You are reading the archives for July 2009.

Frances Hodgson

  • Posted by admin on July 31, 2009 at 6:54 am

Frances Hodgson

Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories (Dodo Press)
Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories (Dodo Press)
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The Shuttle
The Shuttle
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Racketty-Packetty House
Racketty-Packetty House
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In The Closed Room
In The Closed Room
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Frances Hodgson
what's the setting in a little princess by Frances Hodgson?

I need a web site please that has the setting and the main charters
I also need to know the main characters and the importent events in the story.

The Author's full name is Frances Hodgson Burnett - maybe you can find a web site better with the complete name.

Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories (Dodo Press) Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories (Dodo Press)
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Description

Frances Hodgson Burnett (1849-1924) was an English- American playwright and author. She was best known for her children's stories, in particular The Secret Garden (1911) and Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886)...

The Shuttle The Shuttle
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The Shuttle is presented here in a high quality paperback edition. This popular classic work by Frances Hodgson Burnett is in the English language. If you enjoy the works of Frances Hodgson Burnett then we highly recommend this publication for your book collection.

Reviews

A Wonderful ArtfullyTold Story!

by F. J. Powell from Chester, SC United States on 2005-02-08
I have a 1907 edition of this book that I love.. I've read it several times and each time I savour the language and the world that Frances Hodgeson Burnett described before the First World War: a world of English village streets with sound of carts clattering past hawthorn hedges and brash young American boys bicyling in buttonup boots and celluloid collars up the pleached alleys of country estates. I think that the previous reviewer has unfortunetely missed much of the subtlety of the story, painting it in almost comicbook colours. It's "comfort reading" for adults who grew up making friends with Little Lord Fauntleroy and a Secret Garden. This is a novel that celebrates the goodness of people and cultures on both sides of the Atlantic in tender and funny ways that remind me of Lousia May Alcott's books and in the end, metes out justice in very satisfying ways. You might also want to see if you can find F H Burnett's "T. Tembarom" --which is, as her characters themselves might put it, a "bang-up" book as well.


An old-fashioned page turner

by Ann E. Nichols from Sierra Vista, AZ United States on 2001-09-10
The book is set in the 19th century, but the heroine, Bettina Vanderpoel of the filthy rich New York Vanderpoels, is no shrinking violet. That role is left to her older sister, sweet and not overly bright Rosalie. The story starts out with Rosalie being courted by and married to Sir Nigel Anstruthers, an impoverished English aristocrat on the make for a rich wife. Although she is only eight at the time, Betty hates Sir Nigel. Her instincts are on the money. Sir Nigel is a rotter, a blackguard, a cad, and a bounder. He is utterly infuriated that he did not automatically gain control of Rosalie's money when he married her. He and his equally appalling mother start a loathsome campaign of emotional abuse that gentle Rosalie is not equal to. Luckily, by chapter five it is 12 years later and Bettina has grown into a fine, strong-minded woman who has all the business sense that made the Vanderpoel fortune. The rest of the book tells us how she rescues her sister, her nephew, and the Anstruthers estate from Sir Nigel. The hero of the book is another impoverished aristocrat, but cut from genuinely noble cloth, even if most of his ancestors were of the Sir Nigel type.Before the book is over, Bettina will be trapped, injured, and at the mercy of Sir Nigel, who has Perfectly Awful plans for the lovely lady. Will Bettina wring her hands helplessly and beg?Don't be silly. Read and see how love, virtue, and justice triumph and Sir Nigel gets his.


Racketty-Packetty House Racketty-Packetty House
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The book has no illustrations or index. Purchasers are entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge.

Reviews

Racketty-Packetty dolls undismayed by time's changes

by Harriet M Welsch from Northern California, USA on 2006-04-01
The doll family in the old dollhouse doesn't mind when Cynthia gets Tidy Castle as a present, even when she dismisses their house as Racketty-Packetty House and sticks it behind the door. They had fallen from the "gay and fashionable life" and become shabby over the years since Cynthia's Grandmamma first owned them, but it does not dampen their spirits one bit! They dance in circles until they're hysterical and all fall down laughing, and have much more fun than the lords and ladies in Tidy Castle. When Cynthia gives the Tidy Castle dolls scarlet fever, the old dolls are quite kind-hearted to their fancy neighbors and all manage to become friends. But when Cynthia expects an important visitor and wants the nurse to burn Racketty-Packetty house, things look quite serious, even for the ever-optimistic old doll family. Fortunately, Queen Crosspatch and her Fairies are quite fond of the Racketty-Packetty dolls, and they will find a way to save Racketty-Packetty House. This is one of the goofiest, most frenetic doll books ever. See if you can find a copy with the wonderful illustrations by Harrison Cady.


ALL TIME FAVORITE CHILDREN'S BOOK !!

by Mrs. Pink from Atlanta on 2010-04-23
This is my all time favorite book when I was little. All about doll house people that come alive ... and must meet the NEW doll house people. It's just a super great story and "fairy tale" .... Love it!! Hope to find one of the early editions. Will be reading now to my grandchildren.


