Children’s / Teenage social topics: Religious issues / debates
Crossway Books Tell Me the Secrets
Book SynopsisMax Lucado and Ron DiCianni join forces to create a unique and beautiful book of stories and illustrations that explore biblical truths for the entire family. Part of Crossway's award-winning Tell Me children's series. Redesigned.
£13.49
Crossway Books The Song of the King Redesign
Book SynopsisNow redesigned with a new cover, this beautifully illustrated medieval tale by Max Lucado will encourage children to treasure God's truth in their hearts and hold fast to it amid the world's confusing messages.
£11.69
Crossway Books A Hat for Ivan
Book SynopsisThisabridged version of a classic heartwarming tale captures the truth that God has made everyone for a special purpose. Redesigned with a new cover.
£10.79
B&H Publishing Group My Merry Christmas
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£12.99
David C Cook Blue Ribbon Trail Ride
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£10.80
David C Cook Mystery Rider
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£10.32
David C Cook WhistleStop West Beyond the Orphan Train 2
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£10.80
Xlibris Summa The Brave Little Donkey
£16.71
Simon & Schuster The Hanukkah Hop
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewA fresh and festive choice for the Festival of Lights. --SLJ, October 2011
£10.75
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers This Side of Salvation
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£10.79
Pelican Publishing Company The Diary of Asser Levy First Jewish Citizen of
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£10.40
Pelican Publishing Company Mon Cher Bebe A Parents Prayer
£16.99
Guardian Books The Little Donkey
£12.49
Kar-Ben Copies Ltd The Missing Letters A Dreidel Story
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£7.59
Margaret K. McElderry Books Paper Hearts
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£12.59
Simon & Schuster The Christmas Baby
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£8.54
Aladdin Paperbacks The Light of Christmas
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£13.49
Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books The Book Rescuer
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewOne young man seeks out a unique collection of Yiddish books to preserve them and their lost world.Growing up, Aaron Lansky remembered the story of his grandmother's immigration to America. She had just one worn suitcase, filled with books in Yiddish and Sabbath candlesticks—which her brother tossed into the water upon greeting her. It was of the Old World, and she was in the New World. Lansky loved reading but realized that to pursue his interest in Jewish literature he would have to study Yiddish, his grandmother's language. His search for books in Yiddish led to one rabbi about to bury a pile, which led to years of rescuing books from dumpsters and then building a depository for them and for the thousands of subsequent donations. Lansky visited many of the donors and heard their emotional stories. Now a well-established resource in Amherst, Massachusetts, his Yiddish Book Center is digitized, with free downloads, and conducts educational programs. Macy's text beautifully and dramatically tells this story while noting the powerful influence of Yiddish writing in the lives of Jews. Innerst's acrylic and gouache artwork, with the addition of digitized fabric textures, is stunning in its homage to Marc Chagall and its evocation of an Eastern European world that has physically vanished but is alive in these pages of beautifully realized imagery.For lovers of books and libraries. (afterword by Lansky, author's note, illustrator's note, Yiddish glossary, further resources, source notes, photographs) (Picture book/biography. 7-10) -- Kirkus Reviews *STARRED* * July 15, 2019 *This inspired pairing of two top picture book biographers tells the story of Aaron Lansky, an “all-American boy” (a Star Trek poster decorates his bedroom) who in college became convinced that Yiddish books represented the “portable homeland” of the Jewish people. With Yiddish dying out after the Holocaust and little mainstream support (“Yiddish was a language whose time had passed”), Lansky learned the language, then began saving Yiddish books any way he could. He pulled nearly 5,000 out of a dumpster and accepted “one book at a time” from elderly owners (“We didn’t eat much,” one book donor tearfully tells him, “but we always bought a book. It was a necessity of life”). Founded in 1980, Lansky’s Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, Mass., is today home to 1.5 million rescued books and is a hub of Yiddish studies. Innerst (Ruth Bader Ginsburg), who notes in an afterword that his illustrations were inspired by Chagall, contributes dramatic, textural acrylic and gouache images, with sculptural figures, expressionistic settings, and the deep, rich tones of vintage book bindings. Evoking both a lost past and an urgent present, they’re a marvelous complement to the journalistic, propulsive narrative by Macy (Motor Girls). Ages 5–8. (Oct.) -- Publishers Weekly *STARRED* * August 5, 2019 *MACY, Sue. The Book Rescuer: How a Mensch from Massachusetts Saved Yiddish Literature for Generations to Come. illus. by Stacy Innerst. 