Book Review: Leslie Handler’s Rats, Mice, and Other Things You Can’t Take to the Bank
A memoir of Handler’s life and views expressed in a standalone collection of hilarious essays that tell it like it is from Mom’s point-of-view.
A memoir of Handler’s life and views expressed in a standalone collection of hilarious essays that tell it like it is from Mom’s point-of-view.
The mission to rescue the children fails when Lily Yu is taken captive by Dragon Spawn. Lily has a bare chance to survive and get home alive with the children.
Iron Druid Atticus O’Sullivan has a point to make — and then drive into a vampire’s heart.
Jane Hawk — fiction’s most relentless, resourceful, stunning new heroine — continues her battle against a murderous conspiracy in the riveting follow-up to The Silent Corner.
Slicker McQuicker and Friends offers two short stories featuring Slicker McQuicker — who may have funny ears, but he’s a very good fellow — who laughs and laughs with his heart full of joy.
A suitcase, jars of marmalade, and a label requesting care accompanies a small bear from Peru on the adventure of a lifetime, as he stows away for England.
Be careful how often you cry “wolf”, you may get eaten as Lola finds out.
A counting book for children that plays off the creatures and objects found in Margaret Wise Brown’s Goodnight Moon.
What must you do to make a wish upon a star come true?
Eleven short stories in an anthology about shadowed heroes.