In The Closed Room In The Closed Room
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Once, as she tossed on her cot-bed, she broke into a low little laugh to think how untrue things really were and how strange it was that people did not understand--that even she felt as she lay in the darkness that she could not get away...

Reviews

Judith and the Invisible Playmate.

by Zou Zou from cape cod,ma on 2009-04-12
This is a short story concerning a working class couple, Jem and Jane Foster and their otherwordly young daughter, Judith. Judith is imaginative and solitary, she frequently dreams of her Aunt Hester, who died quietly at a very young age. Judith and her parents live in a hot, airless flat near the City's noisy Elevated Railroad. The father is offered the temporary position of caretaker at large house by the Park. The small family relocates to the beautiful deserted mansion. Judith and her mother discover a locked room on the fourth floor of the house. There is a mystery to the empty house and the locked room. This short story is a little predictable but will hold your interest.


Little Lord Fauntleroy Little Lord Fauntleroy
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This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc...

Reviews

Well done!

by from on 1999-04-28
Little Lord Fauntleroy stirred my emotions. Would I have let my seven-year-old live with his ill-tempered grandfather who despised me? Probably not! Yet as the story unfolded, I admired the wise words and kind ways of Fauntleroy's mother, Dearest. I empathized with the mother's caring for her only child and her concern for the poor and less fortunate. This book renewed my faith in goodness and kindness. It made me reflect on all that I have.


A charming story about a young boy and his gruff grandfather

by from on 1998-08-05
When the Earl of Fauntleroy decides to bring his favourite son's son to England from America, young Cedric's life is dramatically changed forever. With an ever-innocent and trusting perspective on life he manages to turn his bitter grandfather into a loving, generous man while also endearing himself to every other person he comes in contact with.


Wimpy Kid

  • Posted by admin on July 29, 2009 at 10:43 pm

Wimpy Kid

Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth
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Diary of a Wimpy Kid Box of Books
Diary of a Wimpy Kid Box of Books
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Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw
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Dog Days (Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Book 4)
Dog Days (Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Book 4)
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Wimpy Kid

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Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth
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Greg Heffley has always been in a hurry to grow up. But is getting older really all it’s cracked up to be?   Greg suddenly finds himself dealing with the pressures of boy-girl parties, increased responsibilities, and even the awkward changes that come with getting older—all without his best friend, Rowley, at his side...

Diary of a Wimpy Kid Box of Books Diary of a Wimpy Kid Box of Books
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Description

The first four books in the bestselling Diary of a Wimpy Kid series are available together for the first time in a collectible boxed set. Included are Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Rodrick Rules, The Last Straw, and Dog Days, in a specially designed package that features six pages from Rowley Jefferson’s journal, “Diary of an Awesome, Friendly Kid”—an original cartoon by Jeff Kinney.