48p. glossary. S. & S./Paula Wiseman Bks. Oct. 2019. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9781481472203. Gr 1-4–Aaron Lansky could not forget what his grandmother told him as a child. At the age of 16, she immigrated to the United States from Eastern Europe. In his twenties, Lansky decided to find out more about his grandmother’s stories, which set him on a journey to learn how to speak and read Yiddish and to also locate Yiddish books. The result is the Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, MA. Lansky’s story is a fascinating one, filled with book rescues and meeting older people who not only treasure books but what they represent. His disappointments and rewards in pursuing this passion are well portrayed. The narrative is both informative and engaging and includes Yiddish words, many of which have been incorporated into English. All appear in a glossary. An afterword by Lansky himself brings the Center and his work up to date. Illustrations intentionally call to mind the bold line and semi-abstraction of Russian-born artist Marc Chagall. VERDICT A potentially valuable addition to both school and public libraries as well as Jewish schools. Echoing Carole Boston Weatherford’s Schomburg: The Man Who Built a Library, the book’s narrative shows that pursuing interests can lead to meaningful and long-lasting results.–Maria B. Salvadore, formerly at District of Columbia Public Library -- School Library Journal * September 2019 *“Kum aher. Sit down. I want to tell you a story.” With a storyteller’s cadence, Macy (Miss Mary Reporting, rev. 1/16; Trudy’s Big Swim, rev. 7/17) explains how Aaron Lansky came to collect the thousands of books now housed in the Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, Massachusetts. Through an anecdote from Lansky’s family history as well as a brief historical overview of why the number of Yiddish speakers has dwindled, Macy gives context to Lansky’s difficulty in finding Yiddish novels for his college studies. That difficulty led him to collect books first for his own purposes, then for the Center (which he founded) starting in 1980. Stories of how he obtained them—meetings “over tea and cake and lokshn kugl” with older Jews; a late-night dash to a dumpster—lend both human interest and a sense of urgency to the mission. Innerst’s (The Beatles Were Fab (and They Were Funny), rev. 5/13) painterly illustrations (in acrylic and gouache, with fabric textures rendered digitally, and, according to an illustrator’s note, inspired by Marc Chagall), give readers plenty to peruse, with sprinkled Yiddish words and visual references to Jewish history and culture. Detailed back matter also includes notes from Lansky and Macy, a glossary, further resources, and source notes. shoshana flax -- Horn Book * November 1, 2019 *Yiddish was a dying language (it's still not robust) when a young man, Aaron Lansky, decided to save it. Macy begins the story several generations back, with Lansky's grandmother arriving in America: her suitcase was thrown in the ocean by her brother—out with the old, in with the new. Flash-forward to the 1970s, and Aaron is in college, studying Jewish history, and he wants to read books in the common language of European Jews in past centuries, Yiddish. But after the Holocaust and the diaspora of European Jewry, the number of people speaking Yiddish plummeted. Yiddish books were also disappearing, so Lansky decided to make it his mission to rescue them and his ancestors' heritage. Macy's text details how Lansky's pursuit took him out in all kinds of weather, to all kinds of places, where elderly Jews gave him an education in their lives and the importance of their books. An afterword by Lansky tells readers about the Yiddish Book Center, a vibrant organization that, among many other things, fosters learning the language. The story comes alive through the bold acrylic and gouache art, which illustrator Innerst says was inspired by the "exuberant motifs" of Marc Chagall. He finds drama in faces, profundityin the weight and number of books. The most outstanding spread places a shtetl on Yiddish pages that resemble matzo. Yiddish appears throughout the text; a glossary explains the words. -- Booklist *STARRED* * November 1, 2019 *The Book Rescuer is both informational and inspiring, explaining to young readers how one imaginative American Jew named Aaron Lansky determined that he would rescue the Yiddish language and make it a living testament to the dwindling culture of millions of European Jews. Lansky’s combination of persistence and innovative thinking allowed him to carry the remnants of a culture and language, from basements and dumpsters to an outstanding research institution built to house them and open their pages to the world. Macy begins her narrative by inviting the reader to ?