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Books with author Scott Williams

  • The Winter Olympics For Kids

    Willy Scott

    language (Willy Scott, Feb. 4, 2014)
    The Winter Olympics For Kids is a short overview of The Winter Olympic Games. Primarily a picture book, it is appropriate for kids, ages 6 to 12, who are learning to read. It can be a great way, especially with a parent's guidance, for a young reader to learn a little bit about some history, why and where the Games are played and what events take place. Symbols and symbolism are discussed briefly, as well as the simple "heart" or message of the Games - the promotion of world peace and understanding through a friendly sports competition. The book encourages the young reader to dream big while playing in the snow and imagine becoming an Olympian! Targeted for short attention spans, it contains approximately 1250 words (some challenging) and 60 pictures or graphics. This is a really great quick-read primer for kids interested in learning about The Winter Olympic Games!
  • Bunny and Bee Favorite Colors

    Sam Williams

    Board book (Sterling Publishing, Aug. 5, 2014)
    See the colorful world with Bunny and Bee. Look up: there's a bright yellow sunrise and lovely blue skies. Look down: plump orange pumpkins grow in the ground. Brown leaves flutter and fall from the trees. But nicest of all is when gray skies go away—and a rainbow appears over Bunny and Bee.
    L
  • On Island Time: Kayaking the Caribbean

    Scott B. Williams

    Hardcover (University Press of Mississippi, April 11, 2005)
    Tourists visit popular islands of the Caribbean by the planeload. What they don't see from their resort hotels are the hundreds of out-of-the-way, uninhabited islands sprinkled along the West Indies from Florida to South America. This alluring archipelago, strung with beaches accessible only by boat but spaced temptingly close together, led Mississippi adventurer Scott B. Williams to embark upon an open-ended quest to see how far south he could go in a seventeen-foot sea kayak. No one was willing to accompany him. He spent months working his way down the west coast of Florida, through the Bahamas, and on to Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. On Island Time: Kayaking the Caribbean, his narrative of this journey of a lifetime, describes the wonders of discovery as he makes landfall on pristine cays. Relentless headwinds, dangerous surf, countless beaches declared off-limits to trespassing, and aggressive sharks that ram his kayak and snap him out of his musing remind the adventurer that this paradise is far from perfect. Every day of the journey required constant vigilance. With no one to depend on and often no one even knowing where he was for weeks at a time, Williams learned what it means to be self-reliant and to adjust to "island time." With just a simple craft and the few belongings that would fit in it, Williams explores an almost boundless frontier and a powerful natural stretch of the Caribbean rarely, if ever, accessed by the island tourist.Tourists visit popular islands of the Caribbean by the planeload. What they don't see from their resort hotels are the hundreds of out-of-the-way, uninhabited islands sprinkled along the West Indies from Florida to South America. This alluring archipelago, strung with beaches accessible only by boat but spaced temptingly close together, led Mississippi adventurer Scott B. Williams to embark upon an open-ended quest to see how far south he could go in a seventeen-foot sea kayak. No one was willing to accompany him. He spent months working his way down the west coast of Florida, through the Bahamas, and on to Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. On Island Time: Kayaking the Caribbean, his narrative of this journey of a lifetime, describes the wonders of discovery as he makes landfall on pristine cays. Relentless headwinds, dangerous surf, countless beaches declared off-limits to trespassing, and aggressive sharks that ram his kayak and snap him out of his musing remind the adventurer that this paradise is far from perfect. Every day of the journey required constant vigilance. With no one to depend on and often no one even knowing where he was for weeks at a time, Williams learned what it means to be self-reliant and to adjust to "island time." With just a simple craft and the few belongings that would fit in it, Williams explores an almost boundless frontier and a powerful natural stretch of the Caribbean rarely, if ever, accessed by the island tourist.
  • Sharing

    Sam Williams

    Paperback (Rourke Educational Media, Aug. 1, 2012)
    Sharing Is Sometimes Hard For Young Students. This Book Talks About Different Things And Ways You Can Share To Get Along Better With Your Classmates And Friends. Complete K-5 Social Skills Collection. Paired With A Fiction Social Skills Title.
    N
  • Dead Men Don't Order Flake: A Rusty Bore Mystery

