Browse Results

Showing 52,151 through 52,175 of 100,000 results

Borre Learns to Swim

by Saskia Bultman Jeroen Aalbers Stefan Tijs

Borre goes to his first swimming lesson with dad. "It's very important that you learn to swim," dad says. At first, the swimming doesn't go very well. But after a while Borre starts to get the hang of it. "Good job, Borre!" dad cheers from the edge of the pool. But he is so enthusiastic that he slips and...

Borre and the Monster under the Bed

by Saskia Bultman Jeroen Aalbers Stefan Tijs

The big children at school have told Borre that there's a monster under his bed. Mum says this is nonsense. The big children are only trying to frighten him. But when Borre is in bed, he takes a look just in case. "Hello," whispers Borre, "is there a monster down there?" "No, there isn't," squeaks a frightened little voice. "I'm not here, leave me alone!" Could there be a monster down there after all?

Borre and the Penguin

by Saskia Bultman Jeroen Aalbers Stefan Tijs

Borre is in the living room drawing a picture. When he looks outside, he sees something waddling through the garden. A funny-looking bird in a long, black coat. That's got to be a penguin! "What are you doing here?" Borre asks the bird. "Ah, young man," the penguin says. "Perhaps you could help me. You see, I'm going to a party tonight, but I have a nasty stain on my coat." Borre knows what to do: he'll put the coat in mum's washing machine!

Borre and the Submarine

by Saskia Bultman Jeroen Aalbers Stefan Tijs

Borre has been playing in the muddy puddles all day and is covered in mud from head to toe. When he gets home, mum sends him upstairs to take a bath. He doesn't want to, but he has to do as he's told. When Borre is finally in the bath, Captain Jacques Crouton and his submarine suddenly come up out of the water. The Captain asks Borre if he would like to come for a ride with him. Borre would love to!

Borre is The Great Borrini

by Saskia Bultman Jeroen Aalbers Stefan Tijs

Dad has given Borre an old top hat. It is one of those hats magicians use to pull rabbits out of.Borre can't wait to put on his own magic show where he can perform this trick himself. He disguises Fuzz Fuzz as a rabbit and has mum and dad sit down as his audience. But Fuzz Fuzz isn't the only thing that comes out of the hat...

Borreguita and the Coyote

by Verna Aardema Petra Mathers

What's a little lamb to do about a big, oafish coyote that wants to eat her? Why, trick him, of course! "This folk tale from the west of Mexico is energetically told and comfortably packed with many recognizable motifs. Aardema and Mathers are felicitously paired in a tale of trickery rewarded that begs to be read aloud. A glossary to correct Spanish pronunciation is conveniently placed at the beginning of the tale."--(starred)Horn Book.

