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Books with author T L Randall

  • Don't Try to Kiss a Lizard

    T.L. Randall

    Paperback (T.L. Randall Books, LLC, Oct. 13, 2011)
    "Don't Try to Kiss a Lizard," by Children's Book Author/Illustrator T.L. Randall is a humorous rhyme suggesting the possible consequences when interacting with lizards and other wild animals. "Don't Try to Kiss a Lizard's" FUN rhymes and illustrations amaze and delight children! Once again, T.L. Randall has produced a children's book successful in entertaining children while encouraging readership. (For children over 3 years of age)
  • I Wish I Were an Emu

    T.L. Randall

    Paperback (T.L. Randall Books, LLC, Oct. 30, 2013)
    "I wish I were an Emu" by Children's Book Author/Illustrator T.L. Randall is a black and white children's book filled with humorous rhymes embracing the uniqueness in all creatures. "I wish I were an Emu's" precious and creatively stylized illustrations amaze and delight children! Once again, T.L. Randall has produced a children's book successful in entertaining children while encouraging readership. (For children over 3 years of age)
  • I.M. Bugged

    T L Randall

    Paperback (T.L. Randall Books, LLC, Sept. 1, 2018)
    Introducing . . . I.M. Bugged! I.M. Bugged (a prehistoric bug) has a bit of an attitude problem! But when I.M. Bugged meets his best friend (an "optimistic" pet rock) and they go on magical time-travel adventures, I.M. Bugged's attitude MIGHT improve! Preschool to early elementary children will be entertained as I.M. Bugged and his best friend travel through time learning about history along the way! (I.M. Bugged "series" planned)
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  • I Wish I Were an Emu

    T.L. Randall

    Paperback (T.L. Randall Books, LLC, Oct. 25, 2013)
    "I wish I were an Emu" by Children's Book Author/Illustrator T.L. Randall is a black and white children's book filled with humorous rhymes embracing the uniqueness in all creatures. "I wish I were an Emu's" precious and creatively stylized illustrations amaze and delight children! Once again, T.L. Randall has produced a children's book successful in entertaining children while encouraging readership. (For children over 3 years of age)
  • Day In The Life Of A Baby Dinosaur - Pbk

    Randall

    Paperback (Troll Communications, Oct. 1, 1996)
    Takes a young duckbill dinosaur through the first year of life highlighted by the frightening encounter with a carnivorous Albertosaurus
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  • The Zeroes: My Misadventures in the Decade Wall Street Went Insane

    Randall Lane

    eBook (Portfolio, Aug. 30, 2011)
    What Liar's Poker was to the 1980s, The Zeroes is to the first decade of the new century: an insider's memoir of a gilded era when Wall Street went insane-and took the rest of us down with it. Randall Lane never set out to become a Wall Street power broker. But during the decade he calls the Zeroes, he started a small magazine company that put him near the white-hot center of the biggest boom in history. Almost by accident, a man who drove a beat-up Subaru and lived in a rented walk-up became the go-to guy for big shots with nine-figure incomes. Lane's saga began with a simple idea: a glossy magazine exclusively for and about traders, which would treat them like rock stars and entice them to splurge on luxury goods. Trader Monthly was an instant hit around the world. Wall Streeters loved the spotlight, and advertisers like Gulfstream, Maybach, and Bulgari loved the marketing opportunity. To accelerate the buzz, Lane's staff threw parties featuring celebrities, premium steaks, cigars, and top-shelf vodka. Nothing was too expensive or too outrageous. Private jets in Napa Valley. Casino nights in London. And $1,000-a- seat boxing matches in New York, where traders from Goldman Sachs and Bear Stearns pounded each other in front of tuxedoed throngs. Before long, Wall Street's rich and powerful trusted Lane as a fellow insider- the guy who could turn an anonymous trader into a cover model and media darling. And the rest of the world sought him out as a way to tap into Wall Street's riches. As he emptied his bank account to help keep his little company afloat, he became a nexus for the absurd. Traders who turned 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina into multimillion-dollar windfalls. John McCain closing out the craps tables during an all-night gambling binge. Pop artist Peter Max hustling hundreds of thousands of dollars by selling traders paint-by-numbers portraits. Al Gore, John Travolta, Moby. Corrupt Caribbean rulers, the mobsters from Goodfellas, the pope. And a retired baseball star turned market guru named Lenny Dykstra, whose rise and fall was a great metaphor for the decade. All played roles in Lane's increasingly surreal world. When the crash of 2008 hit, Lane's company and life savings were destroyed along with the high-flying traders and dealmakers his magazines exalted. But Lane walked away with something more lasting: an incredible true story, told by a skilled writer and reporter who sat squarely in the middle of one of the critical periods in modern financial and cultural history. People will turn to The Zeroes for many years to come, to find out what the era was really like.
  • My Mini Monster: A Little Book for Big Brothers

