The How and the Why presents an honest and accurate view of how many adopted teens must feel.
By Cynthia Hand
The How and the Why presents an honest and accurate view of how many adopted teens must feel.
The How and the Why presents an honest and accurate view of how many adopted teens must feel.
In this fantastical Gothic tale, the lives of two sisters raised in a mysterious citadel are changed forever when a stranger enters their world.
A Day So Gray is a colorful story, told entirely through dialogue, about the virtues of slowing down to notice the world around us.
Three teens have more pressing problems than a possible alien apocalypse in Farah Naz Rishi’s dynamic debut.
Unpretentious and charming, Apple Cake follows a little girl as she and her pup tromp through the fields to gather the ingredients to make apple cake.
Rich with smells and sounds, Fry Bread radiates with Native American pride, the sharing of traditions and the love of family.
Fans of books featuring long lineages of magical women, doomed romances and quests to master supernatural powers will find much to enjoy in Winterwood.
Five teens are swept up in a quest to find the final resting place of a mythical Welsh king in this stellar series opener.
Ralph S. Mouse looks out of his mouse-hole in the Mountain View Inn and spies a little red motorcycle that’s just his size.
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