“Kum aher. Sit down. I want to tell you a story.” At first, it may seem as if romanticized family memories will predominate as we learn that Lansky’s immigrant grandmother was told by her brother to toss her suitcase full of useless items from the past into the Hudson River. It soon becomes clear that this poignant anecdote is only the beginning, as the woman’s grandson retrieves the culture lost in that suitcase; Macy and Innerst emphasize the ordinary nature of this ?“all-American boy” growing up in a small Massachusetts town. Although the cultural relics depicted in Innerst’s portrait may be dated the vision of childhood as a time of unlimited curiosity is not. Soon Aaron’s love of reading and sense of connection to his family’s past becomes a consuming passion. Children will identify with the obstacles which Lansky confronts in the form of skeptical establishment figures who have little patience for his mission. When he calls on ?“the leaders of the biggest Jewish organizations in the country” to warn them that Yiddish books are being tossed in the trash by those who no longer see a use for them, the response he receives would discourage anyone less focused. Innerst describes in an ?“Illustrator’s Note” how the influence of Chagall helped him bring Jewish culture to life. Some of the book’s scenes are direct homages to that artist while others represent a subtle response to his vision. One incredible two-page spread shows a stylized model of the Jewish world in all its multiple settings, from shtetl buildings to the palm trees of the Middle East. The ?“ground” on which these features stand is a collage of pages filled with Yiddish print, forming a foundation for the world above it. Innerst’s artwork is a complex interplay of Chagall’s world and that of late twentieth-century America. He captures the transition between generations, as the book collector’s tremendous energy meets the quiet dignity of older Jews ready to pass on their tradition. One picture shows two elderly hands giving a Yiddish book to Lansky’s youthful ones; the book is entitled symbolically chai (life). The silence of this image is followed by a much different one, featuring the vibrant activity in the Yiddish Book Center where Lansky’s dream has become a reality. The Book Rescuer is highly recommended not only for children but for older readers who are inspired by the revival of Yiddish culture, as well. It includes an ?“Afterword” by Aaron Lansky, an ?“Author’s Note,” an ?“Illustrator’s Note,” a Yiddish glossary, and a list of additional sources. -- Jewish Book CouncilText and illustration meld beautifully in Sue Macy and Stacy Innerst’s THE BOOK RESCUER: How a Mensch from Massachusetts Saved Yiddish Literature for Generations to Come, the story of a lesser-known hero, Aaron Lansky. A MacArthur Genius Grant recipient and the founder of the Yiddish Book Center, he almost singlehandedly saved Yiddish books in America at a time when Yiddish was considered a langguage “whose time had passed.” When he started rescuing books from Dumpsters, it was thought there were maybe 70,000 Yiddish books left; his team has now saved 1.5 million. Macy, who has written books about women’s history and sports, knows how to start a tale: “Kum aher. Sit down. I want to tell you a story.” In these luminescent pages, an “All-American boy” grows into a man in love with a language considered dead. The text is sprinkled with Yiddish (“Aaron could have plotzed! Destroying Yiddish books was like erasing Jewish history!”) without getting Catskills-y. Innerst’s acrylic, gouache and digital art shares the book’s gentle humor: Little Aaron was a Star Trek fan, and images of Leonard Nimoy (a Yiddish-speaker himself) as Spock sneakily appear, like a pointy-eared Waldo, throughout the book. A cheerful spread strews around Yiddish words that have entered the vernacular (“klutz,” “bagel,” “glitch”). In another, little Aaron and hippie collegiate Aaron are each surrounded by washes of warm reds and pinks and flying rings of books forming a subtle infinity sign. -- The New York Times * 12/5/2019 *Text and illustration meld beautifully in Sue Macy and Stacy Innerst’s THE BOOK RESCUER: How a Mensch from Massachusetts Saved Yiddish Literature for Generations to Come, the story of a lesser-known hero, Aaron Lansky. A MacArthur Genius Grant recipient and the founder of the Yiddish Book Center, he almost singlehandedly saved Yiddish books in America at a time when Yiddish was considered a langguage “whose time had passed.” When he started rescuing books from Dumpsters, it was thought there were maybe 