Borriquitos con chándal: Escritos sobre la educación, la enseñanza y el deporte

by Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio

Una selección de los mejores artículos de Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio sobre la enseñanza. «Es el mejor Cervantes que se ha dado en España».Juan Goytisolo Decía Ferlosio que las cuestiones por las que se interesaba apenas pasaban de «seis o siete», y añadía que, «con el paso de los años y de las recurrencias», algunas acaban abriendo tuberías de comunicación con las otras, por lo que no era raro que esas «seis o siete» cuestiones se fueran «fundiendo y reduciendo». Sin duda, una de ellas es la cuestión de la enseñanza, es decir, la forma en que cabe transmitir el conocimiento, los modos en que éste es adquirido. De esa centralidad ofrecen un testimonio los textos reunidos en el presente volumen, que comprenden un arco temporal de cuatro décadas, las que van de 1972 a 2012.Las ideas fuertes de Ferlosio en lo relativo a la enseñanza parten de su convicción de que «toda educación es constrictiva», por cuanto entraña «un proceso de apropiación social del niño por el medio». En lugar de eso, lo que corresponde más bien es instruir al niño, es decir, brindarle el acceso a unos conocimientos que, «exentos de toda clase de orientaciones prácticas y juicios de valor [...] no pueden ni deben, de ninguna manera, dejarse dirigir por ninguna finalidad educativa». Pues de lo que se trata, o de lo que debería tratarse, al menos en la escuela, es de transmitir conocimientos, y los conocimientos, en sí mismos son radicalmente impersonales. De ahí que lo más consecuente sea que en el proceso de la enseñanza prime el «principio de impersonalidad», principio que debería regir el lugar público en que los conocimientos se imparten y que debería revestir la relación de los alumnos con sus profesores.De uno a otro de los textos aquí compilados, escritos a veces con muchos años de distancia, es fácil apreciar motivos recurrentes, argumentos y observaciones a los que Ferlosio vuelve para connotarlos cada vez de manera distinta, y que terminan por conformar una urdimbre coherente y compacta, que da cuenta de la forma tan lenta y progresiva en que madura sus ideas, imbricándolas unas con otras. La vigencia que mantienen todas las piezas reunidas es indicativa de la profundidad de sus planteamientos, que siguen incidiendo con toda pertinencia en cuestiones de permanente actualidad. Sobre el autor y su obra se ha dicho:«Si se me pidiese un nombre, uno solo, entre los surgidos en la literatura española de posguerra, con categoría suficiente para afrontar la inmortalidad literaria, yo daría, sin vacilar, el de Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio».Miguel Delibes «Gramático anfetamínico, grafómano patológico, plumífero hipotáctico —demasiadas esdrújulas para un hombre tan poco dado al perifollo—, Ferlosio es, en definitiva, lo que se dice un clásico en vida».Ernesto Baltar, Jotdown«Los pecios de Ferlosio son... ferlosianos. Están escritos como si partiera de cero, del vacío... No sé si alguna vez fueran restos del naufragio, pero ya tienen categoría de género en sí mismos».Gonzalo Hidalgo Bayal «Entre los autores de mi generación o de las anteriores, sólo me interesa Ferlosio, que es el mejor escritor español».Juan Benet«Si la vida intelectual española ha tenido un clérigo auténtico, sin duda ha sido el maestro Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio».Jordi Amat, La Vanguardia

Borrow My Heart

by Kasie West

When a girl overhears a guy getting verbally destroyed by his friends for being catfished, she jumps in to save the day—and pretends to be his online crush. A young adult romance from the critically acclaimed author of Places We've Never Been.Wren is used to being called a control freak. She doesn&’t care; sticking to the list of rules she created for herself helps her navigate life. But when a cute guy named Asher walks through the door of her neighborhood coffee shop, the rulebook goes out the window.Asher is cute, charming . . . and being catfished by his online crush. So Wren makes an uncharacteristically impulsive decision—she pretends to be the girl he's waiting for to save him from embarrassment. Suddenly she&’s fake-dating a boy she knows nothing about. And it&’s . . . amazing.It's not long before Asher has her breaking even more of her own rules. But will he forgive her when he finds out she's not who she says she is? Wren's not so sure. . . . After all, rules exist for a reason.

Borrow Trouble

by Victor Mcglothin Mary Monroe

"A perfect blend of two amazing stories by two talented authors." --Books2Mention"Monroe and McGlothin share engaging tales of how one night changed the course of some unsuspecting individuals."--The RAWSISTAZ ReviewersA woman lets herself go and finally does something wrong. Down on his luck, a man tries to do something right. For both, the consequences are as surprising as they are rewarding. . ."Nightmare in Paradise" by Mary MonroeDutiful wife and devoted friend, Renee Webb always does the right thing. So when she gets a chance to let her hair down on a Caribbean vacation, she's more than ready to let go. But all is not as it seems, and Renee finds out that doing the wrong thing might cost her more than she ever imagined. . ."Bad Luck Shadow"by Victor McGlothinOn the run from some of Harlem's baddest hitmen, Baltimore Floyd's luck takes a turn for the worse after he murders a big-time businessman and gets thrown off a train in Kansas City. Now he's got only one shot to get out alive--the biggest heist in KC's history. Lucky for him, someone's got his back, and is willing to use every trick to save Baltimore from going down for good. . .

Borrow-A-Bridesmaid

by Anne Wagener

When life hands you lemons, make lemonade--or, in Piper Brody's case, make a Craigslist ad offering yourself up as a hired bridesmaid! A hilarious, touching, coming-of-age novel from debut author Anne Wagener.Piper is a recent college grad who decides to sell her body on Craigslist--as a hired bridesmaid. Her airport bookseller job just isn't bringing home the turkey bacon, and no one's going to pay her to analyze Milton's poetry. Turns out, having an English literature degree from an upstanding university isn't all it's cracked up to be. Piper's Craigslist endeavor soon picks up steam, netting her clients such as Southern peach Stacey, whose interracial marriage causes a family feud, and Alex, a bride-to-be who's so type A she's type A-plus. Between fighting off matching T-shirt-wearing teams of "bustle bitches" at gown sales and learning more about fondant than the Cake Boss, Piper falls for Charlie Bell, the brother of a client. A fellow aspiring writer, Charlie's the only person recently who's encouraged Piper to follow her dreams. Not to mention, he's pretty darn cute. But when Charlie turns out to be the groom in one of her gigs--and set to marry the craziest bridezilla of them all--Piper must band together with her newfound friends and stop Charlie from making the biggest mistake of his life.

