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Books with author Christopher Hubert

  • Briskwood Blood Rain

    Christopher Joubert

    eBook (Christopher Joubert, Dec. 3, 2018)
    When Miles Parker walks into one of his final classes of high school, the only thing on his mind is how poorly he is about to do on a Literature quiz he didn’t study for. Then, his teacher dies – and vanishes – in front of him. He thinks his day can’t get any stranger. He’s wrong. When severe weather roars into the small city of Briskwood and school is canceled for the rest of the day, Miles thinks nothing of it. Then, the rain suddenly turns red and mutates people into yellow-eyed, spike-covered creatures, hell-bent on terrorizing anything that moves. Miles soon finds himself trapped at his job, the Royal Cinema Theater, along with his best friend and a group of teenagers who can’t seem to get along, even in a time of crisis. With the blood rain cutting off access to many necessary resources, Miles and the others must use their limited supplies to fight an enemy that is much stronger than they are. The race for survival against this new, deadly species is on.
  • Kids Draw Manga

    Christopher Hart

    Paperback (Watson-Guptill, June 1, 2004)
    The characters from manga-or Japanese comics-have begun to dominate the world of kids' cartoons and comics. Now kids can learn to draw their own manga-style characters with Kids Draw Manga, the newest addition to the Kids Draw series. Young artists will find a complete introduction to the basics of manga style, from the well-known shiny eye to manga-style noses, mouths, and body types. Pages of step-by-step drawings offer a diverse range of cool manga characters with appeal to both boys and girls, including a basic manga girl and boy, a schoolgirl, a mysterious swordsman, a hero knight, a flying robot soldier, and a laser fighter. More elaborate manga characters, like a spaceship commander and a dark-magic sorceress, are offered for kids who are either older or have worked through the book and are ready for the next level. As in all Kids Draw books, each dazzling spread is easy to follow, fun to look at, and guaranteed to charm a new generation of artists!• The 10th book in the best-selling Kids Draw series• Follows the success of Kids Draw Anime, which sold over 20,000 copies in one year• Capitalizes on the manga craze for kids: from Sailor Moon to Yu-Gi-Oh!• Author has sold more than 1.5 million books• Packed with colorful, fun spreads
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  • 25 Quick Cartoon Characters- From Christopher Hart, a Complete Collection with Step-by-Step Instructions that will have you Drawing Goofy-but-Great Cartoons in no Time.

    Christopher Hart

    Paperback (Sixth&Spring Books, Nov. 19, 2015)
    Follow along with bestselling how-to-draw author Christopher Hart as he shows you how to quickly draw a complete collection of funny cartoon characters. Covering a wide range of both people and animals, this booklet offers easy, step-by-step instruction that will have you drawing goofy-but-great cartoons in no time.
  • Kids Draw Cats, Kittens, Lions and Tigers

    Christopher Hart

    Paperback (Watson-Guptill, May 1, 2001)
    Offers complete instructions for drawing all kinds of cartoon cats in many different poses and costumes.
  • King Arthur

    Christopher Hibbert

    Paperback (New Word City, July 4, 2018)
    The tales of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table are among the best-known stories in the world, but they are often relegated to the realm of legend. However, Arthur was a man, not a myth. In this book, acclaimed historian Christopher Hibbert vividly brings to life the sixth-century British monarch and his extraordinary court.
  • Draw a Square, Draw Anything!

    Christopher Hart

    Spiral-bound (Chris Hart Books, Oct. 7, 2008)
    It’s hip to draw squares! And that’s all kids need to know to be able to create almost anything at all. It’s amazing to watch as children transform the humble shape into a boy astronaut, a robot, a knight in armor, an airplane, a witch, a dinosaur, a vampire, a fire-breathing dragon, even a zoo-full of wacky animals. There are 60 great ideas to kindle kids’ imaginations.
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  • "Kids Draw Dogs, Puppies and Wolves"

    Christopher Hart

    Paperback (Watson-Guptill, May 1, 2001)
    Dogs, puppies, and wolves are among the most popular subjects in comic strips, animation, and children's book illustration—now kids age 6 and up can learn to draw canines of all sorts with these fun, easy-to-follow lessons from a master cartoonist and teacher. Roly-poly pups, villainous wolves, shaggy sheepdogs, and more tumble through the dynamic, kid-friendly pages, all age-appropriate with younger reading levels. Easy-to-follow step-by-steps teach kids to draw canines in repose, walking, and running, in a variety of situations and with a range of facial expressions. Spreads are easy to follow and fun to look at, guaranteed to charm a new generation of cartoonists!
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  • Keeping My Hope

