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Books with author Alexandra Vos

  • Carl Goes to Daycare

    Alexandra Day

    Board book (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Sept. 30, 1995)
    Carl the rottweiler takes charge when things take an unexpected turn at the day care center he is visiting.
    WB
  • Carl and the Baby Duck

    Alexandra Day

    Hardcover (Square Fish, May 10, 2011)
    Mama Duck has lost one of her ducklings. Where could Baby Duck be? Mama Duck asks Carl for help. Will Carl be able to find Baby Duck? Alexandra Day's ever-popular dog, Carl, stars in this brand-new story created especially for beginning readers.
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  • Frank and Ernest Play Ball

    Alexandra Day

    Hardcover (Laughing Elephant, April 15, 2011)
    Good Dog, Carl creator Alexandra Day’s dynamic duo Frank, a bear, and Ernest an elephant, are back, and this time must master the language of baseball during their stint as managers of the Elmville Mudcats- a minor league team. The animal pals have their work cut our for them; the team is in the cellar (in last place in the league) and Frank and Ernest have to do everything- sell tickets, run batting practice, announce the game to the fans, and more! But once they learn the right language, it all seems easy… Soon expressions like “fly hawk”- a skillful outfielder; “smoke artist”- a pitcher who throws lots of fastballs; and “can of corn”- a ball that’s been hit so high it can easily be caught- no longer sound strange to the animal friends. Readers will cheer for Frank and Ernest whose skill with the lingo makes for a great day at the ballpark! First published in 1990, we welcome the opportunity to re-present this Alexandra Day book full of the secret language children love, as well as a story of cooperation, and friendship.
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  • Cult, A Love Story: Ten Years Inside a Canadian Cult and the Subsequent Long Road of Recovery

    Alexandra Amor

    Paperback (Fat Head Publishing, Feb. 9, 2017)
    For fans of Educated, Captive, and Beyond Belief comes the gripping true-life story of one young woman's accidental journey into a cult. And her escape a decade later.Think you could never join a cult? So did I.It's rarely obvious when a group is a cult. Most cults don't advertise themselves as such: they are groups of people who look and act just like you and me. Not dangerous. Not deranged. At least, not at first.The slide toward complete control of your personality, your thoughts, and your life, is slow and virtually unnoticeable. Until it's too late.In this award-winning memoir, Alexandra Amor shines a light on cults so that others might learn from her heartbreaking experience. Amor gracefully and sensitively explains how ordinary and intelligent people get seduced into joining cults, why they stay despite the emotional and psychological abuse, and what the long process of recovery looks like once someone leaves a cult. Amor's transparency about her decade-long involvement with a Vancouver, Canada cult makes this powerful and gripping book an excellent resource for those wanting to know more about how the mind control of a high demand spiritual or religious group works. "This excellent memoir reveals how a charismatic, manipulative spirit medium can use love for God and neighbor as a hook to drag a small group of devotees into her cynical web of impossible goals for self-perfection. After a heroic struggle for insight, Alexandra Amor was one of the cult members who broke the abusive spell."Joseph Szimhart, Cult Information Specialist Knowledge is power. Buy this chilling memoir today and educate yourself about how cults work.In this page-turning, personal memoir you will learn:how normal, intelligent people can, without knowing what's happening, get sucked into a cult's gripwhy it's so very difficult for those in high demand groups (cults) to leavehow to evaluate whether a group you belong to is a cultwhat the recovery period after a cult looks likeresources and recommendations if you know someone in a cult, or if you are in recovery from a cult yourself
  • Carl And The Kitten

    Alexandra Day

    Library Binding (Turtleback, Nov. 8, 2011)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. In a title for beginning readers, Carl the Rottweiler helps a little kitten that is stuck in a tree descend safely. By the creator of Carl's Afternoon in the Park.
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  • Carl's Halloween

