The Little Burrow is all abuzz with holiday cheer as Hare, Squirrel, and Mouse prepare for the morning’s gift exchange, but a frozen swallow all alone in the woods soon unwraps their plans. Festive patterns, textures, and muted tones... Read More
The constant motion and evolution of a tiny drop through the fundamental water cycle is beautifully interpreted in Jorge Tetl Argueta’s poetically bilingual Agua, Agüita, or Water, Little Water. Illustrations from Felipe Ugalde... Read More
From confidence and grace to compassion and reflection, Helen James offers inspirational affirmations and advice in PUG: How to be the Best You. Philosophical Universal Guidance, or PUG for short, is a collection of quotes accompanied by... Read More
Around the world and through the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous eras, dozens of dinosaurs, reptiles, and prehistoric creatures forage, nest, migrate, and battle, in "Atlas of Dinosaur Adventures". A multifaceted catalogue of facts... Read More
For inquiring minds everywhere, "Random Illustrated Facts" offers an exceptional variety of quirky trivia on topics ranging from history and natural science to outer space and entomology. Artist, author, and daily sketchbook keeper Mike... Read More
Brimming with both acuity and grace, "Can You See Anything Now?" is a welcome challenge to the dogmatic conventions of modern Christian fiction. The unsanitized, transgressive tendencies and the thoughtful style of "Can You See Anything... Read More
Silverberg’s science fiction stands head and shoulders above other works in the genre. The short stories in Robert Silverberg’s "First-Person Singularities" are inventive, sublime, and endlessly entertaining. All eighteen pieces are... Read More
This food study forwards a fascinating human history of a region like no other. Gregory McNamee’s fascinating Tortillas, Tiswin & T-Bones: A Food History of the Southwest is a wonderfully absorbing foodie saga that drills down to... Read More