Borrowed Angel

by Heather Graham

A riveting novel of desire, murder, and a race for survival in the storm-drenched Everglades by the New York Times–bestselling “queen of romantic suspense” (RT Book Reviews).It was supposed to be a great gig: a high-profile photo shoot in the Florida Everglades, with Ashley Dane modeling a set of famous emeralds. Instead, Ashley finds herself fleeing through the snake-filled swamp after witnessing a murder. Writer Eric Hawk is also on the run—he’s being hunted by a man from his past. Ashley doesn’t completely trust Eric, but she has no one else to turn to . . . and she finds him irresistible. Unrelenting threats keep them on the move through the dangerous terrain, and although they come from different worlds, their deepening feelings for each other make them believe they might have a future together . . . if they make it out alive.“Graham stands at the top of the romantic suspense category.” —Publishers Weekly“There are good reasons for Graham’s steady standing as a bestselling author.” —Booklist

Borrowed Bachelor

by Barbara Hannay

Maddy Delancy needed a man who'd pretend to be her boyfriend, and borrowing the gorgeous bachelor next door seemed the perfect solution. She wasn't looking for romance, while sexy Australian Rick Lawson was a highflier-married to his job and determined to stay single... Yet Rick played the part of attentive lover so convincingly that even Maddy's mind turned toward marriage. Then Maddy was asked to provide the flowers for a wedding at his family's beautiful Outback homestead. Had the ultimate bachelor decided to take a bride?

Borrowed Body

by Mason Valerie John

"I could have been born and raised in Africa. But my Spirit was in too much of a rush to be reincarnated...At six weeks I was chucked out into the new year of 1965 which wasn't prepared to welcome on African baby, abandoned on a harsh English winter's day." So begins Pauline's spirited and moving story of her childhood and teenage years in and out of foster homes and back and forth to Dr. Barnardo's Village in Essex. Her Barnardo's family was ruled by an unlikely trio—Aunty Claire, a fervent Christian; her laconic husband, the German Jewish Uncle Boris; and Aunty Morag, the cook. And, of course, other kids orphaned or abandoned like Pauline. Woven into this account are Pauline's angel and spirit companions—Sparky, Annabel and Snake— who by turns help and hinder her to survive in the "real world." The Barnardo's good times are shattered by the sudden visits of her mother, whom she calls Wunmi and with whom she goes to live in a London high-rise. Wunmi's method of refashioning Pauline into a dutiful African child is literally to knock the English out of her. Pauline tries other ways to survive—sniffing glue and shoplifting—until the harsh realities of detention centres and juvenile courts make Pauline think again...

Borrowed Boy

by Gene Gant

What would you do if you found out your whole life was a lie? That’s what happens to Zavier Beckham. One moment, he’s a happy teen with a loving family and a nerdy best friend named Cole. The next, there’s an FBI agent telling Zavier he was kidnapped as a baby and sold to an adoption agency—that the parents he’s always known aren’t his parents. Not even his name is his own. Now Zavier may be forced to deal with a move from his home in Memphis to Chicago, where he would be living with strangers, including a new brother who already resents him. And there is also Brendan, an older boy who stirs confusing feelings in Zavier. There’s more to Brendan than meets the eye, but will he help Zavier adjust to his new situation or add more stress to all the upheaval in Zavier’s life?

Borrowed Children

by George Ella Lyon

Having been forced to act as mother and housekeeper during Mama's illness, Amanda has a holiday in Memphis, far removed from her family, and finds her world expanding even as she grows to understand and appreciate her background.

