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Books with author David Kenneth Mull

  • Nobody Like Toby

    David Kenneth Mull

    Paperback (Royal Fireworks Publishing, March 15, 2014)
    When Charlie's military family is transferred to western Pennsylvania, Toby Brant is the first friend he meets. Not only is he the most interesting teenager in town but Charlie soon knows he has made a friend for life. Toby collects salamanders, catches fish with his bare hands, and knows how to find food for his struggling and dependent family. His quick wits save the friends from tricky, and even dangerous, situations as their escapades become more daring. But as Charlie spends more time with him, the more mysterious Toby becomes. He doesn't attend Charlie's new school, and seems to move around more frequently than Charlie. Everything Toby does is drenched in drama, and it all leads up to one confusing and terrifying moment that uncloaks Toby's mystery. it's a story of friendship, character, tolerance, and survival.
  • Charlie's Rocky Mountain High School

    David Kenneth Mull

    Paperback (Royal Fireworks Publishing, March 15, 2013)
    It was a great year, that year Charlie went to high school in the Denver area. He had a turn at playing football for a legendary coach, and he made very, very good friends with a beautiful cheerleader. He had an extraordinary English teacher and got one of his stories made into a play, which was performed. He made many good friends, but he encountered unexpected problems. The football coach was abusive, and he did not like the English teacher. The cheerleader and her family were loyal to the football coach, while Charlie preferred his English teacher, and divisions grew into wide chasms.
  • The Death of Old Man Hanson

    David Kenneth Mull

    Paperback (Royal Fireworks Pr, Nov. 1, 1994)
    Here is a romp for smart, pre-teen boys with a twinkle in their eyes and harmless, well-planned pranks in their hearts. ** Old Man Hanson is a recluse, but his orchard has some of the best apples around, and he protects them mightily from the neighborhood five who never tire of trying to steal someeven though their attempts are doomed to failure. Getting the apples becomes a duel of wits and the boys form the GOH (Get Old Man Hanson) Club. Plots and counterplots, pranks and counter-pranks propel the humorous story. When Old Man Hanson dies, curiosity leads the storyteller, Sam, and his buddy, Bill, into Hansons house. ** In the midst of their snooping they experience Hansons best prankthey are trapped and must use their wits to escape within a specified time. They do escape, and the reader roars at the mental hijinks they go through. Later, at the reading of Hansons will, his final pranks motivation becomes clear. He was a genius, a rich and lonely man, with only a short time to live. The boys added fun to his last years. The tricks they played were harmless, thought-provoking and humorous, and at no time malicious. To thank them, he bequeaths to them his orchards as a business, his small but fine, personal library, and college tuition for certain studies. To benefit the community and the children, the orchard business is to be self-perpetuating, for as each child turns 18 another neighborhood child is to be chosen by the new adult as his replacement. ** Respect for mental agility bridges the age differential. While enjoying the pranking youngsters problem-solving abilities, Hanson planned to nurture those abilities for their future happiness and for the happiness of other children like them. When they matured, each group of youngsters would respect Hansons genius and purpose and carry it on for the next wave of young, creative thinkers.
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  • Don't Know Much About the Civil War: Everything You Need to Know About America's Greatest Conflict but Never Learned

    Kenneth C. David

    Hardcover (Harper Collins/ Perennial, March 15, 2004)
    By the vastly amusing author of Don't Know Much About History and Don't Know Much About Geography, this fresh look at America's greatest conflict will dispel all those misconceptions you acquired by watching "Gone With the Wind". Davis has a genius for bringing history to life, sorting out the players, the politics and the key events -- Harpers Ferry, Shiloh, Gettysburg, Emancipation, Reconstruction -- in a way that will enlighten even the most dedicated back-of-the-class napper. A brilliant crash course, this book vividly brings to life the people -- from Dred Scott to Abraham Lincoln -- and the everyday details that make up History with a capital H.
  • Pharaoh: Life and Afterlife of a God

