Browse all books

Books with author Ron Dias

  • Walt Disney's Cinderella

    RH Disney, Ron Dias

    Hardcover (Golden/Disney, Aug. 23, 2005)
    The most beloved princess movie of all time—Disney's Cinderella—is retold in the classic Little Golden Book format. It's perfect for Disney Princess fans ages 2-5, and available just in time for the movie's Diamond Edition DVD and Blu-ray release in fall 2012.
    T
  • Walt Disney's Mickey's Christmas Carol

    Ron Dias

    Hardcover (Golden Books, Dec. 31, 1999)
    A retelling of Dickens's ghost story with Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and other Disney creations depicting the original characters.
    N
  • Aspeans: The Beginning

    Roy Dias

    language (, April 12, 2014)
    James spent his whole life just trying to be normal, to be accepted, to fit in, and now he finds out that he and his family are freaks. Just having Asperger’s syndrome had been bad enough, but according to what his father told him, he, his brother David, and James himself were all alien hybrids.His father had managed to escape from a military base with this unwelcome information. People with Asperger’s descended from an alien species, so the government wanted to track down, monitor, and sterilize every individual with Asperger’s, keeping them under control. But for this very ambitious plan to work, the government had to guarantee total secrecy, and that had been lost with his father’s escape. Now James and his family were being hunted down like animals. As James tried to make sense of it all, his father continued supplying them with more unwanted information. This alien species had been coming to earth since the dawn of man. They had sent breeders to seed and observers to watch, and there was more: before escaping, his father was able to decipher an alien symbol, and he discovered that on three occasions this alien species had sent one of their own to live among humans to influence their evolution. The outcome of the first visit was Isaac Newton, the outcome of the second visit was Albert Einstein, and the outcome of the third visit was James and David. Would James and his family manage to find safety? Even then, what were they meant to do? And what did it have to do with the future of the human race?
  • Aspeans: The Invasion

    Roy Dias

    language (, May 12, 2015)
    James was surrounded by fear. He and everyone else with Asperger’s had been thrown into a concentration camp, and fear was everywhere. His fellow inmates had no idea what was going on. Innocent victims: that’s what they were. The government had obviously panicked, losing control and giving into external pressures. After they revealed that everyone on the autistic spectrum descended from aliens, they used these camps all over the world, supposedly to protect them, to keep them safe. But in reality, they felt the need to control them. They feared that, when the time came, they would attack the human race. James couldn’t help but feel sorry for them. They didn’t know what was going on, that Earth was going to be invaded by the Nequitians, using his brother’s DNA. He had to escape. Outside these walls were drones set to contain them, but James was going to have to save the world. He had to so he could save his brother.
  • Cinderella

    RH Disney, Ron Dias

    Paperback (RH/Disney, July 23, 2002)
    Disney’s Cinderella is the classic story of a beautiful girl, her evil stepmother and stepsisters, and the fairy godmother who helps her meet the prince of her dreams.
    I
  • Aspeans: The Beginning

    Roy Dias

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 16, 2014)
    James spent his whole life just trying to be normal, to be accepted, to fit in, and now he finds out that he and his family are freaks. Just having Asperger’s syndrome had been bad enough, but according to what his father told him, he, his brother David, and James himself were all alien hybrids. His father had managed to escape from a military base with this unwelcome information. People with Asperger’s descended from an alien species, so the government wanted to track down, monitor, and sterilize every individual with Asperger’s, keeping them under control. But for this very ambitious plan to work, the government had to guarantee total secrecy, and that had been lost with his father’s escape. Now James and his family were being hunted down like animals. As James tried to make sense of it all, his father continued supplying them with more unwanted information. This alien species had been coming to earth since the dawn of man. They had sent breeders to seed and observers to watch, and there was more: before escaping, his father was able to decipher an alien symbol, and he discovered that on three occasions this alien species had sent one of their own to live among humans to influence their evolution. The outcome of the first visit was Isaac Newton, the outcome of the second visit was Albert Einstein, and the outcome of the third visit was James and David. Would James and his family manage to find safety? Even then, what were they meant to do? And what did it have to do with the future of the human race?
  • Aspeans: The Invasion

    Roy Dias

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 13, 2015)
    James was surrounded by fear. He and everyone else with Asperger’s had been thrown into a concentration camp, and fear was everywhere. His fellow inmates had no idea what was going on. Innocent victims: that’s what they were. The government had obviously panicked, losing control and giving into external pressures. After they revealed that everyone on the autistic spectrum descended from aliens, they used these camps all over the world, supposedly to protect them, to keep them safe. But in reality, they felt the need to control them. They feared that, when the time came, they would attack the human race. James couldn’t help but feel sorry for them. They didn’t know what was going on, that Earth was going to be invaded by the Nequitians, using his brother’s DNA. He had to escape. Outside these walls were drones set to contain them, but James was going to have to save the world. He had to so he could save his brother.