Borrowed Crime: A Bookmobile Cat Mystery

by Laurie Cass

Librarian Minnie Hamilton spreads the joy of reading throughout Chilson, Michigan, with her bookmobile, but she doesn’t ride alone. Her rescue cat, Eddie, and a group of volunteers are always on board to deliver cheer—until one of her helpers gets checked out for good...When Minnie loses a grant that was supposed to keep the bookmobile running, she’s worried her pet project could come to its final page. But she’s determined to keep her patrons—and Eddie’s fans—happy and well read. She just needs her boss, Stephen to see things her way, and make sure he doesn’t see Eddie. The library director doesn’t exactly know about the bookmobile’s furry co-pilot.But when a volunteer dies on the bookmobile’s route, Minnie finds her traveling library in an even more precarious position. Although the death was originally ruled a hunting accident, a growing stack of clues is pointing towards murder. It’s up to Minnie and Eddie to find the killer, and fast—before the best chapter of her life comes to a messy close…

Borrowed Dreams: A Novel (Debbie Macomber Classics)

by Debbie Macomber

Debbie Macomber's poignant novel of moving on and trusting the power of love is available for the first time as an eBook. Carly Grieves is made of strong stuff. Tough and adventurous, she journeys to the wilds of Alaska looking for a new beginning. She finds more than she bargained for in Brand St. Clair, a rugged bush pilot who stirs something primal inside Carly that shocks her with its intensity. But he's also a man with wounds, a widower stuck in the past. Carly desires him deeply, but she can't compete with a dead woman for a place in his heart. From the moment she sasses him, Brand knows there's something special about Carly. She makes him want to love again, to reach for a new kind of happiness. As much pain as he has known, he's ready to make his own fresh start with Carly. But first, the walls she's built have to come down. Now Brand won't give up until he convinces Carly that the biggest risk of her life is actually the safest move she could make: loving him.BONUS: This edition includes excerpts from Debbie Macomber's Last One Home and The Inn at Rose Harbor.

Borrowed Finery: A Memoir

by Paula Fox

An exotic, heartbreaking memoir that should finally earn Paula Fox, a distinguished novelist and children's book writer, the audience she has for decades deserved Paula Fox has long been acclaimed as one of America's most brilliant fiction writers. Borrowed Finery, her first book in nearly a decade, is an astonishing memoir of her highly unusual beginnings. Born in the twenties to nomadic, bohemian parents, Fox is left at birth in a Manhattan orphanage, then cared for by a poor yet cultivated minister in upstate New York. Her parents, however, soon resurface. Her handsome father is a hard-drinking screenwriter who is, for young Paula, "part ally, part betrayer. " Her mother is given to icy bursts of temper that punctuate a deep indifference. How, Fox wonder, is this woman "enough of an organic being to have carried me in her belly"? Never sharing more than a few moments with his daughter, Fox's father allows her to be shunted from New York City, where she lives with her passive Spanish grandmother, to Cuba, where she roams freely on a relative's sugar-cane plantation, to California, where she finds herself cast upon Hollywood's grubby margins. The thread binding these wanderings is the "borrowed finery" of the title-a few pieces of clothing, almost always lent by kind-hearted strangers, that offer Fox a rare glimpse of permanency. Vivid and poetic, Borrowed Finery is an unforgettable book which will swell the legions of Paula Fox's devoted admiriers.

Borrowed Flesh

by Sephera Giron

A woman is killed and cut up like a slaughtered animal, but the worst is yet to come.

Borrowed Heart

by Andrew Grey

Robin, the recipient of a brand-new heart, knows he can’t give it to just anyone…. Robin’s been through his share of upsets recently, from heart transplant surgery to a brutal breakup. But his experiences have taught him life is short, and he’s ready to seize the day and start anew. A job at Euro Pride Tours is just the kind of adventure he’s looking for. He gets to see the world and live a little, but love isn’t on his radar screen. He isn’t sure his heart can endure that again. Johan might’ve disappointed his family by striking out on his own, but when he meets Robin, he has no intention of letting him down. Each man is just what the other needs to feel whole again, and while Johan might not be the man Robin originally thought he was, he’s exactly what the doctor ordered to make Robin’s borrowed heart beat faster. As the tour through Germany progresses, they grow closer, but when Robin’s ex joins the tour, he could bring their blossoming love to a dramatic halt.

