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Ken Brown

    Ce duo d'auteurs partage non seulement un long mariage, mais aussi une passion pour la création. Leur écriture reflète un lien profond et la joie d'explorer le monde à travers les mots. Ensemble, ils créent des œuvres qui approfondissent leur compréhension mutuelle et offrent aux lecteurs une perspective unique sur des expériences partagées.

    Collected Poems
    KB's Jamaican and Caribbean Recipes Vol 1
    The Scarecrow's Hat
    What's the Time, Grandma Wolf?
    One Putt
    Folio Benjamin - 92: Le lion des hautes herbes
    • Le jour vient de se lever sur la savane africaine. Un lionceau attend, seul, le retour de sa mère partie chasser. Le soleil monte dans le ciel, les chacals rôdent alentour ... Qui protégera le lionceau de ses ennemis affamés?

      Folio Benjamin - 92: Le lion des hautes herbes
    • One Putt

      • 176pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      4,3(18)Évaluer

      Achieve perfect putting with golf's best-loved analyst and commentator, and with a foreword by the late, great Seve.

      One Putt
    • There's a wolf in the woods and everyone says: "She's big and she's bad, she's old and she's hairy. Best leave her alone, she's mean and she's SCARY!" When the little animals hear that a big, bad wolf lives in their forest, they decide to get a closer look. Squirrel, Crow, Badger, and their friends sneak up on Grandma Wolf's house, where they find her fast asleep. Brave Piglet shouts, "What's the time, Grandma Wolf?" and the fun begins. All the animals take a turn asking the question, creeping closer and closer. As the excitement mounts, children will delight in discovering the surprise Grandma Wolf has in store for the curious animals. Author-illustrator Ken Brown's vivid watercolor illustrations perfectly complement this engaging and unexpected story. What's the Time, Grandma Wolf? is also based on a popular classic game. Readers can look in the back for the rules.

      What's the Time, Grandma Wolf?
    • The Scarecrow's Hat

      • 32pages
      • 2 heures de lecture
      4,1(356)Évaluer

      The story features a clever chicken who seeks to obtain Scarecrow's coveted straw hat by enlisting the help of her farm friends. Although she lacks a walking stick to trade, she knows who can help. Ken Brown's vivid watercolors complement the inventive plot, emphasizing themes of friendship, bartering, and problem-solving. This award-winning tale is perfect for fall read-alouds, celebrating the spirit of cooperation and resourcefulness in a delightful circular narrative.

      The Scarecrow's Hat
    • Ice

      A bridge between past and present

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Set in Gloucester in 2017, the story follows new language teacher Julie as she joins a science group led by Peter. A casual remark triggers a childhood memory of a dream filled with sorrow and loss, prompting her to reflect on the deeper meanings of her experiences. As the group delves into parascience and the mysteries of the undiscovered world, Julie begins to question whether her recollections might hold greater significance than mere imagination.

      Ice
    • Mind Process and Formulas

      Principles, Techniques, Formulas, and Processes for Success

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Empowering the brain and mind is central to unlocking personal motivation and inspiration. This book explores techniques to enhance mental capabilities, enabling readers to identify and seize opportunities for success and happiness. By focusing on self-improvement, it guides individuals toward a more fulfilling life.

      Mind Process and Formulas
    • U-Boat Assault on America

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      An important and original examination of the U-boat war in American waters

      U-Boat Assault on America
    • Near the beginning of the Joban Dialogues, Job's friend Eliphaz is attributed a remarkably subversive vision (Job 4:12-21). Laced with images of divine judgment and deception, this vision undermines the very foundation of the friends' theology, and closely conforms to Job's. In particular, the vision's distinctive corporeal imagery and its conclusion that anyone can suddenly perish reflect Job's characteristic style, and form the basis for his accusations of divine injustice. In this study, Ken Brown argues that the tensions between the vision's present attribution to Eliphaz and its role in the dialogue run much deeper than is generally perceived, and can only be resolved through a reassessment of the book's development, both synchronic and diachronic. Brown suggests that the present order of Job 3-4 and 25-27 is neither original nor accidental, but reflects an intentional reframing of the dialogue, and anticipates similar moves across the earliest reception of the book. This work was awarded the Manfred Lautenschlaeger Award for Theological Promise 2016.

      The vision in Job 4 and its role in the book