Reviews

Or why you never want to play a tree in a school production of The Wizard of Oz

by E. R. Bird from Manhattan, NY on 2007-03-25
The world has not yet invented a method of finding the best webcomics currently available on the Internet for kids. So basically, for every twenty low-quality/poorly thought out amalgamations of crap, you get one bright shining star. "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," the webcomic, was one such star. The only conclusion I can really draw at this point is that somebody at Abrams is a friggin' genius for plucking the comic up and making it into a book. Now normally I don't like to separate titles into "girl books" and "boy books", but Jeff Kinney has written such a marvelous "boy book" that for every parent that walks in the door of my library I'm going to be cramming this title into their arms. Heck, I'll slip it into their purses if I have to. This book is going to reach its intended audience whether I have to wrestle skeptical parents to the floor with it clamped firmly in my teeth. Want to transfer your Captain Underpants lovers from graphic novels to fiction? This book won't do that. It's just something that every single person will get a kick out of. First things first. Boys do not have diaries. Girls have diaries. Let's get that straight cause things could get messy if we don't. Basically, what we have here are the gathered thoughts and memories of Greg Haffley. Greg's got a pretty average life, all things considered. His older brother is a jerk, his younger brother annoying, his best friend a doofus, and his parents perfect dweebs. To top it all off, Greg's been thrown into his first year of middle school and things are really weird. Suddenly friendships are shifting and Greg's not sure who he wants to be. Add in some haunted houses, wrestling, downhill games involving bodily injury, forbidden cheese, and basic family fears and you've got yourself one heckuva debut. I should specify that in spite of the fact that this book is based on a webcomic, it's not a graphic novel. Not really. Comic illustrations appear on every single page and complement the storytelling, but this is really more a (what's the term again?) illustrated novel. What this appears to be, more than anything else, is a notebook that's been written in by hand with the occasional cartoony illustration here and there for effect. It never breaks up into panels or long illustrated periods. There are just tasty little comic treats on each and every page. Now the term "laugh-out-loud funny" is not to be bandied about. When I say that something is "laugh-out-loud funny" I don't want to be talking titters, mild chuckles, or undersized, underfed guffaws. I want to describe something so amusing that you think about it later and start laughing in an embarrassing manner on the subway. Jeff Kinney gave me that more than once. There was the moment when Greg's trying to get out of performing as an apple-throwing tree in his school's production of, "The Wizard of Oz." He thinks that maybe if he screws up what he has to say, that might be his out. "But when you only have one word to say, it's really hard to mess up your lines." The next thing we know, "Dorothy" has picked an apple and Greg's trying out a tentative, "Owwwchhh?" Oh! And the form thank you letters! Greg figures out that he says basically the same thing to all his relatives. So he just cranks out a form letter and fills in the details. This works great until he gets to something like, "Dear AUNT LORETTA, Thank you so much for the awesome PANTS! How did you now I wanted that for Christmas? I love the way the PANTS looks on my LEGS! All my friends will be so jealous that I have my very own PANTS." I think I was laughing over this for a good three hours after I read it. There's something particularly charming about Kinney's illustration/cartoons too. The lines are incredibly clean and precise, even as they are showing some pretty raucous stuff. Kinney's grasp on visual gags is without comparison. At one point Greg happens to mention that if you "mess up in front of Dad" (i.e. kick over your little brother's toys maliciously) he'll throw whatever he has in his hands at you. We then see two shots of Greg misbehaving. The first is labeled, "GOOD TIME TO SCREW UP:" and shows him kicking over some blocks while his dad is holding the newspaper. The second reads, "BAD TIME TO SCREW UP:" and shows him doing it while his dad is cementing together a brick wall. Comedy gold, people! The comics are drawn over lined paper, making the whole enterprise really feel as if you're poring through someone else's journal. And for all that, the writing's not too shabby. When Greg talks about week-ends he says, "The only reason I get out of bed at all on weekends is because eventually, I can't stand the taste of my own breath anymore." Been there. Tasted that. Kinney's able to point out all kinds of funny school details we adults may have forgotten, but that kids will recognize instantly. For example, why should you tell kids that "It's great to be you," when a lot of people really should think about changing themselves? We see two bullies shoving some poor kid down at this point yelling, "It's great to be me!," you you have to concede the point. I mean, Kinney remembers what it was like to roll a really big snowball and then see that you were ripping up the grass on your lawn in the process. No one remembers that! Characters are also lovingly delineated, not only in words, but in their little comic illustrations. Take as your example the character of Greg's fellow student and neighbor Fregley. Fregley is weird. So how would you, as the writer/cartoonist, convey this? You might want to have him say things like, "Wanna see my secret freckle?". You might draw him with a mouth wider than his head. You might have him stabbing kites in his front yard, shirtless. For a start, anyway. Every character in this book feels real. Even Greg's annoying, practically mute, little brother. And so much more. Such as the name of Greg's older brother's band. Loaded Diaper, only it's spelled "Loded Diper" with an umlaut over the "o". Greg suspects his brother thinks that it really is spelled that way. And there are the small failures and triumphs of your average pre-adolescent. No one in their right mind would ever want to return to the days of Middle School, but if Jeff Kinney keeps churning out books like this one, I'll follow him there any day of the week. This title has already been getting some pretty choice reviews here and there. Can I make a nomination for funniest children's book of 2007? Consider it a necessary purchase.


Hilarious Even for Adults

by Noah D. Karchmer from Maryland on 2007-12-08
I learned of this book in my University of Maryland alumni magazine and I'm very glad I did. The author, Jeff Kinney, wrote a popular comic strip called "Igdoof" in the early 90's for the Maryland student newspaper, the Diamondback. His comic alone made me look forward to each new issue of the paper and I continued to seek it out even after I graduated to read Kinney's comic. From what I understand, he fought to get the strip syndicated after he graduated, but it never happened- presumably because his somewhat simplistic and crude artistic style is nothing like what you see in the daily comics sections. I had often wondered what became of Kinney, whose considerable talent should not be going to waste, so I was happy to pick this book up once I discovered it. The book, likely written for kids at or above a fifth or sixth grade reading level, was better reading for a 37 year old than I could have possibly imagined. Kinney picks up right where he left off with the Igdoof strip with the very same humor and art that made me enjoy it so much. The book was laugh-out-loud funny throughout and I would recommend it to not only kids, but anyone who can appreciate humor books. I wish Jeff all the success in the world and look forward to reading more of his works-- he has really found his calling.


Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw
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Description

The highly anticipated third book in the critically acclaimed and bestselling series takes the art of being wimpy to a whole new level.  Let’s face it: Greg Heffley will never change his wimpy ways...

