Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Ellis Weiner

    Ellis Weiner
    Attracting Birds and Butterflies
    Starting Seeds
    The big jewish book for jews
    How To Raise A Jewish Dog
    Templeton Twins Make a Scene : Book 2
    How to Prune Trees & Shrubs
    • How to Prune Trees and Shrubs stresses the importance of determining the unique needs of each plant and then developing a plan before pruning it. It helps readers develop the skill and knowledge they need, whether they're motivated gardeners or beginners who simply want to maintain a new landscape with as little effort as possible.

      How to Prune Trees & Shrubs
    • Templeton Twins Make a Scene : Book 2

      • 262pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,1(8)Évaluer

      The second in a series of funny, highly illustrated middle-grade novels about boy-and-girl twins--with a great concept and visual appeal for both boys AND girls, now in paperback.

      Templeton Twins Make a Scene : Book 2
    • You don't have to own a dog and you don't have to be Jewish... A humour title about using guilt, shame and passive aggression to raise your dog that will have you barking with laughter.

      How To Raise A Jewish Dog
    • The big jewish book for jews

      • 239pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,0(30)Évaluer

      A whimsical guide to Judaism that covers such topics as how to serve far too much food, passive-aggression, excessive worrying, and things not to do on the Sabbath.

      The big jewish book for jews
    • Starting Seeds

      • 121pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      4,0(107)Évaluer

      Growing plants from seeds isn't difficult; it just takes a little know-how. This book provides the basic information that you need and teaches you foolproof starting techniques for a variety of vegetables, herbs, and flowers.

      Starting Seeds
    • The Templeton Twins Have an Idea

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,7(1973)Évaluer

      Suppose there were 12-year-old twins, a boy and girl named John and Abigail Templeton. Let's say John was pragmatic and played the drums, and Abigail was theoretical and solved cryptic crosswords. Now suppose their father was a brilliant, if sometime confused, inventor. And suppose that another set of twins—adults—named Dean D. Dean and Dan D. Dean, kidnapped the Templeton twins and their ridiculous dog in order to get their father to turn over one of his genius (sort of) inventions. Yes, kidnapped. Wouldn't it be fun to read about that? Oh please. It would so. Now in paperback, this is just the first in a series perfect for boys and girls who are smart, clever, and funny (just like the twins), and enjoy reading adventurous stories (who doesn't?!). And now, there's more!

      The Templeton Twins Have an Idea
    • AN AFRICAN JOURNEY BOOK TWO

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      This second volume of AN AFRICAN JOURNEY traces former enslaved Africans, along with their heroes, Sista and Breda Anancy (Ananse, Anansi), after Emancipation in the British Caribbean. It depicts their struggle for political and economic liberation from the colonial power ' Britan, and outlines their journey throughout the region in search of work. It also comments on the journeys made to Europe by thousands of men and women who enlisted to fight in the First and Second World Wars. The book also traces the journey of Mrs Brown and her seven young children who set sail from Jamaica to Britain in 1964 to join their father in London.

      AN AFRICAN JOURNEY BOOK TWO
    • An African Journey

      • 260pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      The hero of the Akan people of West Africa and our hero, Anancy, takes us on a journey through time and history. He reveals the heroic achievements of his people, and guides us through the traumas that were inflicted on his motherland by the European Invaders, from the 15th century onwards. Anancy takes us back to December 1492, when the three galleons commanded by Christopher Columbus ran aground on the rocky shoreline of Ayiti (Haiti). The event was to have dire consequences for the inhabitants of the island - the Taino people - and later the African continent...

      An African Journey