Browsing by Title
Now showing items 81917-81936 of 82320
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A World of Paranoia
(2004) -
A World of Stories for Children
(The Bobbs-Merrill Company. Indianapolis and NY, 1947)This 820-page book has a large subtitle to match: The Great Fairy, Folk Tales and Legends of the World from the Earliest Times to the late Nineteenth Century. Pages 27 through 63 are given to fables without illustration ... -
The World of Yesterday Magazine, No. 8, October, 1976
(L. and R. Downey. North Clearwater, FL, 1976)Aesop's Fables, sugar coated pills of wisdom by Jeff Missinne takes up 5-10 in this magazine. It deals with the history of the motion picture cartoon series known as Aesop's Fables. Paul Terry started the series around ... -
The World Over
(Creighton University. Omaha, Nebraska, 2015)Eight years ago, an unknown epidemic swept through the world, turning those infected into ravenous cannibals with no sense of self or others. Following the Waves, the government formed camps to protect the survivors, but ... -
World physical therapist education
(2007) -
World Tales
(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. NY, 1979)Here is an extra copy of this book. A wild array of sixty-five stories and illustrations by various contemporary artists. Ten items mention or bear upon Aesop. They include Don't Count Your Chickens (18), which claims ... -
World Tales
(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. NYNew York, 1979)A wild array of sixty-five stories and illustrations by various contemporary artists. Ten items mention or bear upon Aesop. They include Don't Count Your Chickens (18), which claims that it is eggs which are smashed in ... -
World Tales
(Johnson Reprint Corporation. NY, 1979)See my comments on the original (?) listed under the same date. This edition makes liberal changes with the other, especially in format. It adds, for example, a strong frontispiece picture. -
The World Treasury of Children's Literature.
(Little Brown,. Boston, 1984)Identical in one volume with the two-volume hardback edition. -
The World Treasury of Children's Literature.
(Little Brown,. Boston, 1984)One of the loveliest and most comprehensive kids' books I know. Early in the first volume, eight Aesop's fables are presented and one Russian fable, The Fox and the Crane. The versions are from Jacobs and Daly. The ... -
The World without Us: Romanticism, Environmentalism, and Imagining Nature
(Wiley-Blackwell. 2012) -
The World's Best Fairy Tales
(Reader's Digest Association. Pleasantville, 1967)My first printing of this book is under 1967/77 and my second 1967/83. Here is a ninth printing, apparently of the two volume edition. This copy comes with the second volume. This large collection of stories includes ... -
The World's Best Fairy Tales
(Reader's Digest Association. Pleasantville, N.Y., 1967)My first printing of this book is under 1967/77. Here is a third printing, apparently of the two volume edition. For the second volume, see 1967/90. This large collection of stories includes TMCM on 294, described as ... -
The World's Best Fairy Tales
(Reader's Digest Association. Pleasantville, N.Y., 1967)This large collection of stories includes TMCM on 294, described as an old Scandinavian tale. The Town Mouse gets drunk on Christmas beer, is caught by the cat, and offers to tell a tale to get free. A door slammed shut ... -
The World's Best Short Stories: Anthology and Criticism: Volume IV: Fables and Tales
(Roth Publishing. Great Neck, N.Y.Great Neck, NY, 1991)Here is an anthology of which I had not known. The book contains a large collection of stories and story-types. First comes a section of fables and tales from oral traditions. A brief overview of this section suggests ... -
The World's Favorite Fairy Tales
(Derrydaledistributed by Crown Publishers Inc.,. NYNew York, 1986)Lots of LaFontaine fables on 192-237. Watercolor or acrylic illustrations. Maybe the best illustration in an average lot is for The Reed and the Oak on 230-31. -
The World's Great Stories: Fifty-Five Legends That Live Forever.
(Published by M. Evans and distributed in association with Lippincott, Philadelphia. NYNew York, 1964)The only fable material in this book is Androcles... The Slave Freed by a Lion (140). The surprising things about this story are that (1) it is different from Untermeyer's own Androcles and the Lion in his Legendary Animals ...