"Petit Pierre and the Floating Marsh" is a fascinating book with two distinct strengths. The first is the story of Petit Pierre, a young pelican who must leave his mother’s nest and find a new home. The second is told across the bottom... Read More
Heidi is very good at hide-and-seek. She and her friends play again and again, and Heidi always wins. They even play at Heidi’s birthday party, but when her friends are unable to find her, they continue the party without her. Soon... Read More
Highly appealing, "Blip!" introduces children ages four to six to the sequential art found in comic books. The book tells the story of a robot exploring an alien planet and consists of very few words. In fact, the only words in the... Read More
A celebratory spirit pervades the collection, which positions Jerusalem as a center of medieval hopes. Against astounding contemporary arguments that Jerusalem does not represent shared the history of a bevy of religions and cultures... Read More
Recycling is a wonderful early-nonfiction title for children ages six to nine. It discusses the importance of recycling, what kinds of materials can be recycled, and what those materials can be made into. Each page is accompanied by... Read More
"Coming of Age at the End of Nature" ushers in a new wave of millennial thought on the environment, climate change, and the art of living. This groundbreaking collection of essays, with a foreword by Bill McKibben, features twenty-two... Read More
This commodious study of the relationship between spirituality and agriculture calls into question prevailing practices of modern industrialism. "Religion and Sustainable Agriculture" includes fifteen selections from leading scholars in... Read More
Isolate. Compartmentalize. Control. This is the motto of Amanda Sinclair, who used to belong to a cult—a cult that rears its ugly head again just when Amanda felt sure she had put the past behind her. Dark and charged from the start,... Read More