Bell Jr. grew up before accessibility laws and supported the Americans With Disabilities act. John Bell Jr. developed a reputation depicting Arkansas history on canvas.
Bashful Billy and the Mysterious Island is a children's book for our tumultuous times. It features animals, adventure and nature while promoting friendship, respect and cooperation among different species.The book is set on the shores of a lake in northern Illinois. The star is Bashful Billy, a bulldog who lives in a cottage on the lake with his human family. He spends his days sleeping on his dock and pondering a mysterious island in the middle of the lake. He wants to know who lives there and what their lives involve.Thanks to a pair of strong beavers who give him a ride on their backs to the island, Billy begins to meet a variety of interesting animals: a pair of gorgeous swans, a group of pelicans, an imposing eagle, a sly fox, a deer and her doe, a fearsome coyote and a rugged turtle. Each animal has named the island after his or her species. Nobody cooperates and everybody has a fear of the coyote. Over the summer months, Billy visits the island every day, building relationships and helping the animals bond. In late summer, a huge event occurs that threatens the entire island and all the inhabitants.Bashful Billy must find a way to save them.Grandparents and teachers will love reading this book to their grandchildren and students. Children will be excited to read about Bashful Billy and his friends over and over again. The world will be a better place because of Bashful Billy and the Mysterious Island.
STUFF: Tales from Places is a love letter to the pulp novels and short-story collections of the twentieth century, and is a peek through the double-glass doors into a new universe of adventures.
Joyce Faulkner gives readers a different slant on life in Chance and other horrors. Peeling away the layers of civility, she searches the lines where good meets bad, desire becomes obsession, fun turns evil, and actions are lethal physical and emotional weapons. A series of short stories, each sends chills into your mind and soul. Faulkner offers a glimpse of the pain caused by people who ignore and abuse basic human relationships and kindnesses.
In Julia and Maud, author Joyce Faulkner presents a compellingtale told by Archie Biggs, the "steadfast," yet conflicted Huck Finntypenarrator. Biggs, often at the center of the action, whether hewants to be or not, reveals his own bias, while also showing theperspectives of complicated citizens during an evolutionary 1890sFort Smith. The ebb and flow of popular opinion and the sixdegreesof separation which connect characters throughoutparallels many political stories and the ambitions throughoutArkansas history to the present. Readers are empathetic to thenarrator, whose dialectal perspective, youth, and honor, are clearthroughout. Some readers may find empathy for Maud, asreminded by Faulkner, this story has many sides.
Anyone interested in judicial history will be pleased to learn of anew book by Judge Jim Spears. Justice Divided, which pertains to thecircuit judges of Sebastian County, takes its title from the county havingtwo courthouses--one in Greenwood and another in Fort Smith. This is not adry tome on legal minutia, rather it is the briskly written story of howlawyers and judges on the Arkansas border attempted to dispense justice.Tom Dillard, Arkansas historian and newspaper columnist
Anyone interested in judicial history will be pleased to learn of anew book by Judge Jim Spears. Justice Divided, which pertains to thecircuit judges of Sebastian County, takes its title from the county havingtwo courthouses--one in Greenwood and another in Fort Smith. This is not adry tome on legal minutia, rather it is the briskly written story of howlawyers and judges on the Arkansas border attempted to dispense justice.Tom Dillard, Arkansas historian and newspaper columnist
During the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln reviewed thousands of wartime military trials, including several cases featured in this book. These cases range from murder, to theft of a cavalry horse. Lincoln's decision was the final answer for each defendant. --Back cover.
A comprehensive manual about how to succeed in the grant business.
"Dogs do speak, but only to those who know how to listen." Orhan Pamuk Hi, I'm Luke the Author Dog, and I know that quote is true. We speak to people through our actions and our feelings for them. In researching famous dogs, I've discovered that all of them have spoken loudly and clearly of the love and devotion they have for their humans. They have performed their jobs without question, treated their humans well, and in some cases, gave their lives for them. You'll read about Barry, the St. Bernard in the Swiss Alps, who rescued stranded travelers, Lily who searched tirelessly for victims following the Joplin tornado, and Judy the only registered prisoner-of-war dog in WWII. I've also learned the same traits apply to other animals as well as dogs. That's why we've included them in this book. Murphy the WWI donkey, carried wounded soldiers to safety even when bullets flew around him. Fungie the Dolphin has greeted visitors to Dingle Harbour for thirty years. Ham was the first chimpanzee in space and he performed his duties well, paving the way for human space flight. All have clearly spoken about their intelligence and loyalty. I hope you enjoy reading their stories as much as we enjoyed writing them. Luke
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