Reviews

Jeff Kinney Doesn't Wimp Out with Diary 3

by Scott Allen from New York on 2009-01-13
Fantastic - as much fun as the first three. I was a real-life wimpy kid and I did end up at West Point so this installment was even more fun for me. My daughter loves this series. Jeff Kinney delivers again - the "Diary" is so funny and fast-paced that even "reading wimps" can't put the book down. The format of fun cartoon drawings and true-to-life stories that kids & adults alike can relate to make this a must-buy for your young reader. (Or adults that didn't totally grow up)


My Sides Hurt and Water Came Out of My Eyes

by Lynn Ellingwood from Webster, NY United States on 2009-01-17
This is an amazingly funny book. The Wimpy Kid series should not be confined to people under 18 so I highly urge adults to read all three as soon as possible. My sides hurt and yes, my eyes watered. The book is so funny and each one is better than the last which means The Last Straw is the funniest so far. The author has a knack of mentioning things that kids and kids who have gotten older can all identify with. It's great. My favorite scene in this book was the gym class in which middle school students are urged by their gym teacher and other teachers to dance the Hokey Pokey! What a nightmare! What fun! Rowley is the sad sack friend who is embarrassing to be with and makes a great stooge for our hero. Mom is supposedly "hip" and so uncool that she needs to be kept in the house and not let out for activities that involve being "with it". Dad can't stay on a diet and Greg's New Year's Resolution is telling everybody else what's wrong with them! Just a wonderful book and I think that we will see more of them. This is truly a classic series and too good just to be isolated in the kids' section. Adults get your "Young Adult" reading done now! My excuse? I teach middle school.


Dog Days (Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Book 4) Dog Days (Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Book 4)
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It’s summer vacation, the weather’s great, and all the kids are having fun outside. So where’s Greg Heffley? Inside his house, playing video games with the shades drawn. Greg, a self-confessed “indoor person,” is living out his ultimate summer fantasy: no responsibilities and no rules...

Reviews

Another Instant Favorite with Son!

by Shilom from MI on 2009-10-22
My son loves this series so of course I pre-ordered this book for him. It just arrived today and boy did he gush when I surprised him with it after school. I even got a hug and an "I love you!" before he disappeared with it for the remainder of the evening. He's about halfway through with it already and stopped himself so he would have more to enjoy tomorrow. He rereads them all anyways. I also flipped through it before he came home and chuckled at the parts, the boy reminds me of my own and is probably why he loves this series so much. It is very relatable to kids without being a bad influence. I love the humor and that it keeps my son reading!


Not only fun

by T. Szefler from Blaine, WA United States on 2009-10-13
First of all the whole series of Wimpy Kid books deserves its success. My kids love the books and I also read all of them myself. I think it is a great series of books not only for the children but for their parents as well. And if you pay some attention to the reading you will actually realize that the books are also in a way educational. Greg is actually a very smart kid and the simple drawings are just perfect for demonstrating humour. Another kid's series that I like for that educational aspect is Why Some Cats are Rascals, Book 2 .


Diary of a Wimpy Kid Do-It-Yourself Book Diary of a Wimpy Kid Do-It-Yourself Book
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Now every kid can write like a Wimpy Kid! An exciting companion to the bestselling Diary of a Wimpy Kid series. “First of all, let me get something straight: This is a journal, not a diary.” This innovative interactive journal based on Greg Heffley’s own “diary” lets kids express themselves in an exciting new way...

Reviews

Mike's review

by Michael Boyd from SAINTE GENEVIEVE, MO, US on 2010-04-14
Fantastic book. My two youngest kids - my son and daughter, respectively - loved the Diary of a Wimpy Kid Do it Yourself book. It actually was for my son, but my daughter kept stealing it from him and writing her own things in it, thus creating arguments (typical for those two anyway). Now they both want more Wimpy Kid books from the series and she wants her own Do It Yourself book. I now have ideas for useful birthday and Christmas presents that's not another toy and motivates them to put their day and thoughts in written words and do so creatively. THANK YOU Jeff Kinney. As a longtime sportswriter, I feel writing, especially a journal or diary, is very important at every age. :) Mike Boyd Ste. Genevieve, Mo.


They love it!

by Noname from on 2010-05-13
I have a kindergartener and a third grader who are gung ho over "Diary of a Wimpy Kid Do-It-Yourself Book." My 8 year-old son, who never enjoyed writing, is writing every day in his own diary. The kids fought over it until my kindergartener went out and bought her own. I asked my son what was so special about this diary. He said it asks him questions. I looked and half the book is filled with pages prompting things like "Five things nobody knows about you because they never bothered to ask" or "The worst nightmare you ever had." There are 16 pages of full color Zoo-Wee Mama comics followed by lined blank pages for the children to write freely. This Do-It-Yourself Book is a hit. My kids have shown their books to all their friends and I've seen other kids toting them around, as well. It inspired my children to go on and buy their own private locked diaries after having gone through this one. If you have a "Diary of a Wimpy Kid" fan, this book is sure to delight.



diary of a wimpy kid the movie coming out when?

when is diary of a wimpy kid coming out in the movies?

therye makin a movie O:
gasp

DIARY OF A WIMPY KID with STEVE ZAHN, ZACHARY GORDON, and DEVON BOSTICK

Looking Glass

  • Posted by admin on July 29, 2009 at 10:07 pm

Looking Glass

The Looking Glass Wars
The Looking Glass Wars
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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass
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Through the Looking Glass: Observations in the Early Childhood Classroom (3rd Edition)
Through the Looking Glass: Observations in the Early Childhood Classroom (3rd Edition)
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Looking Glass
Looking Glass
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Looking Glass

