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Books with author DAVID WILLIAM MAY

  • First Hippo On The Moon

    DAVID WILLIAMS

    Paperback (HarperCollins Children Books, May 5, 2016)
    First Hippo on the Moon
  • The Mirrored Heavens

    David Williams

    eBook (David J. Williams, Oct. 2, 2013)
    In the 22nd century, the first wonder of a brave new world is the Phoenix Space Elevator, designed to give mankind greater access to the frontier beyond Earth. Cooperatively built by the United States and the Eurasian Coalition, the Elevator is also a grand symbol of superpower alliance following a second cold war. And it’s just been destroyed.With suspicions rampant, armies and espionage teams are mobilized across the globe and beyond. Enter Claire Haskell and Jason Marlowe, U.S. counterintelligence agents and former lovers—though their memories may only be constructs implanted by their spymaster. Now their agenda is to trust no one. For as the crisis mounts, the lives of all involved will converge in one explosive finale—and a startling aftermath that will rewrite everything they’ve ever known—about their mission, their world, and themselves.
  • Mr Stink: Limited Gift Edition of David Walliams' Bestselling Children's Book

    David Williams

    Hardcover (Harper Collins, Oct. 29, 2009)
    David Walliams' bestselling book Mr Stink has gone FULL COLOUR in a brand-new anniversary edition. This beautiful hardback gift book is the perfect present for children of any age, and contains an introduction from David Walliams himself. Available for a limited time only! Mr Stink was the second David Walliams book to be illustrated by the inimitable Quentin Blake, and won unanimous critical acclaim. Mr Stink remains one of his most beloved characters - in a tale that continues to touch the hearts of readers everywhere. A highly collectable edition for fans old and new.
  • William Lloyd Garrison: A Radical Voice Against Slavery

    William David Thomas

    Paperback (Crabtree Pub Co, Aug. 1, 2009)
    Profiles the life and work of the abolitionist and journalist who published his beliefs about antislavery.
    P
  • Message to My Girl

    David Wyn Williams

    language (Allen & Unwin, Feb. 1, 2016)
    Doctor Jared Noel knew he was dying for almost six years, from the age of 25. But when it looked as though he would not live to see the birth of his child, he began a Givealittle crowd-funding campaign to raise money for a course of chemo treatment that would keep him alive long enough to meet his unborn child. This remarkable campaign, covered by nationwide media, raised an incredible $170,000 in two days. Jared not only lived to see Elise born but also enjoyed her first nine months.Jared's blog, initially written to alleviate boredom during rounds of chemotherapy, attracted hundreds of thousands of readers. He used it to challenge the taboos of death and dying with humour and unnerving honesty, and wrote with clinical precision and pragmatism. Jared had the knack of turning conversation stoppers into conversation starters.In his final weeks, Jared put his story together with the help of writer David Williams, primarily so that his baby daughter Elise might one day know her father. This is Jared's story, but it is also a profound meditation on life and death, and everything in between.
  • Joey's Little Monster: Trip to imagination

    William May

    language (, July 15, 2018)
    Joey’s Little Monster is about Joey’s journey to a land of dreams, where imagination lets him build his own world and his own rules. Little Joey is taken to this world with a little monster Dewdrop he finds in his room at night. Together they go on an adventure that every kid will enjoy.An illustrated bedtime story for children.This is a book intended for an audience of children from ages 4-8. The book is filled with wonderful illustrations that portray Joey’s adventures.
  • Grandma Essie's Covered Wagon

    David Williams

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Aug. 10, 1993)
    An account of turn-of-the-century America--as retold by Essie Willams's grandson--recalls Essie's journey across the Midwest in a covered wagon, describing the hardships, tragedies, and joys of pioneer life
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  • The civil war and reconstruction in Florida

    William Davis

    eBook
    The civil war and reconstruction in Florida. 814 Pages.
  • Growing Up White: In the Heart of Memphis

    David May

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 19, 2018)
    This is the story of the enlightenment of one young man who lived through the Civil Rights Movement, who sympathized with it, cheered for it even, loved the music of it; but who didn’t do anything significant about it. It will take you from WW2 to Viet Nam, from the murder of Emmet Till to the integration of Little Rock Central High School and from a Black Boy Scout Camp to James Meredith’s admission to Ole Miss. It tells of our adoption of an eleven-year-old Black boy, of the mother who ran away and the church that ran away, of my rescue by a Nigerian man, and of our successful efforts to get Black foster children adopted. In the end it asks what Jesus would do and it suggests the beginning of a solution to our current racial issues.
  • George: The Lost Year

    William Mays

    eBook
    Homer's Odyssey veers off course and crashes into the seamy underworld of the turbulent sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll era of the late 1960s and early 1970s. In this dark comedy George drives a load of marijuana from Austin to Chicago. When he arrives, he is supposed to marry a girl he's never met in order to avert a mob war. He runs afoul of police and a deranged cowboy, discusses the meaning of life with a junkie, and meets three beautiful women and a Cherokee Indian. Meanwhile, his enemy is plotting to kill him at a hippie commune.
  • The Mirrored Heavens

    David J. Williams

    Paperback (Spectra, May 20, 2008)
    In this thrilling debut, David J. Williams delivers a hard-hitting blend of military SF and dystopian cyberpunk, set in a futuristic landscape where hostilities rage from the Eastern and Western hemispheres to the outer ranges of space. In the 22nd century, the first wonder of a brave new world is the Phoenix Space Elevator, designed to give mankind greater access to the frontier beyond Earth. Built by the U.S./Pan-Asian Coalition, the Elevator is also a grand symbol of superpower alliance following a second cold war. And it’s just been destroyed. The South American insurgent group Autumn Rain claims responsibility for the attack, but with suspicions rampant, armies and espionage teams are mobilized across the globe and beyond. Enter Claire Haskell and Jason Marlowe, U.S. counterintelligence agents, and former lovers—though their memories may only be constructs implanted by their spymaster. Forced to set aside the enigma of their past, their agenda is to trust no one. For in a time of shifting loyalties, the enemy could be anyone—from a shadowy assassin working a questionable mission on the dark side of the moon, to a Euro data thief working under deep cover and wooed into a dangerous pact. As the crisis mounts, and the search for Autumn Rain spans both Earth and Moon, the lives of all those involved will converge in one explosive finale—and a startling aftermath that will rewrite everything they’ve ever known—about their mission, their world, and themselves
  • A TIFFY I WILL BE: Life as a Royal Navy Artificer in the Fifties and Sixties

    David Williamson

    language (, Sept. 12, 2016)
    One man’s Memoir of time in the Royal Navy during the late fifties and the sixties as an artificer.Firstly as an apprentice from 1957 to his first ship, HMS Diana, as a UA killick tiff in a PO’s mess thru a submarine depot ship, a frigate in the Far East onto 2 aircraft carriers as a Chief Tiff ”neither sought nor wanted”. Then CinC’s technical staff before leaving in 1972 with 3 years Chief Tiff seniority, 10 years before Falkland’s. A tale of fun, mischief, avoidance, travel and peculiar adventure in a failed attempt to by-pass success.