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Princess Lola LeDeaux, aka KILLER
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Stephen J. McKolay
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Deanna York
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Michael C. Frost, Ph.D.
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Jack D. Hodge
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MEGAN S. JOHNSTON
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Gary M. Pecuch
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Dr. Brucetta McClue Tate
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Rudy Sikora
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King A. Khaliq
JUVENILE NONFICTION - Performing Arts (General)
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By Edmund Lyndeck
With the skill of a master of the English language, with the pizzazz of a performer on stage, with the wisdom of a man of grace and charm, Mr. Lyndeck offers us five works that reflect the theatrical life. His characters and their words recreate the world their author has lived in— a world of quick-wit, love of words, and passion for the stage! These works are wonderful reads in themselves, and they also offer students of English and Drama fun artistic vehicles to learn from and through. We are how we speak! And this volume of plays reflects a sensitive, intelligent, witty, and passionate human being. We come to see that a life in the theatre can be a wonderful life.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Richard Smythe
'Your smile, your lovely smile / Stirs my senses, as if / Waking to the first rays of an alpine sun / On the ridge of my tent, / I enjoy a spreading warmth........ Richard Smythe's imagery goes straight to the heart of what it is like to be human, simply joyful or sad, expectant or fearful, but above all to feel the natural world, in all its wonder, to be a part of oneself in life and, at the end, in one's frailty and death. His poems span a lifetime's experience of music, mountains, teaching and acting from the dark years of the 1940's listening in bed to his mother playing Chopin to the present time when he wonders himself how he himself should be recalled: 'Carve no stone to remember me by / Lest it bruise you...........I would rather you / See me, feel me, like a child spreading his hands / On a couch of summer grass. Inside this slim volume the reader will find an immense variety of subjects and moods, from quiet, philosophical reflection in the Shropshire countryside to a light hearted playing with words, as in the melodramatic portrayal of the cyclical existence of the common earthworm, written to be performed from within a sleeping bag! Truly this is a book to be slipped into the pocket to provide pleasure at odd moments during a busy day.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Tonyo Melendez
This is a tale about a dream come true. The story of a boy’s longing to belong to a home, a family, a country. Rejected as a baby by his father as well as by his mother’s family, Memo, at the age of five, is abandoned by his mother María at a boarding Catholic school in Mexico, while she pursues her acting career. After three years of beseeching, María takes pity and takes him to El Salvador, where he struggles to belong to a family that treats him as an inferior and a country that treats him as a foreigner. At age fourteen he goes to Nicaragua, hoping his father would provide what his Salvadorian family has not. His father wants nothing to do with him By a quirk of destiny, Memo becomes a Radio and T.V. teen star in El Salvador. But he soon realizes that, by pursuing acting he has given up his education thus surrendering his future for an uncertain present. A lover of American movies, he spends all his free time in movie theaters dreaming about living in America, a country that seems to have it all. He decides that only in America would he be able to realize his dreams. He implores his cousin Violeta, who lives in the United States, to sponsor him. After several years of pleading, Violeta acquiesces; but he will have to finance his trip. Memo starts the long legal process. Meanwhile, he saves all his money to pay for the trip. He returns to Nicaragua to ask his father for help. His father rejects him and wishes him failure. Memo will have to do it alone. At last he overcomes all obstacles and boards an airplane bound for America. What will he learn there? Memo cannot wait to find out.
FORMAT: Hardcover
By Tonyo Melendez
This is a tale about a dream come true. The story of a boy’s longing to belong to a home, a family, a country. Rejected as a baby by his father as well as by his mother’s family, Memo, at the age of five, is abandoned by his mother María at a boarding Catholic school in Mexico, while she pursues her acting career. After three years of beseeching, María takes pity and takes him to El Salvador, where he struggles to belong to a family that treats him as an inferior and a country that treats him as a foreigner. At age fourteen he goes to Nicaragua, hoping his father would provide what his Salvadorian family has not. His father wants nothing to do with him By a quirk of destiny, Memo becomes a Radio and T.V. teen star in El Salvador. But he soon realizes that, by pursuing acting he has given up his education thus surrendering his future for an uncertain present. A lover of American movies, he spends all his free time in movie theaters dreaming about living in America, a country that seems to have it all. He decides that only in America would he be able to realize his dreams. He implores his cousin Violeta, who lives in the United States, to sponsor him. After several years of pleading, Violeta acquiesces; but he will have to finance his trip. Memo starts the long legal process. Meanwhile, he saves all his money to pay for the trip. He returns to Nicaragua to ask his father for help. His father rejects him and wishes him failure. Memo will have to do it alone. At last he overcomes all obstacles and boards an airplane bound for America. What will he learn there? Memo cannot wait to find out.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Cecilia Naa Densua Quarshie
No Description Available.
FORMAT: E-Book
By Tonyo Melendez
This is a tale about a dream come true. The story of a boy’s longing to belong to a home, a family, a country. Rejected as a baby by his father as well as by his mother’s family, Memo, at the age of five, is abandoned by his mother María at a boarding Catholic school in Mexico, while she pursues her acting career. After three years of beseeching, María takes pity and takes him to El Salvador, where he struggles to belong to a family that treats him as an inferior and a country that treats him as a foreigner. At age fourteen he goes to Nicaragua, hoping his father would provide what his Salvadorian family has not. His father wants nothing to do with him By a quirk of destiny, Memo becomes a Radio and T.V. teen star in El Salvador. But he soon realizes that, by pursuing acting he has given up his education thus surrendering his future for an uncertain present. A lover of American movies, he spends all his free time in movie theaters dreaming about living in America, a country that seems to have it all. He decides that only in America would he be able to realize his dreams. He implores his cousin Violeta, who lives in the United States, to sponsor him. After several years of pleading, Violeta acquiesces; but he will have to finance his trip. Memo starts the long legal process. Meanwhile, he saves all his money to pay for the trip. He returns to Nicaragua to ask his father for help. His father rejects him and wishes him failure. Memo will have to do it alone. At last he overcomes all obstacles and boards an airplane bound for America. What will he learn there? Memo cannot wait to find out.
FORMAT: E-Book
By Richard Smythe
No Description Available.
FORMAT: E-Book
By Keith Busby, Christopher Casaccio, Matthew Curry,
No Description Available.
FORMAT: E-Book
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