Through The Looking Glass: Email Marketing From Your Customer'S Viewpoint

-ping- New email. Should I read, delete, or file it? In this email marketing article from Mediapost, an Epsilon research project found that "57% of consumers feel they have a more positive impression of companies when they receive email from them, and 50% said they're more likely to buy products from companies who send them email, whether their purchases are online or at a place of business." This shows that the right message targeted at the right viewer can be very effective, especially as part of a multi-channel marketing campaign. 1) Who are you selling to? Define your audience, and narrow it down if you can. You can send different variations of the email if there are different target verticals. Obviously, the more targeted your message, the higher your success will be. What are their needs that your product or service addresses? 2) Briefly and basically define your product or service for that audience. 3) What differentiates you? Put your competitors around a table—what makes you different? Why choose you? Try to answer a problem or concern your target market has. For example, instead of saying "Our phone is small and lightweight", you could say "Fits in your pocket—you won't even know it's there!" 4) What's the offer? You may have the most amazing new thing in your industry. Your audience doesn't care. Sweeten the deal with offers like a free consultation, or a percentage off the price of your product. I often get coupons from Staples. Even if I'm not going to use the coupon, I'll send it to someone else. Whitepaper downloads or Webinars can be enticing offers too. 5) Call to action is everywhere. Offer it early, mid-way, and on the end of your email. Offer it as a big graphical button, and in the text. Use bright colors, arrows, "Click Here", be totally obvious. 6) Craft the perfect subject line. This is the most important part of your email. If it doesn't get opened, it doesn't get seen. Make it catchy, but not Spammy. Why would YOU open an email? 7) Don't forget the landing page. This is where you'll send all those clicks. DO NOT send them to your home page. Landing pages should be similar in tone and offer to the email, but it will have a small form to capture your visitor's information. You've almost got them now! The wording should be urgent. See my tips on landing page design here. Given the fact that you have 3 or 4 seconds to grab your viewer's interest, don't skimp on the design. In addition to following the above guidelines, it should be interesting, exciting, and clean, and should direct the viewer to read the message in a specific order. A high-quality, professionally designed email will inspire trust much faster than words can, much like a professionally designed blog;) Send me your e-blast and I'll critique it for you!

About the Author

Michael founded Metropolis creative in 1999. Michael has taught print and web design courses at Northeastern University and Bentley College. Speaking engagements include The Boston Chamber of Commerce and the Mass Health Data Consortium. Michael holds a BFA in Graphic Design from Rochester Institute of Technology and has won numerous design awards. When not at work, Michael enjoys sketching, brewing beer, and gardening. Read his blog here.

The Looking Glass Wars The Looking Glass Wars
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Description

The Myth: Alice was an ordinary girl who stepped through the looking glass and entered a fairy-tale world invented by Lewis Carroll in his famous storybook. The Truth: Wonderland is real. Alyss Heart is the heir to the throne, until her murderous aunt Redd steals the crown and kills Alyss’ parents...

Reviews

An absolutely brilliant celebration of the power of imagination

by Mason Mule from on 2005-09-19
Frank Beddor's "The Looking Glass Wars" grabbed me in the first 20 pages, then never let me go. The premise is genius: What if Lewis Carroll (né Charles Dodgson) didn't actually create the story of "Alice in Wonderland", but was actually told the story by his muse (the real-life Alice Lidell), to whom these events all actually happened -- but he got the story wrong -- and here, at last, is the real tale. The way Beddor weaves his tale into the actual history of the writing of the book is nothing short of wonderful. His version of the origins of such classic characters as the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat are ingenious and ring with psychological truth. It's a classic hero's journey about Alyss, a little girl who is destined to be the Queen of Wonderland, but who most importantly has the most powerful imagination in the world; anything she can imagine is made real. When an evil Queen murders her parents, she is forced to flee to safety in our world, and once here, no one believes her tales of Wonderland. Lewis Carroll breaks her heart by seeming to believe her, but then turns the story of her life into a nonsensical mish-mash when we writes his book, killing her spirit and her belief in her own dreams in the book's most heartbreaking scene. Then, as many children do when they become adults, she shuns her imagination - she loses her power to make her dreams a reality - and becomes like everyone else - until a loyal friend from Wonderland finds her and reminds her who she is, and that her potential is greater than she could ever imagine. It's a very touching allegory to what happens to most people as they grow up and lose faith in their ability to believe in the dreams they once had for their lives. Beddor has created a world so vivid and rich it rivals the Star Wars universe in its breadth and complexity. I could not wait to see where this story was going from one moment to the next, and it continually surprised me, in its story, its imagination -- and foremost, in how emotional it was. It's ultimately a story about the power of holding onto your imagination and believing in your dreams, which the author has clearly done. But it's also just a great story, which is a rare thing to find these days. This is one of those rare pieces that had me thinking, "I wish I'd thought of that." Highly recommended.