    David Kennett

    Hardcover (Walker Childrens, April 1, 2008)
    In Ancient Egypt, the pharaoh is the supreme ruler and overseer of every aspect of life―a living god. From the moment of his coronation, he is busy with the construction of elaborate temples, the conquering of foreign lands, and the creation of beautiful jewelry and art, all of which are done to worship the great Egyptian gods and to expand the pharaoh's eternal legacy. Yet Pharaoh is ever mindful of his eventual journey into the afterlife and his final transformation into a complete god. Through such funerary rites as embalming and organ removal, the pharaoh's soul will move on to paradise, while his body remains on earth in one of his ornately decorated temples. Full of fascinating, little-known details about Ancient Egypt all brought to life by David Kennett's stunning graphic novel-style artwork, Pharaoh shines a jewel-toned light on the lives and afterlives of Seti I and Ramesses II―and the powerful civilizations they built.
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  • The Death of Old Man Hanson

    David Kenneth Mull, Kenneth David Mull

    Hardcover (Royal Fireworks Pr, Sept. 1, 1996)
    None
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  • Pharaoh: Life and Afterlife of a God

    David Kennett

    Hardcover (Walker Childrens, April 1, 2008)
    In Ancient Egypt, the pharaoh is the supreme ruler and overseer of every aspect of life—a living god. From the moment of his coronation, he is busy with the construction of elaborate temples, the conquering of foreign lands, and the creation of beautiful jewelry and art, all of which are done to worship the great Egyptian gods and to expand the pharaoh’s eternal legacy. Yet Pharaoh is ever mindful of his eventual journey into the afterlife and his final transformation into a complete god. Through such funerary rites as embalming and organ removal, the pharaoh’s soul will move on to paradise, while his body remains on earth in one of his ornately decorated temples. Full of fascinating, little-known details about Ancient Egypt all brought to life by David Kennett’s stunning graphic novel-style artwork, Pharaoh shines a jewel-toned light on the lives and afterlives of Seti I and Ramesses II—and the powerful civilizations they built.
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  • Americas Hidden History

    Kenneth Davis

    Hardcover (SMITHSONIAN BOOKS, March 15, 2008)
    Excellent Book
  • Don't Know Much about the 50 States ~ Thirteen Stripes, Fifty Stars, and Hundreds of Amazing Facts About the U.S.A.!

    Kenneth Davis

    Paperback (SCHOLASTIC INC. @, Aug. 16, 2001)
    Book by Davis, Kenneth
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  • Pharaoh: Life and Afterlife of a God

    David Kennett

    Library Binding (Walker Childrens, April 1, 2008)
    In Ancient Egypt, the pharaoh is the supreme ruler and overseer of every aspect of life―a living god. From the moment of his coronation, he is busy with the construction of elaborate temples, the conquering of foreign lands, and the creation of beautiful jewelry and art, all of which are done to worship the great Egyptian gods and to expand the pharaoh's eternal legacy. Yet Pharaoh is ever mindful of his eventual journey into the afterlife and his final transformation into a complete god. Through such funerary rites as embalming and organ removal, the pharaoh's soul will move on to paradise, while his body remains on earth in one of his ornately decorated temples. Full of fascinating, little-known details about Ancient Egypt all brought to life by David Kennett's stunning graphic novel-style artwork, Pharaoh shines a jewel-toned light on the lives and afterlives of Seti I and Ramesses II―and the powerful civilizations they built.
    W
  • Pharaoh: Life and Afterlife of a God

    David Kennett

    Hardcover (Walker Childrens, April 1, 2008)
    In Ancient Egypt, the pharaoh is the supreme ruler and overseer of every aspect of life—a living god. From the moment of his coronation, he is busy with the construction of elaborate temples, the conquering of foreign lands, and the creation of beautiful jewelry and art, all of which are done to worship the great Egyptian gods and to expand the pharaoh’s eternal legacy. Yet Pharaoh is ever mindful of his eventual journey into the afterlife and his final transformation into a complete god. Through such funerary rites as embalming and organ removal, the pharaoh’s soul will move on to paradise, while his body remains on earth in one of his ornately decorated temples. Full of fascinating, little-known details about Ancient Egypt all brought to life by David Kennett’s stunning graphic novel-style artwork, Pharaoh shines a jewel-toned light on the lives and afterlives of Seti I and Ramesses II—and the powerful civilizations they built.
    W