Borrowed Hearts: New and Selected Stories

by Rick Demarinis

Traveling salesmen, small-time hustlers, hitchhikers, harried fathers, and sex-obsessed sons: Rick DeMarinis's stories take men at the end of their rope, then give them just enough line for things to get interesting. Style rhetoric drives a burned-out high school teacher to violence in "Wilderness"; answering a Help Wanted ad leads to disastrous results in "Billy Ducks Among the Pharaohs." In charting the downward arc of their character's lives, DeMarinis's smart, self-conscious tales run the gamut from experimental fables to down-to-earth realism. In "Insulation," for example, his protagonist has a genetic predisposition for being struck by lightning; the gently naturalistic "Voice of America," on the other hand, follows a 17-year-old boy who both loves and resents his promiscuous mother and dreams "of waking up as someone else, in a different place, where things were decent." Even those stories that begin as mere narrative exercises soon turn into things greater than the sum of their parts. "Romance: A Prose Villanelle," for example, crosses the preposterous conventions of a romance novel with the strict patterning of the villanelle (the famously difficult poetic form in which two lines are repeated at intervals throughout; think "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night"). The results are odd, hilarious, and curiously apt: "Silence slips into the bloated prose," one repeated passage tells us. "It invades each trumped-up scene.... It is there, smirking, when you begin, there in the middle, showing a wider grin, and it waits for you at the dead end--a surprise ending of dead paper, rustling with the last word." It's difficult for fiction to interrogate itself and engage the reader's sympathies, but DeMarinis pulls it off. In Borrowed Hearts, he shows himself one of the funniest and deadliest American writers at work today: a Flannery O'Connor for the Prozac age.

Borrowed Hearts: New and Selected Stories

by Rick Demarinis

Borrowed Hearts traces the development of Rick DeMarinis's incantatory voice, including newer work as well as stories selected from his three previous, highly acclaimed collections: Under Wheat (1986), the winner of the Drue Heinz Literature Prize for short fiction; The Coming of the Free World, a New York Times Notable Book (1988); and The Voice of America (1991). The title story was included in 1991's The Best Stories of the South, and "Your Story" was played on National Public Radio's Selected Shorts.

Borrowed Identity

by Kasi Blake

APPEARANCES CAN BE DECEIVING...A groggy Kelly Hall didn't understand why her dead husband was standing in front of her, telling her their wedding night that had ended in his grisly "murder" had all been a dream. Was she going insane or was someone trying to kill her? Sinister threats lurked in the melancholy halls of Moore House...and all Kelly could be certain of was that this cold, magnetic man who bore an uncanny resemblance to the Michael Taggert she vividly remembered marrying was suddenly fiercely protective, cloaked in mystery and set off a lightning bolt of desire at the merest touch. As passion and peril spiraled out of control, would Kelly trust her life to the man whose deception could shatter the only love she'd ever known?

Borrowed Light

by Anna Fienberg

A sixteen-year-old feels alienated from her family while struggling with the difficult decisions surrounding her unplanned pregnancy.

Borrowed Light

by Graham Hurley

'There is no one writing better police procedurals today.' Daily TelegraphFour charred bodies. One killer. A race against time...DI Joe Faraday is convalescing after a serious injury - but four deaths in a suspicious fire drag him back to work before he's truly fit. His partner, meanwhile, wants to adopt a child who was badly burned in the hellhole of Gaza. Both privately and professionally, Faraday is under threat.Ex-cop Paul Winter is still drug lord Bazza Mackenzie's trusted lieutenant. But his growing doubts about his new life deepen when Bazza orders him to retrieve a stash of missing cocaine ... whatever the cost.Two investigations: one official, one definitely not. And three very different men who must confront a disaster of someone else's making.Why readers love Graham Hurley:'There is no one writing better police procedurals today.' Daily Telegraph'Well-written and plotted, utterly convincing and really exciting... Excellent' Daily Mail'One of the great talents of British police procedurals... every book he delivers is better than the last' Independent on SundayFans of Ian Rankin, Peter James and Peter Robinson will love Graham Hurley:Faraday and Winter1. Turnstone 2. The Take 3. Angels Passing 4. Deadlight 5. Cut to Black 6. Blood and Honey 7. One Under 8. The Price of Darkness 9. No Lovelier Death 10. Beyond Reach 11. Borrowed Light 12. Happy Days Jimmy Suttle1. Western Approaches 2. Touching Distance 3. Sins of the Father 4. The Order of Things * Each Graham Hurley novel can be read as a standalone or in series order *

Refine Search

Showing 52,151 through 52,175 of 100,000 results