Excellent

by Amy from on 2005-12-06
This alternate version of the classic story of "Alice in Wonderland" is a captivating read. Rather than the children's story we are all familiar with, it tells a story of a violent civil war in Wonderland. In Beddor's version of the story the Cheshire cat is an assassin, the hatter is the queen's bodyguard and looking glasses are a method of travel.


Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass
Sale Price: $7.94
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Description

"And what is the use of a book," thought Alice, "without pictures or conversations?" Taking to heart his charming, insatiably curious heroine's words, Lewis Carroll worked many long hours (days, months...

Reviews

"Curiouser and curiouser!"

by Monika from Davis, California on 2004-10-27
My first exposure to Lewis Carroll's classic children's story was through the 1951 Disney film adaptation "Alice in Wonderland," which I watched repeatedly as a child. The creative quality of the story never failed to fascinate me, and I kept going back despite my deep-rooted terror of the frightful Queen of Hearts, who always gave me nightmares! However, it was not until recently, as an adult, that I ever picked up the book/s upon which that film was based. In some ways I wish I had read it when I was younger, as the book certainly makes a great deal more sense than the movie does (as much sense as a story of this sort can, anyhow), but thankfully this book is unique in that it is just as enjoyable for adults as for children. The story is actually spread across two books, here contained in a single volume. "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" was first published in 1865 and relates the events that take place after young Alice falls asleep during her lessons and dreams of following a white rabbit down a rabbit hole. Alice encounters all manner of strange creatures in her dream, and finds herself in all sorts of curious predicaments where common sense fails and the nonsensical comes to be expected. There is no central, concrete storyline, but rather Alice moves rapidly from one bizarre situation to the next before waking once more and relating the whole adventure to her sister. The second of the two books, "Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There," appeared in 1871 and is very similar in nature to the first, though having a slightly different plot. Here Alice steps through an ordinary looking-glass one day, only to find herself in a world where, if you wish to get anywhere, you must walk in the opposite direction! Walking toward your desired destination only gets you further and further away. Also, interestingly, the land which Alice has entered is essentially a giant chessboard, and she must move through the different squares to reach the other side if she wishes to become a queen (which she does). The characters Carroll created in these two stories are some of the most strikingly unique and unforgettable in the world of literature. Alice herself, based largely on Alice Liddell, a real-life child of whom Carroll was very fond, is a wonderful heroine that you can't help admiring. Throughout all of her backwards and upside-down adventures, she remains ever sensible and analytical, always trying to reason her way out of the most unreasonable situations. Other characters a reader won't soon forget include the White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, the Dormouse, the Cheshire Cat, Bill the Lizard, the Caterpillar, the Duchess and her peppery cook, the aforementioned Queen of Hearts, the Mock Turtle, the Gryphon, the Red and White Queens, the talking flowers, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the Sheep, Humpty Dumpty, and the Red and White Knights. Carroll also created many fascinating new creatures in his stories, including bread-and-butterflies, rocking-horseflies, "slithy toves," "mome raths" and more. What I find most intriguing, as an adult reader of these books, is Carroll's brilliant use of wordplay and symbolism throughout the stories. Nearly everything has some sort of double meaning. There are hidden messags and subtle witticisms on every page. Carroll also includes several parodies of what were well-known songs and rhymes in England at the time. Young children will love the books for their fantastic qualities and imaginative inspiration, but most readers will not pick up on the many puns and jokes until they are a little older, so these stories really do have something to offer to anyone, no matter what age. I'd highly recommend the book to any reader - and be sure to get an edition that includes the original illustrations. This review refers to the 2004 Barnes & Noble Classics printing, with introduction and notes by Tan Lin.


"Curiouser and curiouser!"