    Alexandra Day

    eBook (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), Aug. 11, 2015)
    Mom has to go help Grandma, but it's Halloween, and Carl and Madeleine don't want to miss out on the fun. So after Mom leaves, they make their own costumes and go out trick-or-treating by themselves. They even stop in at a party to bob for apples before they return safely to their house, content from their Halloween adventure and with Mom none the wiser.
  • Rules for Thieves

    Alexandra Ott

    Paperback (Aladdin, June 5, 2018)
    After twelve-year-old orphan, Alli Rosco, is cursed with a deadly spell, she must join the legendary Thieves Guild in order to try and save herself in this high-stakes debut.Twelve-year-old Alli Rosco is smart, resourceful, and totally incapable of keeping her mouth shut. Some of these traits have served her well during her nine years in Azeland’s orphanage, and others have proved more troublesome…but now that she’s escaped to try her luck on the streets, she has bigger problems than extra chores to contend with. Surviving would be hard enough, but after a run-in with one of the city’s Protectors, she’s marked by a curse that’s slowly working its way to her heart. There is a cure, but the cost is astronomical—and seems well out of her reach. Enter Beck, a boy with a gift for theft and a touch of magic, who seems almost too good to be true. He tells Alli that the legendary Thieves Guild, long thought to be a myth, is real. Even better, Beck is a member and thinks she could be, too. All she has to do is pass the trial that the King of Thieves will assign to her. Join the Guild, collect her yearly reward and buy a cure. Plus, Alli hopes the Guild will be the home—the family—that Alli has always wanted. But when their trial goes wrong, innocent lives are put in danger, and Alli has to decide how much she can sacrifice in order to survive.
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  • Carl's Masquerade

    Alexandra Day

    Board book (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), Oct. 1, 1993)
    To Carl and his young charge, a masquerade party proves an irresistible invitation to fun.
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  • Frank and Ernest on the Road

    Alexandra Day

    Hardcover (Scholastic Inc., Feb. 1, 1994)
    In the sequel to Frank and Ernest Play Ball, Frank the bear and Ernest the Elephant take to the road as truck drivers. By the author of Frank and Ernest.
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  • Frank and Ernest

    Alexandra Day

    Paperback (Scholastic, Feb. 1, 1991)
    An elephant named Frank and a bear called Ernest become the unlikely proprietors of Mrs. Miller's diner, where they learn a mysterious restaurant lingo
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  • My Puppy's Record Book

    Alexandra Day

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), Sept. 30, 1994)
    Carl and Alexandra Day have created a baby record book for puppies. It has room for a paw print and a lock of fur, as well as places for photographs that record such special things as a family portrait, best trick, and first birthday. The book also has a page to keep track of the puppy's medical history. Lively illustrations depicting more than twenty breeds, plus a metal keepsake medallion for the puppy's collar, make this a must for every dog owner.
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  • The Cycle of Me...a Collection of Words and Thoughts: Self-Growth

    Alexandra L.

    language (Paper N Ink Publishing, July 7, 2014)
    "Be yourself. People may or may not like you, but it's important that you stay true to who you are." - Anonymous. "I remember my very first therapy session. It was supposed to help me cope with my parents’ divorce. It was “family” therapy because they felt it was best that we all discuss it together. I was told to read a story about another family that went through a divorce, and it just confused me even more. They told me “It’s not your fault, mommy and daddy love you” and blah, blah blah!""There was a time where I hated myself just because I was so obese. I felt un-pretty, not confident, a waste, and I can go on and on... I won’t lie, I still sometimes feel that way. I learned that me, Ali could NOT even get past my outer layer! How can I expect others in my life to get past my outer layer, if I couldn't? I had to find out by peeling back my own layers and finding out what makes me the woman I am. Spending countless hours, days, writing, reflecting, and digging deep into my past. Honesty is something I value, so in order to be honest with others, I had to be honest with myself."I always felt like an outsider in my own family. I’m tired of hiding behind the smiles, the “I’m okays”… the battle goes beyond the surface; it’s internal. This is my story, through the good, the bad and the ugly; I’m holding nothing back.