    Sue Williams

    eBook (Text Publishing, May 30, 2016)
    On the night Leo Stone returns—notionally from the dead, in reality from the Democratic Republic of the Congo—Cass Tuplin gets a call from Gary Kellett. A call about an actual dead person: Gary’s daughter, killed in a car crash. Gary’s adamant it wasn’t an accident. Cass agrees to investigate. After all, not just Rusty Bore’s only purveyor of fine fast food, Cass is also the closest thing to a private detective within a couple of hundred k’s. The local police (Cass’s son Dean) try to warn her off. It’s true Cass’s status as a celebrated yet non-licensed nobody doesn’t entirely suit Dean. But Dean also believes Gary’s a delusional, grieving father. Is that the case? Or did a young journalist die after asking too many questions? Cass intends to find out. As soon as she’s dealt with some queries raised by the reappearance of Leo Stone. Sue Williams is a science writer and chartered accountant who also holds a PhD in marine biology. She lives in Melbourne with her husband. Her first Cass Tuplin mystery, Murder with the Lot, also published by Text, was shortlisted in the Ned Kelly Awards. ‘There’s a wry, satirical element to much of Williams’ humour…In the grand tradition of cosies, [Cass is] a woman underestimated at your peril…Fun and often charming crime fiction, thanks to its winning super-sleuth heroine.’ Saturday Paper ‘Williams captures small town Victoria with ease and her plot has enough twists and red herrings to keep it interesting. Fans of Murder With The Lot will not be disappointed, and no doubt will be hoping for more of Cass Tuplin. An excellent sequel!’ BookMooch ‘Once again, Williams has created a small-town mystery with big repercussions with the wacky, loveable characters who fill Rusty Bore making a comeback in this novel.’ Weekly Times ‘An enormously enjoyable and pacy novel set in a speck of a country town in rural Victoria, with a plucky amateur sleuth amid a quirky ensemble of townsfolk and family. Quintessentially Australian without being overcooked.’ Abbey’s Bookshop ‘[A] finely wrought and highly amusing crime novel…Williams has created a wonderful new series in the comedy crime genre. Dead Men Don’t Order Flake is a multilayered yarn that mines the rich ore of regional Australia and I can’t wait for the next Cass Tuplin adventure.’ Australian ‘Williams has put together a recipe for madcap adventure the main ingredient an engaging female lead whose nosiness solves the mysteries of her tiny hometown.’ Adelaide Advertiser ‘This book is pure entertainment the author captures the quirky ways of small town Australia perfectly, well, apart from murder that is, we don’t get too many of them in these parts.’ Audiothing ‘Smoothly written with plenty of humour, and some wry observations by Cass, this is an enjoyable, off-beat crime novel with a good cast of characters and a nicely paced storyline.’ Sydney Morning Herald
  • Bunny and Bee Animal Friends

    Sam Williams

    Board book (Sterling Publishing, March 4, 2014)
    All through the forest, spring fills the air, and baby animals are everywhere! Come join Bunny and Bee as they walk through the woods and meet a menagerie of adorable new friends. From playful fox cubs and quacking ducks to chirping birds and splashing frogs, these are the creatures kids know and love best.
    J
  • Brother

    Teleah Scott-Williams

    eBook
    None
  • The Lost Lemuria

    William Scott-Elliot

    Paperback (Independently published, April 15, 2020)
    Lemuria is a 'lost world', much like Atlantis. Helena Blavatsky wrote about it, helping it to become part of the lexicon of the occult. Scott-Elliot takes it further here and presents us with information as to what the Lemurians looked like, their art, religion, origin of language, and their methods of reproducing.
  • A Shroud of Tattered Sails: A Garrison Gage Mystery

    Scott William Carter

    Paperback (Flying Raven Press, Dec. 27, 2015)
    A beached sailboat. A missing man. A distraught woman staggering ashore. There to greet her—Garrison Gage, full-time curmudgeon and part-time private investigator, who quickly finds himself thrust into his familiar role of crusader for the desperate and downtrodden. The woman claims to have no memory, but is she lying? When a body later washes ashore, the mystery deepens and the stakes ratchet up another notch. Dark money and even darker intentions. Violence both threatened and real. The woman may be at the heart of it all, or merely an innocent interloper who chose the wrong boat at the wrong time. Only Gage can discover the truth.
  • The Dragon of the Dolomites

    Scott William Carter

    eBook (Flying Raven Press, April 5, 2011)
    Dragons, glass boys, and multiplying cats . . . From award-winning writer Scott William Carter comes a collection of four spellbinding fantasy tales geared toward younger readers -- and the young at heart. THE DRAGON OF THE DOLOMITES Everyone knows dragons are the vainest of all creatures. And if you're the last dragon? You're the vainest of them all. THE HUMAN ADDICT: A DRAGON'S TALEDragons didn't need to eat but once every full moon, so gluttony was considered the worst of their crimes. The fascinating tale of one dragon's struggle with a rather unusual addiction. SHATTERBOYA short, powerful tale about a woman who finds a glass boy in a recycling transfer station -- and how the few days with him change both of their lives.THE PROBLEM WITH POLLYHow many cats is too many? One? Ten? A thousand? When Nathan Randall awakes one morning to find a strange tortoise shell cat sitting on his dresser, he's soon struggling with the most unusual problem of his life. Praise for Other Works by Scott William Carter:"...touching and impressive...Carter's writing is on target." - Publishers Weekly"...compelling...good choice for reluctant readers..." - School Library Journal
  • The Lost Lemuria

    William Scott-Elliot

    eBook (E-BOOKARAMA, July 8, 2020)
    A theosophist and believer of the Occult, Wlilliam Scott-Elliot gives us in "The Lost Lemuria", first published in 1904, a description of Lemuria, along with what he considers evidence of this.The Theosophists believed they were descendants of the Aryans, and that the Aryans had originally come from Atlantis and Lemuria. Atlantis and Lemuria (also called Mu) were continents in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans that were supposedly destroyed in great catastrophes in prehistoric days and sank beneath the sea. They were said to be highly advanced civilizations, capable of many things not possible in later days.The object of "The Lost Lemuria" is not so much to bring forward startling information about the lost continent of Lemuria and its inhabitants, as to establish by the evidence obtainable from geology and from the study of the relative distribution of living and extinct animals and plants, as well as from the observed processes of physical evolution in the lower kingdoms, the facts stated in The Secret Doctrine and in other works with reference to these now submerged lands.