by Monika from Davis, California on 2004-10-27
My first exposure to Lewis Carroll's classic children's story was through the 1951 Disney film adaptation "Alice in Wonderland," which I watched repeatedly as a child. The creative quality of the story never failed to fascinate me, and I kept going back despite my deep-rooted terror of the frightful Queen of Hearts, who always gave me nightmares! However, it was not until recently, as an adult, that I ever picked up the book/s upon which that film was based. In some ways I wish I had read it when I was younger, as the book certainly makes a great deal more sense than the movie does (as much sense as a story of this sort can, anyhow), but thankfully this book is unique in that it is just as enjoyable for adults as for children. The story is actually spread across two books, here contained in a single volume. "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" was first published in 1865 and relates the events that take place after young Alice falls asleep during her lessons and dreams of following a white rabbit down a rabbit hole. Alice encounters all manner of strange creatures in her dream, and finds herself in all sorts of curious predicaments where common sense fails and the nonsensical comes to be expected. There is no central, concrete storyline, but rather Alice moves rapidly from one bizarre situation to the next before waking once more and relating the whole adventure to her sister. The second of the two books, "Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There," appeared in 1871 and is very similar in nature to the first, though having a slightly different plot. Here Alice steps through an ordinary looking-glass one day, only to find herself in a world where, if you wish to get anywhere, you must walk in the opposite direction! Walking toward your desired destination only gets you further and further away. Also, interestingly, the land which Alice has entered is essentially a giant chessboard, and she must move through the different squares to reach the other side if she wishes to become a queen (which she does). The characters Carroll created in these two stories are some of the most strikingly unique and unforgettable in the world of literature. Alice herself, based largely on Alice Liddell, a real-life child of whom Carroll was very fond, is a wonderful heroine that you can't help admiring. Throughout all of her backwards and upside-down adventures, she remains ever sensible and analytical, always trying to reason her way out of the most unreasonable situations. Other characters a reader won't soon forget include the White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, the Dormouse, the Cheshire Cat, Bill the Lizard, the Caterpillar, the Duchess and her peppery cook, the aforementioned Queen of Hearts, the Mock Turtle, the Gryphon, the Red and White Queens, the talking flowers, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the Sheep, Humpty Dumpty, and the Red and White Knights. Carroll also created many fascinating new creatures in his stories, including bread-and-butterflies, rocking-horseflies, "slithy toves," "mome raths" and more. What I find most intriguing, as an adult reader of these books, is Carroll's brilliant use of wordplay and symbolism throughout the stories. Nearly everything has some sort of double meaning. There are hidden messags and subtle witticisms on every page. Carroll also includes several parodies of what were well-known songs and rhymes in England at the time. Young children will love the books for their fantastic qualities and imaginative inspiration, but most readers will not pick up on the many puns and jokes until they are a little older, so these stories really do have something to offer to anyone, no matter what age. This particular edition (2004 Barnes & Noble Classics printing, with introduction and notes by Tan Lin) also contains several extra "goodies" in addition to the text of the two books. There is a brief biography of Lewis Carroll, a timeline of his life and career, a fascinating and insightful introduction (well worth the read!), information on various film adaptations, a short story by Carroll - "What the Tortoise said to Achilles," commentary on the text by various individuals and publications, and a set of questions designed to aid the reader's thought and analysis of the text. The book also contains all of the original illustrations, which are indispenable to a full enjoyment of the story. Highly recommended to any reader.


Through the Looking Glass: Observations in the Early Childhood Classroom (3rd Edition) Through the Looking Glass: Observations in the Early Childhood Classroom (3rd Edition)
List Price: $65.33
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Description

Taking a strong developmental focus, this book ensures that teachers understand the close relationship between observing, understanding what has been observed, and improving the educational curriculum and environment...

Reviews

bad printing

by L. Noel from Folsom, CA on 2009-10-26
I ordered this book as a required text for my college class. When I went to read it, it looked as though it had been printed on a copy machine with the charts and photos barely recognizable. I realize this is not Amazon's fault and contacted the publisher as Amazon suggested. Thay were totally unresponsive. The content may be good but you won't know if the printing is until you get it. One of the pitfalls ofordering online...


Extremely poor quality!!!

by Jessica Goette from Orange County, CA USA on 2010-02-01
I am appalled at the quality of this book!!! It looks as if its composed of copies from the original text then made into a book?? This is required reading for a course I am taking so I have no choice but to keep the book. I'm sure its filled with interesting and useful information but WOW! I am shocked at how terrible the text and pictures turned out- no color and so grainy and blurred that you can't even tell what most of the pictures are of. Also, the paper quality is trash. I know this has nothing to do with amazon but I will be filing a complaint with the publishers. I Think I spent a little over $70 for this book....what a disappointment!


Looking Glass Looking Glass
List Price: $14.95
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Description

Looking Glass is set in the not too distant future, in a gritty, unrefined, shattered North America, torn apart by civil war and terrorism. Hackers and IT security technicians fight a different kind of war in cyberspace, the global network we know today as the Internet...

Reviews

Excellent Book

by T. Miller from Silicon Valley, CA on 2007-07-04
I have been disappointed by a number of new authors who have clearly used some sort of formula to write their book. This book is not like that - it has its own style. It's absorbing reading: it draws you in effortlessly. Details appear where needed, and not as a "scene setting" first chapter. I have reread it twice now, and it gains more depth with each reading. It's going to be really hard to wait for James' next book! I highly recommend this book.


Must read cyberpunk

by Thomas Dye from Florida, USA on 2007-07-02
James, R. Strickland and Scott Humphries have just been added to my `must read list'. Apparently this book is from a startup publisher called "Flying Pen Press". I rather like their tagline of "Giving flight to great books." I went through their web site and found that their intent is to only publish the best of the best, so if it says 'flying pen press' it has been vetted by multiple editors and found not just print worthy, but damn good. (and it WAS!) I read it in three days flat! Great book that I could not put down. This is an excellent first publication from this press. I will certainly buy the next few books that they publish, in the hope that they are even remotely as good as this one. I found this book to be fast paced action throughout in the cyberpunk genre' and loved it. An absolutely wonderful future look at where our technology is going and what eventually will happen when the line between technology and our brains blurs. It took me a bit to realize that the lead character was a wheelchair bound paraplegic! The author gives us snippets and bits of background to help develop his world as he tells the story, rather than the huge information dump up front of which I am familiar. (And which I detest!) I gather this is also James Strickland's first novel; and that too is hard to believe. This would be a great novel from someone who is well established in the field. I sincerely hope that these two people have more stuff in the pipe for me soon. This is a very well-told story with plenty of action and good character interactions as well. The back and forth play between the online virtual world and the real world I found to be quite entertaining, and while I did have an inkling of what the finale was going to be by about halfway through the book, I was not at all disappointed in how it turned out and how the author brought it to a climax. This book is easily worth reading more than once, (and I like to read a lot!) My only pause in thought through out the book was the 6 by 9 format. How are you going to get shelf space with something that is slightly larger than the normal 'pocket book' of the mass media addition? Great read though; I am absolutely sure you're going to find this book fun.


