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Books with author Ian Lewis

  • Kathmandu

    Ian Lewis

    language (, Dec. 28, 2012)
    A novel for young people aged ten and above.Twelve year old Jo and her mother are on the holiday of a lifetime in Nepal. Alone in the middle of nowhere they are attacked by Maoist rebels and left for dead. Injured, Jo is found by villagers, where she is cared for by a family with a daughter her age.There aren’t any secrets in these villages, and it's dangerous for the family to take in a foreigner at a time and in a place where the rebels are at their most powerful. And then it becomes more serious. Most of the Royal Family are assassinated. The new King is weak, and the Maoists become stronger.Against all of this, Jo recovers, becomes for a while a Nepalese villager, and then, with the help of her newly adoptive family, undertakes the epic and dangerous journey to Kathmandu, contact with the outside world, and home.It’s a story, not of super-heroes, but of real lives in difficult times.
  • Welsh Women Series: 4. Gwenllian - Warrior Princess

    Sian Lewis

    Hardcover (Gwasg Carreg Gwalch, Jan. 1, 2011)
    No Gwenllian - Warrior Princess Read a customer review or write one .
  • How to Conquer the Internet

    Ian Lewis

    Paperback (Oxford University Press, Nov. 30, 2000)
    Another "How To" guide, part of the successful series that tells children everything they need to know about the hottest topics in the world today.How to Conquer the Internet is sure-fire guide to becoming a super-surfer on the worldwide web. Internet use, especially in the UK, has grown enormously in the last two years. Finding their way around the ever-growing volume of information on the web is a formidable challenge for children. From thisbook they can learn how to search effectively, how to download free stuff, travel the world on-line, and create their own web site. Using this book as a guide, every child can become a web wizard!As well as writing books about the Internet, Ian Lewis runs a film production company, writes film and TV writes scripts, and directs TV programmes for children and adults.
  • 2 Young 2 Go 4 Boys

    Lewis

    Paperback (Simon Pulse, Aug. 1, 1988)
    Recounts the madcap adventures of Linda Berman before she discovers boys, when she was a determined tomboy and an avowed boy-hater
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  • Word Power Made Easy

    Lewis

    Paperback (Pocket, June 3, 1984)
    Word Power Made Easy [paperback] Lewis [Jun 03, 1984]
  • The MAGICIANS NEPHEW

    Lewis

    Paperback (Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing, Oct. 1, 1969)
    None
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  • Want to Trade Two Brothers for a Cat?

    Lewis

    Paperback (Simon Pulse, March 31, 2008)
    "Oh, no, not in this small apartment," my parents said. You'd think I asked for a baby elephant. If we just got rid of my bratty kid brothers, there would be plenty of room. But just try telling that to my mom! Then Dad decided we could squeeze in one little kitten, so we got Scratchy. She was smarter - and nicer - than my brothers, that's for sure. Unfortunately, she also got into even more trouble than the twins...First, she destroyed Mom's favorite plant, and then she got caught eating right off the dinner table. My parents got so fed up, they decided I had just two weeks to teach Scratchy to behave...or else.
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  • Through The Looking-Glass

    Lewis Lewis

    eBook (Digireads.com, Feb. 13, 2014)
    Thanks to Disney’s classic film, every adult and most children know the story of Alice, who fell down the rabbit hole and ended up in a mystifying world known as Wonderland. In Lewis Carroll’s 1871 sequel, Through the Looking-Glass, Alice returns to a strange world turned upside down, or – in this instance – exactly opposite her own, as she steps through the eponymous mirror and becomes enmeshed in a life-size chess game, where she encounters children’s rhyme characters and queens. Whether or not “life is but a dream,” Alice’s adventures are preposterous, entertaining and full of engaging wit.
  • Alice in Wonderland

    Lewis

    language (, July 22, 2013)
    Alice in Wonderland (Annotated) (Illustrated)This book include Lewis Carroll’s biography and his works. The book begins with a young girl, Alice, bored whilst sat by a river, reading a book with her sister. Everything seems perfectly normal and serene; there could be nothing more in keeping with the bourgeois Victorian world in which Carroll lived. Then Alice catches sight of a small white figure, a rabbit dressed in a waistcoat and holding a pocket watch, murmuring to himself that he is late. Alice runs after the rabbit and follows it into a hole. After falling down into the depths of the earth she finds herself in a corridor full of doors. At the end of the corridor there is a tiny door with a tiny key through which Alice can see a beautiful garden that she is desperate to enter. She then spots a bottle labeled "DRINK ME" (which she does), and begins to shrink until she is large enough to fit through the door.Unfortunately, she has left the key that fits the lock on a table, now well out of her reach. She then finds a cake labeled "EAT ME" (which, again, she does), and is restored to her normal size. Disconcerted by this frustrating series of events, Alice begins to cry and, caught unawares by a change in size not precipitated by food or drink, she shrinks and is washed away in her own tears.This strange beginning leads to a series of progressively "curiouser and curiouser" events, which see Alice baby-sit a pig, take part in a tea party that is held hostage by time (and so never ends), and engage in a game of croquet in which flamingos are used as mallets and hedgehogs as balls. She meets a number of extravagant and incredibly characters--from the Cheshire Cat (whose habit of making enigmatic pronouncements is only matched by his tendency to disappear) to a caterpillar smoking a hookah, and being decidedly contradictory. She also, famously, meets the Queen of Hearts who has a penchant for execution (almost continually proclaiming of those who she does not like, "Off with their heads").
  • All for the Love of That Boy: All for the Love of That Boy

    Lewis

    Paperback (Simon Pulse, Nov. 1, 1989)
    The new school year is filled with surprises for Linda Berman, including a former boyfriend who is interested in a reconciliation
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  • Jace. Saturday Morning

    Lewis

    eBook
    Jace the bat helps the family get ready on Saturday Mornings
  • IT CANT HAPPEN HERE

    LEWIS

    Hardcover (DOUBLEDAY ,DORAN, March 15, 1936)
    A semi-satirical political novel by Sinclair Lewis published in 1935. It features newspaperman Doremus Jessup struggling against the fascist regime of President Berzelius "Buzz" Windrip, who resembles Gerald B. Winrod, the Kansas evangelist whose far-right views earned him the nickname "The Jayhawk Nazi". It serves as a warning that political movements akin to Nazism can come to power in countries such as the United States when people blindly support their leaders.