70,000 Yiddish books left; his team has now saved 1.5 million. Macy, who has written books about women’s history and sports, knows how to start a tale: “Kum aher. Sit down. I want to tell you a story.” In these luminescent pages, an “All-American boy” grows into a man in love with a language considered dead. The text is sprinkled with Yiddish (“Aaron could have plotzed! Destroying Yiddish books was like erasing Jewish history!”) without getting Catskills-y. Innerst’s acrylic, gouache and digital art shares the book’s gentle humor: Little Aaron was a Star Trek fan, and images of Leonard Nimoy (a Yiddish-speaker himself) as Spock sneakily appear, like a pointy-eared Waldo, throughout the book. A cheerful spread strews around Yiddish words that have entered the vernacular (“klutz,” “bagel,” “glitch”). In another, little Aaron and hippie collegiate Aaron are each surrounded by washes of warm reds and pinks and flying rings of books forming a subtle infinity sign. -- The New York Times * 12/5/2019 *Text and illustration meld beautifully in Sue Macy and Stacy Innerst’s THE BOOK RESCUER: How a Mensch from Massachusetts Saved Yiddish Literature for Generations to Come, the story of a lesser-known hero, Aaron Lansky. A MacArthur Genius Grant recipient and the founder of the Yiddish Book Center, he almost singlehandedly saved Yiddish books in America at a time when Yiddish was considered a langguage “whose time had passed.” When he started rescuing books from Dumpsters, it was thought there were maybe 70,000 Yiddish books left; his team has now saved 1.5 million. Macy, who has written books about women’s history and sports, knows how to start a tale: “Kum aher. Sit down. I want to tell you a story.” In these luminescent pages, an “All-American boy” grows into a man in love with a language considered dead. The text is sprinkled with Yiddish (“Aaron could have plotzed! Destroying Yiddish books was like erasing Jewish history!”) without getting Catskills-y. Innerst’s acrylic, gouache and digital art shares the book’s gentle humor: Little Aaron was a Star Trek fan, and images of Leonard Nimoy (a Yiddish-speaker himself) as Spock sneakily appear, like a pointy-eared Waldo, throughout the book. A cheerful spread strews around Yiddish words that have entered the vernacular (“klutz,” “bagel,” “glitch”). In another, little Aaron and hippie collegiate Aaron are each surrounded by washes of warm reds and pinks and flying rings of books forming a subtle infinity sign. -- The New York Times * 12/5/2019 *
£15.29
Tyndale House Publishers The Delusion
£13.29
Tyndale House Publishers Squirreled Away
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£6.99
Tyndale House Publishers Whirly Squirrelies
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£7.81
Tyndale House Publishers Risky River Rescue
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£7.81
Tyndale House Publishers Dead Sea Squirrels 3Pack Books 13
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£15.75
Tyndale House Publishers I Couldnt Love You More
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£8.11
Tyndale House Publishers A Childs First Bible Learn with Me Set with
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£15.75
Little Bee Books Inc. Babys First Noahs Ark
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£6.99
Skyhorse Publishing Baby Moses: The Brick Bible for Kids
Book SynopsisThe Israelites were living in Egypt for some time before the new pharaoh decided to enslave them to weaken their power and numbers. It was a terrible time for the God’s chosen people, and was made even worse when Pharaoh decreed that any baby boy born to an Israelite should be killed. Jochebed, an Israelite slave, had a baby boy named Moses. In order to save her son, she placed him in a basket and set him floating down the Nile River, with his older sister, Miriam, watching over him. The baby was saved, however, by an Egyptian princess, who gave him the name he’d carry into the desert, leading his people out of bondage and up a mountain to receive God’s laws for his people.The story of baby Moses, his journey down the Nile, and his growth into a man who would lead God’s chosen people out of Egypt is a timeless, important story about faith, love, and redemption. Now, for the first time, this epic story comes to life as part of The Brick Bible for Kids series. Enjoy reading one of the Bible’s most colorful stories illustrated in LEGO as a family.Sky Pony Press, with our Good Books, Racehorse and Arcade imprints, is proud to publish a broad range of books for young readerspicture books for small children, chapter books, books for middle grade readers, and novels for young adults. Our list includes bestsellers for children who love to play Minecraft; stories told with LEGO bricks; books that teach lessons about tolerance, patience, and the environment, and much more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.