ArchEnemy: The Looking Glass Wars ArchEnemy: The Looking Glass Wars
List Price: $17.99
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Description

Discover the fate of Wonderland- and imagination itself- in this riveting conclusion to the New York Times bestselling trilogy. The Heart Crystal’s power has been depleted, and Imagination along with it...

Reviews

Fans will not be disappointed in this third installment

by Teenreads.com from New York, NY on 2009-10-26
At the end of SEEING REDD, Frank Beddor's second book in The Looking Glass Wars trilogy, Wonderland was in disarray. The power of the Heart Crystal had been contained and imagination was seemingly lost. Queen Alyss and her meddling aunt, Redd Heart, were left powerless and forlorn. Only one person looked to capitalize from the confusion and hysteria the citizens of Wonderland were experiencing: King Arch. Not content with sitting idle in the neighboring Borderland, King Arch leads an all-out assault on the capital of Wonderland, while Alyss and Redd remain powerless without the use of their imaginations. He overtakes the palace and starts to construct a plan that can only end in disaster and leave him as the last royalty standing. Along with her host of deadly assassins and without the use of imagination, Redd seeks to return to her origins. Still as bitter, spiteful and evil-hearted as ever, she would like nothing more than to regain her rightful place as Queen from Alyss. King Arch, however, poses a bigger threat at the moment, and Redd is starting to feel that familiar energy of imagination seep back into her. Queen Alyss recognizes that, with or without imagination, a queen still needs to take care of her people. Alyss cares deeply for the inhabitants of Wonderland, so when she's forced on the run, her only concern is to overthrow King Arch and restore peace to her beloved country. It doesn't help that her thoughts are preoccupied with her bodyguard, Dodge, and their ever-complicated relationship. Does he love her? Does she love him? If only imagination could fix things already. And let's not forget the caterpillar oracles. They may know the desires and future of those in Wonderland, but they always seem to have an ulterior motive of their own. It may indeed be that the fat oracles care only for tarty tarts (and lots of them), but they keep mentioning the safety of Everqueen. Who is Everqueen? As the last book in The Looking Glass Wars trilogy, the stakes are as high as ever. Lives will be lost, relationships will be severed, and old enemies will unexpectedly unite in a climactic battle that is beyond imagination. Frank Beddor's re-imagination of ALICE IN WONDERLAND has succeeded on so many levels. The introduction of The Cat and Hatter Madigan as assassins was enough by itself to take the storyline to a whole new level. Once heavily-armed card soldiers, epic battle scenes, and more imagination than your standard daydream were added to the mix, Beddor's tale transcended the level of fun children's story. Fans of THE LOOKING GLASS WARS and SEEING REDD will not be disappointed in this third installment. If anything, Beddor ups the ante and dives even deeper into the characters by offering rare insights into their psyche. And action fans, don't fret: there are more knives, guns, ammunition and bombs than you can shake a jabberwocky at. On a final note, make sure you take time to visit the official website of the series, which contains information on the three books, book trailers, music, art, games, and information on the two graphic novels that accompany this wonderful series. --- Reviewed by Benjamin Boche


An amazing book!

by M. Mansfield from NJ, USA on 2009-12-02
I'm not very good at book reviews - I think it stems from the fact I was never good at book reports as a kid, either. But this book is absolutely amazing. It's the final volume of a wondrous trilogy that poses this question: What if Alice in Wonderland was real, and Lewis Carroll (AKA Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) got it very, very wrong. Political plots, vengeful aunts, a tiny touch of romance, and a LOT of action and adventure all mixed up with colorful, hookah-smoking caterpillars addicted to tarty-tarts. It's all in here, and the final book in the trilogy simply completes a tale that kept me locked into my seat for hours on end. Highly recommended to anyone that likes fantasy, adventure and a little hint of steampunk.



Looking For Any Real looking Cinderella Glass Slippers?

I am a huge Cinderella fan and i have alway wanted this for my wedding which is coming up this June now coming up. And it would be so cool if someone would help me in a hunt for "Real looking" glass slippers i would really like it if they had at least a little glass but if that really does not ever happen then i could find a way to coup with acrylic ones.
Thank you sooo soo so much for any help

http://partywiththis.com/product.php?productid=869

http://www.costumzee.com/tag/cinderella+glass+slippers/

Looking Glass - The Birthday Massacre

Hans Wilhelm

  • Posted by admin on July 29, 2009 at 7:18 am