    Christopher Huh

    eBook (Christopher Huh, Feb. 15, 2013)
    Keeping My Hope, a historical fiction graphic novel written by 14 year old Christopher Huh, talks about the life of a young teenage boy named Ari Kolodiejski, who is caught in the horrors of the Final Solution. Now as a parent and grandparent, he tells his life story to his grandchildren. After surviving the world's most deadliest camp, he hopes to pass on his life legacy to his family.Ari is a strong and courageous teen who must battle for his life throughout the second world war. Ari is forever scarred from his deep past. Despite being kept prisoner at the Auschwitz Birkenau concentration camp, seeing the untimely death of hundreds, and forced to endure unbearable conditions in lice infested clothing, Ari keeps his friends close and struggles to live. Throughout his stay in the camp, he meets two inmates who both stand along with him, trying to help as often as they can. Friendship and belief is all they have left, in which the Nazis and the war strip away from the trio and ultimately brings the devastating disaster that awaits. When Ari and his two friends are slowing down in a death march during a blizzard and his friend has frostbite, Ari still helps his friend despite an SS guard approaching them with a pistol. He even claims that "carrying Saul was a challenge" (page 149), but does not want to leave him in the snow, knowing the fate his friend would face.He tries to help and aid his fellow camp inmates whenever possible. During at his stay at Auschwitz III, everyone fears one Kapo guard who is known for being a sadist on the prisoners with a rubber truncheon. Ari not only stands up against the Kapo, he even goes to the point of scaring him too. The guard showed "in his eyes...he was confused, maybe even fearful. Almost as if he was the beaten victim" (page 104). No matter what consequences are to come, he always gives his best effort in order to make a situation better. Throwing himself into the line of fire while no one else would is the shocking reality that made those like Ari from ordinary people to heroes.A true friend and strong Samaritan, Ari Kolodiejski is a person who is stuck with the ability to make anyone into being a friend with him. After his liberation of six years of terror, he tries to rebuild his life to replace the one he lost a lifetime ago. With his family's history stored safely in the minds of his grandchildren, he can now preserve his memories for his great-grandchildren and their children to remember. Keeping My Hope is an excellent book, and an even better one with the character of Ari.
  • Kids Draw Animals

    Christopher Hart

    Paperback (Watson-Guptill, June 1, 2003)
    Kids Draw Animals offers the perfect addition to the mega-selling art instruction series, written by renowned artist and instructor Christopher Hart.Artists between the ages of 6 and 12 will delight in the wonderful animals that fill the pages of this lively how-to. Colorful, fun spreads demonstrate, step by step, how to draw African animals, bears, horses, birds, reptiles, cute critters, sea creatures, pets, and exotic animals like kangaroos, and camels. As kids progress, they go beyond simply copying to gain real drawing skills and solid artistic technique. Plus . . . they’ll have lots of fun!• The 9th book in Christopher Hart’s best-selling Kids Draw series • Offers age-appropriate instruction and illustration on how to draw all kinds of animals
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  • The Last Dogs: The Vanishing

    Christopher Holt

    Hardcover (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, Sept. 4, 2012)
    When all the humans in his world disappear, Max, a yellow Labrador Retriever, begins the search for his family. He knows that if he can just find Madame Curie, a wise, old black Lab, she'll be able to help. Madame had a premonition of astonishing events to come -- she might know where Max's family is.But Max can't make the journey alone. Joined by friends Rocky and Gizmo, Max sets off to find Madame. Along the way, the trio must face a pack of angry wolves, forage for food in a land where kibble is akin to gold, befriend a house full of cats, and outsmart a gang of subway rats. Ultimately, they'll have to escape from the biggest threat of all: the Corporation, a "perfect" society for dogs and by dogs, where nothing is quite as it seems.The Last Dogs: The Vanishing is a thrilling adventure and a tale of three unlikely friends on an epic quest to find their people -- and bring them home.
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  • Xtreme Art

    Christopher Hart

    Paperback (Watson-Guptill, June 2, 2009)
    Learn to Draw More than 80 Cool Manga Characters in 4 Easy Steps!Are you ready for a crash course in drawing more than 80 cool characters from best-selling author Chris Hart? It only takes four simple steps: Just trace and draw what you see in step 1, then add the orange lines shown in steps 2, 3, and 4. Learn to trace or draw manga kids; "chibi" characters with short, squat bodies and huge heads; and manga monsters. Before you know it, you’ll have drawn characters that will amaze your family and friends!
  • The Blame Game: Spin, Bureaucracy, and Self-Preservation in Government

    Christopher Hood

    eBook (Princeton University Press, Nov. 15, 2010)
    The blame game, with its finger-pointing and mutual buck-passing, is a familiar feature of politics and organizational life, and blame avoidance pervades government and public organizations at every level. Political and bureaucratic blame games and blame avoidance are more often condemned than analyzed. In The Blame Game, Christopher Hood takes a different approach by showing how blame avoidance shapes the workings of government and public services. Arguing that the blaming phenomenon is not all bad, Hood demonstrates that it can actually help to pin down responsibility, and he examines different kinds of blame avoidance, both positive and negative. Hood traces how the main forms of blame avoidance manifest themselves in presentational and "spin" activity, the architecture of organizations, and the shaping of standard operating routines. He analyzes the scope and limits of blame avoidance, and he considers how it plays out in old and new areas, such as those offered by the digital age of websites and e-mail. Hood assesses the effects of this behavior, from high-level problems of democratic accountability trails going cold to the frustrations of dealing with organizations whose procedures seem to ensure that no one is responsible for anything. Delving into the inner workings of complex institutions, The Blame Game proves how a better understanding of blame avoidance can improve the quality of modern governance, management, and organizational design.