£9.99
Skyhorse Publishing Days of the Dead
Book SynopsisBy the critically acclaimed author of Tyger Tyger, a warm, magical story of a girl’s struggle to keep a promise to her dead mother. Glorieta Magdalena Davis Espinosa is happy that Papi married Alice. She’s happy that he can smile again after years of mourning Mamá. But the urn containing Mamá’s ashes disappeared into a drawer the day Alice moved in. If everything about Glorieta’s life is going to change, then she wants one thing to go her way: She wants to hear stories about her mamá when the family gathers on the last night of los Días de los Muertos. And that can only happen if Tia Diosonita will allow Mamá to be buried with the Espinosas in holy ground. If she will allow people to speak Mamá’s name. With the help of her best friend, River, and her cousin Mateo, Glorieta sets out to convince Diosonita that Mamá is not burning in Hell. To do so, she’ll have to learn to let hate go—and to love the people who stand in her way. In prose that sparkles with magical undertones, author Kersten Hamilton weaves a tender story about grief, faith, and the redemptive power of love.Trade Review"Hamilton is a wonderful, dynamic writer. Glorieta’s courage and faithful search for goodness will make your heart glow a little brighter.” —Francisco Stork, award-winning author of Marcelo in the Real World "Timely in its treatment of immigration injustices, and timeless in the exploration of the enduring spiritual and cultural traditions of the author’s beloved home. An engaging story of strength, love, and redemption, complete with dazzling touches of laugh-out-loud humor." —Laura Resau, award-winning author of The Lightning Queen"Hamilton is a wonderful, dynamic writer. Glorieta’s courage and faithful search for goodness will make your heart glow a little brighter.” —Francisco Stork, award-winning author of Marcelo in the Real World "Timely in its treatment of immigration injustices, and timeless in the exploration of the enduring spiritual and cultural traditions of the author’s beloved home. An engaging story of strength, love, and redemption, complete with dazzling touches of laugh-out-loud humor." —Laura Resau, award-winning author of The Lightning Queen
£14.12
Lerner Publishing Group Under the Sabbath Lamp
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£7.59
Lerner Publishing Group The Six-Day Hero
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£9.49
Christian Focus Publications Ltd Rebels Rescued
Book SynopsisReformed theology teaches that, because we are more sinful than we could ever imagine, it can only be God who takes that broken shopping cart wheel (our sinful heart) and replaces it with one that has both the ability and the desire to seek him and to follow him. Brian Cosby is the perfect tool for helping students understand the essentials of reformed theology.
