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Books with author Richard Hack

  • London: 74 Fascinating Facts For Kids

    Richard Hanson

    Paperback (Independently published, April 1, 2019)
    Since the Romans founded London 2,000 years ago, it has grown into one of the largest cities in the world, surviving deadly plagues, the Great Fire of London and dreadful wartime bombings.London is the home of historic buildings dating back hundreds of years. The London Underground is the oldest underground system in the world and the city attracts people from all over the world to see its world-famous landmarks, such as the Tower of London, Buckingham Palace and St. Paul's Cathedral.Richard Hanson's book gives you the fascinating history of London, facts about its important landmarks, and much more in the form of a comprehensive list of 74 facts.We hope that you will be fascinated by the facts about London in our book and that you will be motivated to discover even more about this amazing city.
  • The Prodigal Son

    Richard Rich

    DVD (NEST Family Entertainment, )
    None
  • Paul and Juliana: A Novel

    Richard Hawley

    language (Bancroft Press, Feb. 6, 2012)
    In precisely the same spirit as Abelard and Heloise and Romeo and Juliet, Paul and Juliana are a fresh young couple who embody the near-impossible notion of perfect love. In this elegant, timeless, and lyrical love story, they walk the fine line between forbidden romance and tragic disaster that is the stuff of ageless myths.Mr. Lawrence is a guidance counselor relegated to the mind-numbing task of proctoring standardized tests at his Chicago-area high school, then analyzing the results. Over-educated and over-cultured for his station, Lawrence is emotionally stifled, an island unto himself—until chance circumstance throws him into the lives of two high school students, Paul Berrisford and Juliana Franck.Paul is a sloppy genius who would rather sing and play his guitar on a street corner than take the SATs and have his pick of Ivy League schools. Juliana is a lovely musical prodigy kept under the thumb of her old-fashioned, Viennese-born parents. Through Lawrence’s furtive but well-intentioned design, Paul and Juliana meet one another, then fall in love, almost at first glance.Together, the two are a picture of courtly love brought to modern life. Lawrence’s guidance sessions with them begin to grow into a friendship between the three, and slowly, his own admiration and affection for the couple begins to develop into love. But is he in love with Paul, or with Juliana? Or is he in love with their love?The situation takes an ill-fated turn when Juliana’s parents catch her in a clandestine, prohibited moment with Paul. The couple’s respective parents, concerned about each child’s welfare, forbid them to see one other. Lawrence, like the friar in Romeo and Juliet, is caught in the middle, struggling between emotion and professionalism. At the climax, Paul and Juliana come to a fork in the road, one route that could kill their love—and another that could kill them.Author Richard Hawley revives the classical romance in order to ask age-old questions: Is true adolescent love possible? What is perfect love? And what is perfection? Paul and Juliana leaves the answers up to you, while promising to take you on a magical journey of both personal and epic proportions.
  • I Can Read About the Sun and Other Stars

    Richard Harris

    Paperback (Troll Communications Llc, June 1, 1976)
    The sun is Earth's special star. But there are other stars in our galaxy, too. Brown dwarfs, white dwarfs and constellations put on a show at night, making thesky twinkle.
  • 365 Reasons to Look on the Bright Side: Because Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining

    Richard Happer

    Hardcover (Portico, Sept. 1, 2012)
    365 Reasons to Look on the Bright Side is full to the brim with good fortune arisen out of the flames of history’s biggest and smallest errors, blunders and miscalculations – one for every day of the year, on the day it happened. This brilliantly quirky book demonstrates that while the old adage of ‘Everyone makes mistakes’ may be true, some gaffes are so monumental that they can end up improving life for everyone else (if not for themselves!).365 Reasons to Look on the Bright Side has many magical moments of looking on the bright side of history’s most hopeless moments. Here a few to whet your whistle: Thanking Atilla the Hun for creating Venice, crediting Alexander Graham Bell’s mum’s deafness for inventing the telephone, praising Pope Clement VIII for blessing coffee, realizing that without the bubonic plague Newton may never had invented calculus and believing how one particularly big-boobed woman helped invent the stethoscope.
  • Exploring Science In Your Home Laboratory

    Richard Harbeck

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1963)
    None
  • Song of the Slums

    Richard Harland

    Paperback (Allen & Unwin, Dec. 1, 2014)
    An absorbing tale of fame, changing fortunes, and music, set in an alternative Victorian world, from the striking creator of Worldshaker What if they'd invented rock 'n roll way back in the 19th century? What if it could take over the world and change the course of history? In the slums of Brummingham, the outcast gangs are making a new kind of music, with pounding rhythms and wild guitars. Astor Vance has been trained in refined classical music. But when her life plummets from riches to rags, the only way she can survive is to play the music the slum gangs want. Charismatic Verrol, once her servant, is now her partner in crime—and he could be so much more if only he'd come clean about his mysterious past.
  • I can read about horses

    Richard Harris

    Paperback (Troll Associates, March 15, 1973)
    Discusses horses and the ways man has used them throughout history, from plowing fields and pulling wagons to racing and showing, and describes some common breeds
  • Catriona's Tale

    Richard Harnett

    language (Richard Harnett, Dec. 1, 2014)
    The dreaded Norse pillage Avalon. The goddesses of the Tor reach out across time for a messenger to summon Arthur and his knights. They pull fifteen year-old Katherine (now Catriona), the 25th generation granddaughter of Rhiannon from the twenty first century.Arthur, a small king at the time, resists the summons He threatens Catriona with Excalibur. A small king with a gadfly
  • Women's Suffrage

    Richard Haesly

    Paperback (Greenhaven Press, Oct. 7, 2002)
    Suffragists explain the long struggle to obtain voting rights for women. They reveal how a small group of organizers inspired a national movement that culminated in the passing of the Nineteenth Amendment.
  • Chemistry

    Richard Harwood

    Paperback (Cambridge University Press, July 9, 1998)
    This work provides comprehensive coverage of the GCSE and IGCSE chemistry syllabuses and Scottish Standard Grade. It also covers the chemistry material needed for GCSE balanced science syllabuses.
  • Exploring Science in Your Home Laboratory

    Richard. Harbeck

    Paperback (Scholastic Book Services, March 15, 1965)
    None