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From the author of The Many Worlds of Albie Bright comes another cutting-edge cosmic space adventure for anyone who's ever looked up at the stars and wondered about the universe. An exploration of the constellations, an appreciation of the courage of astronauts, and a loving father-son story. Perfect for fans of Scott Kelly's Astrotwins series. How amazing would it be to have a dad who's an astronaut? To see him go on rocket launches, live in zero gravity, and fly through space like a superhero? Jamie Drake knows. His dad is orbiting Earth in the International Space Station. Jamie thinks it's cool, and he's proud of his dad, but he also really misses him. Hanging out at the local observatory one day, Jamie is surprised when he picks up a strange signal on his phone. Could it be aliens? Are they closer to our planet than anyone realizes? With his dad in space, Jamie feels he has no choice but to investigate on his own. But when something goes wrong with his dad's mission, Jamie is reminded that space is a dangerous place. He decides it's time to prove that he's a hero too.
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A short prequel to the Power of Four series. Eighteen years before the events of Run to Earth, the Elementals lived in harmony together in the City of Marwa. But the youngest of the Elementals, Alex Adams, has a secret. One he’s had to keep from his own brother, Christopher, because he knows Chris would never tolerate it. But with Alex soon coming into his full powers, he knows time’s running out to tell Chris the truth before it’s revealed at his coming-of-age ceremony. With the brotherhood of the Elementals already under strain, will Alex’s secret cost them their unity?
In 1970, scandal rocks a small village in the Adirondack Mountains. The wealthy summer community dissolves overnight, and the town falls into a dark, downward spiral. Years later, a beautiful stranger moves to town, awakening the townspeople's long buried guilt and fear. One man has the courage to befriend her. With fatherly devotion, Ben Chapman tries to shield Devon Wells from Glendon Lake's hostility, but she seems oblivious to it. Gradually, Ben becomes aware of the strange split in Devon's mind that causes her to drift between fantasy and reality, the past and present. Missy Carson, two teenagers whose love transcended the boundaries between class lines with tragic results. characters in HEARTSONG, their own matrix of reality. Are past and present, this life and the next, separate realities or echoes of each other? immediately into the fabric of their lives. It's beautifully written, and holds one's interest causing the reader to go just one more chapter. And then another, and another.
This compelling account of collaboration in the genre of ukiyo-e (pictures of the floating world) offers a new approach to understanding the production and reception of print culture in early modern Japan. It provides a corrective to the perception that the ukiyo-e tradition was the product of the creative talents of individual artists, revealing instead the many identities that made and disseminated printed work. Julie Nelson Davis demonstrates by way of examples from the later eighteenth century that this popular genre was the result of an exchange among publishers, designers, writers, carvers, printers, patrons, buyers, and readers. By recasting these works as examples of a network of com...
One decision changes everything in this Sliding Doors meets Anna and the French Kiss novel that explores split realities of romance and family loyalties, “recommended for fans of Sara Zarr, Elizabeth Scott, and Maureen Johnson (School Library Journal).” Caroline is at a crossroads. Her grandmother is sick and, like the rest of her family, Caroline’s been at Gram’s bedside since her stroke. With the pressure building, all Caroline wants to do is escape—both her family and the reality of Gram’s failing health. So when Caroline’s best friend offers to take her to a party one fateful Friday night, she must choose: stay by Gram’s side, or go to the party for a few hours? The conse...