£6.99
Pan Macmillan Truth Be Told
Book SynopsisThe gripping new YA novel from Sue Divin, the acclaimed and Carnegie shortlisted author of Guard Your Heart.Northern Ireland. 2019.Tara has been raised by her mam and nan in Derry City. Faith lives in rural Armagh.Their lives on opposite sides of a political divide couldn’t be more different. Until they come face-to-face with each other and are shocked to discover they look almost identical. Are they connected?In searching for the truth about their own identities, the teenagers uncover more than they bargained for.But what if finding out who you truly are means undermining everything you’ve ever known?Trade ReviewA compelling, original story that will make you laugh, cry, and laugh til you cry. -- Michelle Gallen, on Truth Be ToldProfoundly powerful, subtle and effective, this superb debut evokes the deep-rooted mistrust lingering in the wake of the Troubles, as well as a new, tentative flowering of hope and love. * The Guardian on Guard Your Heart *A compelling, engaging narrative. -- Claire Hennessy * Irish Times on Guard Your Heart *Truth Be Told is another unique and moving story from Sue Divin, and tells the story of Northern Ireland as warmly and insightfully as the story of her wonderful characters. -- Kelly McCaughrain, author of Flying Tips For Flightless BirdsDivin's second YA novel boasts all the power, humour and heartbreaak of Carnegie-shorted debut. -- Imogen Russell Williams * Guardian *A moving, fascinating story that will have you gripped from the outset. * Armadillo Magazine *For the most part Divin’s work leans into the dramatic rather than the comedic echoing the work of fellow Northern Irish writers Jan Carson and the late Lyra McKee in her explanation of a post-troubles place still haunted by trauma and violence… a more nuanced account of the conflict than simply ‘us versus them. Divin avoids demonising or sanctifying anyone… This polished novel makes space for the messy complexity of human existence, and gently offers, but does not preach, hope. It makes for a deeply satisfying and engaging reading experience. * The Irish Times *This modern-day love story reflects the impact of conflict on second, third and future generations – the hurt, the damage, the loss and the grief – and reminds us of the long-lasting legacy of war. * The Scotsman *It’s a Derry Girls-style set-up… Tara unpicks long-held family secrets in a uniquely withering voice. * Financial Times *Conflict is not always black and white. There are greys. Truth can be messy and hard to hear. Divin's excellent novel explores these nuances in a story that is well-told and peopled by wonderful characters. * The Sunday Independent *…unflinching prose fiction…. but it is not without humour; we are left with discernible hope, despite the darkness… This is a story about family and trauma, but also at its heart it is a story about growing up and finding love in the families we are born into and the ones we create. -- Shirley Anne McMillan * Dig With It *Divin's powerful and compelling writing on contemporary issues appeals to teens and adults alike… [Truth Be Told] delves into the transgenerational impact of the Troubles in Northern Ireland upon three generations of women. Laced with dry wit, emotion and self-deprecating humour, Truth Be Told doesn't shy away from tough subjects - paramilitary punishment shootings, suicide, the legalisation of same-sex relationships, abortion and even gay conversion therapy. -- Jenny Lee * The Irish News *A really beautiful tale of hope, acceptance, and most of all family. From start to finish, this book had me fascinated, immersed, and wanting to know more. A really engaging read. * Juno Magazine *A gritty, contemporary style packed with dry wit, strong emotions and challenging exploration of issues. * Reading Zone *Compelling portrayal of life and love across the political and religious divide of Northern Ireland. * Love Reading 4 Schools *
£8.54
Pan Macmillan Guard Your Heart
Book SynopsisGuard Your Heart is the Carnegie shortlisted debut novel from Sue Divin.Boy meets girl on the Northern Irish border.Derry. Summer 2016. Aidan and Iona, now eighteen, were both born on the day of the Northern Ireland peace deal.Aidan is Catholic, Irish, and Republican. With his ex-political prisoner father gone and his mother dead, Aidan’s hope is pinned on exam results earning him a one-way ticket out of Derry. To anywhere.Iona, Protestant and British, has a brother and father in the police. She’s got university ambitions, a strong faith and a fervent belief that boys without one track minds are a myth.At a post-exam party, Aidan wanders alone across the Peace Bridge and becomes the victim of a brutal sectarian attack. Iona witnessed the attack; picked up Aidan’s phone and filmed what happened, and gets in touch with him to return the phone. When the two meet, alone and on neutral territory, the differences between them seem insurmountable. Both their fathers held guns, but safer to keep that secret for now.Despite their differences and the secrets they have to keep from each other, there is mutual intrigue, and their friendship grows. And so what? It’s not the Troubles. But for both Iona and Aidan it seems like everything is keeping them apart , when all they want is to be together . . .Trade ReviewProfoundly powerful, subtle and effective, this superb debut evokes the deep-rooted mistrust... lingering in the wake of the Troubles, as well as a new, tentative flowering of hope and love. -- Imogen Russell-Williams * Guardian *a compelling, engaging narrative -- Claire Hennessy * Irish Times *Divin skilfully maintains two attractively distinct voices [and]... sets her story with an insider's knowledge of the dynamics of Derry... absorbing. -- Geoff Fox * Books for Keeps *
