The second volume in the classic series, hundreds of additional pidgin words.
· 2017
A determined child goes the extra mile to try to cheer the lonely half moon Have you ever looked up at the half-moon hiding in the night sky and thought it looked just the littlest bit lonely without its other half? Imagine . . . having no one to glow with no one to play with no one to share how much you like puppies and big, fuzzy bears. If you’re like this determined young child, you might stay up every night to keep the moon company. Maybe if you share your treats and toys and stories, you’ll cheer him up. But the moon is very shy, so it might take some time. Still, if you’re very very patient, you just might make a new friend.
· 2018
When the aliens began attacking every night, the Council reunited nations and became the defender of humanity. But there are some who say the Council is just as much of a problem as the aliens. For example, a young woman who's learned the hard way that anyone who gets in the way of the Council disappears forever. Or a girl who's fleeing an accident she'd be blamed for, who makes a discovery the Council would kill her for. Then there's Gillian Roth--feared by everyone who knows she exists. Gillian has a lot of secrets. Secrets about the Council, secrets about herself, secrets about her family. Sometimes it's nearly impossible to keep all of these secrets at the same time. When some of the secrets end up endangering the people she loves, she and her family have to run for their lives. In the process, they become entangled in the biggest secret in the world, a secret that changes everything. Gillian isn't going to be happy when she finds out what it is. GILLIAN'S EYE is a semi-dystopian novel set in an alternate present where things have gone even less well than they have here. It contains lesbians, psi abilities, politics, mad science, angry activism, unpleasant deaths, love, motherhood, televangelists, and nine-foot-tall insectoid aliens. And secrets.
This book differs from other books on the topic of cooperative learning because its central focus is on group dialogue.
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· 1996
Writers and artists struggle with god, love, death and the things that matter.