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Review Date: 11/1/2005
Helpful Score: 1
Great basic Ideas on activities to do with your kids. Has alot of parenting advice.
Review Date: 2/28/2006
good ideas for a school teacher.
Review Date: 11/13/2005
great for Quicky Bedtime stories.
Review Date: 11/16/2006
Helpful Score: 2
great book, full of ideas. I like that it is sorted by seasons.
Review Date: 2/4/2006
this book is fantastic. I have it and it will never leave my Keeper pile. It is full of arts and crafts ideas. Perfect for homeschooling.
99 Ways to Get Kids to Love Writing : And 10 Easy Tips for Teaching Them Grammar
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Book Type: Paperback
1
Author:
Book Type: Paperback
1
Review Date: 7/29/2006
FAntastic Book!!! A must for every Homeschooling PArent. DEfinitely On my Keeper Shelf. The Pages that HAve the 10 ways to teach your kid Grammar are for me worth their weight in Gold.
Review Date: 10/27/2005
liked the way that this easy reader uses both pictures and words to encourage reading.
Review Date: 4/18/2006
great for homeschoolers. covers self and others, schools today and long ago,families and neighborhoods, towns today and long ago,native americans, citizenship, and our country.
Review Date: 12/29/2005
Helpful Score: 1
perfect travel Size book.Great for resteraunts or car.
Review Date: 9/16/2005
I love these books as do my Kids. they are great fun and highly educational.inly letting it go because it is a double in my personal kids collection. Great for homeschooling or any educational setting.
Review Date: 1/18/2006
Great book. Fantastic Pictures.
Review Date: 11/16/2006
fantastic pictures and exotic animals make this a winner
Review Date: 11/13/2005
Another Story of the family in the Amityville House. Horror.
Review Date: 11/13/2005
Awaking from a mind-frozen state, Andas Kastor must discover if he is the rightful human Emperor of Inyanga or an evil android double.
Review Date: 9/14/2005
From Publishers Weekly
Fighting supernatural evil is taxing work, and Brooks's third novel of humanity's stand against the demons of the Void shows hints of battle fatigue. Fifteen years have passed since the events chronicled in Running with the Demon (1997), but neither Knight of the Word John Ross nor former Olympic runner Nest Freemark seem much changed by their encounters with predatory devils who incarnate modern social ills: he is still the reluctant hero tasked with preventing the Void's incursion into human affairs, and she remains the righteous heroine suppressing her demon-tainted powers. The plot follows a pattern similar to A Knight of the Word (1998), beginning with Ross's tormenting vision of the future that will occur if he fails to keep a gypsy morphAa shapeshifting bundle of "wild magics" with potential to become a weapon for good or evilAfrom falling into demon hands. Ross seeks Nest's help in Hopewell, Ill., a hometown of Norman Rockwell blissfulness primed for demonic devastation. There the morph changes into a young boy, which makes him vulnerable to the schemes of avuncular fiend Findo Gask and provides Brooks with a focus for exploring the importance of parental responsibility and mother love. This predictable dark fantasy springs a few surprises at its end, but the long parade of characters from the earlier installments gives it the feel of a family reunion one endures out of obligation rather than enthusiasm. Like Nest, this novel keeps pace, but a change of direction is in order for the series. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Fighting supernatural evil is taxing work, and Brooks's third novel of humanity's stand against the demons of the Void shows hints of battle fatigue. Fifteen years have passed since the events chronicled in Running with the Demon (1997), but neither Knight of the Word John Ross nor former Olympic runner Nest Freemark seem much changed by their encounters with predatory devils who incarnate modern social ills: he is still the reluctant hero tasked with preventing the Void's incursion into human affairs, and she remains the righteous heroine suppressing her demon-tainted powers. The plot follows a pattern similar to A Knight of the Word (1998), beginning with Ross's tormenting vision of the future that will occur if he fails to keep a gypsy morphAa shapeshifting bundle of "wild magics" with potential to become a weapon for good or evilAfrom falling into demon hands. Ross seeks Nest's help in Hopewell, Ill., a hometown of Norman Rockwell blissfulness primed for demonic devastation. There the morph changes into a young boy, which makes him vulnerable to the schemes of avuncular fiend Findo Gask and provides Brooks with a focus for exploring the importance of parental responsibility and mother love. This predictable dark fantasy springs a few surprises at its end, but the long parade of characters from the earlier installments gives it the feel of a family reunion one endures out of obligation rather than enthusiasm. Like Nest, this novel keeps pace, but a change of direction is in order for the series. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review Date: 1/31/2007
Cute Short animal Poems
Review Date: 9/29/2005
Covers compound words and Contractions
Review Date: 4/20/2006
this is a neat little board book that has plastic shapes that fit into the pictures. Great for a kinesthetic learner.
Review Date: 1/31/2007
Grat book for shared reading or beginning readers. Fantastic for homeschoolers
Review Date: 10/30/2005
by the same author as Even Cowgirls Get the Blues.
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