On vacation with his family in Dallas, fifteen-year-old Ted has his hands full when two rich girls pursue him at the same time.
Let's face it: everyone knows that car rides can be boring. And when things get boring, time slows down. In this book, a boy feels time slowing down so much that it starts going backward--into the time of pirates! Of princesses!
A brother and sister are very impatient during a car trip because they are going to a toy store.
Take a trip to Italy in this “introspective, moving, and honest” (Publishers Weekly) novel by bestselling author David Levithan (Every Day; Will Grayson, Will Grayson with John Green) in which fledgling family bonds are threatened by ...
The Book The year I turned eight, Mum and Dad took us on a trip around Australia. Luke, Billy and I missed school for the whole winter term. Join Grace and her family on their adventurous and sometimes funny expedition.
A young boy describes the trip he and his father make to Grandma's house, measuring how many miles are left at various points on the trip.
Fun for kids and adults, the book is filled with details that readers will want to hunt for (over and over!). Buckle up and enjoy the ride! Plus, this is the fixed-format version, which looks almost identical to the print edition!
The contributors to this book seek to offer new insights to improve student affairs, emphasizing action that recognizes this is a complex and multi-faceted process, and beginning with the assertion that, without recognizing the influences ...
F. Scott Fitzgerald makes this automotive desire central to the plot of The Great Gatsby. Fitzgerald was a car guy. “When I was a boy, I dreamed that I sat always at the wheel of a magnificent Stutz,” he recorded in his notebooks, ...
Take the world's tiniest villain add two unlikely heroes and a sandwich on wheels, and what have you got? The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie!
Perfect for fans of Where’d You Go, Bernadette and Small Admissions, a wry and cleverly observed debut novel about the privileged bubble that is Liston Heights High—the micro-managing parents, the overworked teachers, and the students ...