Tasha Blue is a beautiful seventeen year old girl who rides her bicycle onto the mesa outside her little New Mexico town almost daily. One day she does not return. The town suspects the worst. In the absence of a body or any other physical evidence, speculation and gossip in the town is directed toward several residents. The sheriff can find no compelling evidence that any of them had anything to do with Tasha's disappearance. Tasha's disappearance leaves many in the town confused and partly empty. Her schoolmates envied her because she was the star of her swimming team. Her teachers admired...
Tasha Blue is a beautiful seventeen year old girl who rides her bicycle onto the mesa outside her little New Mexico town almost daily. One day she doe...
What appears to be the random street killing of Jasper Londsberry leads to the surprising revelation that he left the bulk of his large estate to a beautiful young woman whom he scarcely knew. All this, and a rapidly following chain of criminal and violent events, mystify and disorient Josie Vance, Jasper's lifelong secretary and confidant. As the daily routines of a life spent working for Jasper and his father disintegrate around her, Josie discovers that she did not know Jasper or his family and associates as well as she thought she did. From her insider vantage point of the Londsberry...
What appears to be the random street killing of Jasper Londsberry leads to the surprising revelation that he left the bulk of his large estate to a be...
This is the story of the coming of age of two adventurous rabbits. The story is illustrated with colorful full page illustrations accompanying each page of text. The story is intended to be read aloud to children who cannot read. It is also appropriate for children who have learned to read stories by themselves.
This is the story of the coming of age of two adventurous rabbits. The story is illustrated with colorful full page illustrations accompanying each pa...
It's a lonely thing to be, like Rosa, the best reader in your second grade class. You have to wait while the others make their way through the same simple passage time after time. Worse, the others think you are stuck-up and don't want to play with you. It's probably even worse to be the worst reader in your first grade class like her cousin, Max, so afraid of his inability to handle the strange language that he hears, that he hardly talks at all. It's not easy to be Rosa's father either, loving them both and trying to help them both, at the same time that he must retrain himself to be able...
It's a lonely thing to be, like Rosa, the best reader in your second grade class. You have to wait while the others make their way through the same si...