£8.54
Lifeway Christian Resources What Am I Feeling
Book SynopsisCan show-and-tell day be saved? It's show-and-tell day at school, and Sam and his friends are feeling lots of emotions. He wonders why he feels flippy in his tummy. And why is Alex stomping his feet? And does Hudson usually have such a big grin? After several unchecked feelings threaten to ruin the big day, Sam and his friends start to learn how to give each emotion a name and ask God to help them remember that 'a feeling is just a feeling -- it's not in charge of you'. In a world where kids are dealing with everything from sibling rivalry to bullying, divorce to tragedy, this book offers a biblically grounded way for children to verbalise their feelings, develop empathy and self-control, and understand their wonderful God-given emotions. BONUS! Also includes a pull-out feelings chart for your wall! Go to bhkids.com to find this book's Parent Connection, an easy tool to help moms and dads (or anyone else who loves kids) discuss the book's message with their child. We are all about conn
£13.25
Candlewick Press,U.S. Shabbat Shalom!
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£8.54
Candlewick Press,U.S. We Go to Shul
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£7.59
Candlewick Press,U.S. Spindle and Dagger
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£16.14
Candlewick Press,U.S. The Hanukkah Magic of Nate Gadol
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£7.59
Little, Brown & Company God's Love Is Like Sunshine
Book SynopsisA joyful celebration of God's deep love for little ones, God's Love Is Like Sunshine takes a subject that could be confusing-God's love-and makes it accessible to kiddos. How? By comparing that love to objects and ideas children know and love, such as warm sunshine, overflowing orange juice, and soft clouds. These comparisons paint a beautiful picture of a love that is kind, gentle, and generous. But most importantly, God's Love Is Like Sunshine celebrates how God's love fills up our hearts so they overflow with kindness, gentleness, and generosity for other people. With illustrations that radiate childlike joy and a message that encourages little ones to love God and the people around them, this sweet board book is sure to make you smile.
£7.83
Red Wheel/Weiser H. P. Lovecraft and the Black Magickal Tradition:
Book SynopsisModern, practising occultists have argued that renowned horror writer, H. P. Lovecraft, was in possession of in-depth knowledge of black magick. Literary scholars claim that he was a master of his genre and craft and his findings are purely psychological, nothing more. Was Lovecraft a practitioner of the dark arts himself? Was he privileged to knowledge that cannot be otherwise explained?Weaving the life story of Lovecraft in and out of an analysis of various modern magickal systems, scholar, John Steadman, has found direct and concrete examples that demonstrate that Lovecraft''s works and, specifically, his Cthulhu Mythos and his creation of the Necronomicon, are a legitimate basis for a working magickal system.Whether you believe Lovecraft had supernatural powers or not, no one can argue against Lovecraft''s profound influence on many modern black arts and the darker currents of western occultism.
£18.04
Crossway Books You Are Mine
Book SynopsisFollow Punchinello's foibles as he learns a lesson that children of every age must never forget: God's children are loved because of whose they are, not because of what they possess. Second in Max Lucado's Wemmick's series!
£11.69
Crossway Books God Knows My Name
Book SynopsisThrough God's own promises and colorful illustrations, young children can discover the reality that God knows everything–and He knows and cares for them.
£9.49
Crossway Books You Are Mine
Book SynopsisNow available in board book form so that younger children can also hear Punchinello's newest lesson: he is loved, not because of what he owns, but because of Whose he is.
£5.99
Crossway Books Tell Me About Heaven
Book SynopsisGently guides adults and children to see what the Bible really has to say about Heaven and those who live there.
£13.49
Tyndale House Publishers Beyond Expectations
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£21.41
Tyndale House Publishers Honesty
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£7.04
Tyndale House Publishers No Way Out
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£16.99
Tyndale House Publishers At Home And Abroad
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£18.83