    Todd Randall

    language (Cedar Park Marketing LLC, Dec. 4, 2015)
    "You should have seen the look on my son's face at the end! He can definitely relate!" -- Stephanie C.Little brothers and little sisters can be hard to deal with. This rhyming and entertaining children's book takes a humorous look at the relationship between a big brother and a little brother and is the perfect lesson for older siblings who are struggling with their own "mini monster" at home. With a twist on the last page sure to surprise and delight, big brothers and big sisters everywhere will fall in love with this short story and be reminded of the need for patience, understanding and love when they are dealing with a frustrating little brother or little sister.Just click that yellow "Add to Cart" button and let this entertaining sibling lesson begin!"Yup, you gotta love your little brother (or sister)...no matter what."
  • The Zeroes: My Misadventures in the Decade Wall Street Went Insane

    Randall Lane

    Hardcover (Portfolio Hardcover, June 29, 2010)
    What Liar's Poker was to the 1980s, The Zeroes is to the first decade of the new century: an insider's memoir of a gilded era when Wall Street went insane-and took the rest of us down with it. Randall Lane never set out to become a Wall Street power broker. But during the decade he calls the Zeroes, he started a small magazine company that put him near the white-hot center of the biggest boom in history. Almost by accident, a man who drove a beat-up Subaru and lived in a rented walk-up became the go-to guy for big shots with nine-figure incomes. Lane's saga began with a simple idea: a glossy magazine exclusively for and about traders, which would treat them like rock stars and entice them to splurge on luxury goods. Trader Monthly was an instant hit around the world. Wall Streeters loved the spotlight, and advertisers like Gulfstream, Maybach, and Bulgari loved the marketing opportunity. To accelerate the buzz, Lane's staff threw parties featuring celebrities, premium steaks, cigars, and top-shelf vodka. Nothing was too expensive or too outrageous. Private jets in Napa Valley. Casino nights in London. And $1,000-a- seat boxing matches in New York, where traders from Goldman Sachs and Bear Stearns pounded each other in front of tuxedoed throngs. Before long, Wall Street's rich and powerful trusted Lane as a fellow insider-the guy who could turn an anonymous trader into a cover model and media darling. And the rest of the world sought him out as a way to tap into Wall Street's riches. As he emptied his bank account to help keep his little company afloat, he became a nexus for the absurd. Traders who turned 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina into multimillion-dollar windfalls. John McCain closing out the craps tables during an all-night gambling binge. Pop artist Peter Max hustling hundreds of thousands of dollars by selling traders paint-by-numbers portraits. Al Gore, John Travolta, Moby. Corrupt Caribbean rulers, the mobsters from Goodfellas, the pope. And a retired baseball star turned market guru named Lenny Dykstra, whose rise and fall was a great metaphor for the decade. All played roles in Lane's increasingly surreal world. When the crash of 2008 hit, Lane's company and life savings were destroyed along with the high-flying traders and dealmakers his magazines exalted. But Lane walked away with something more lasting: an incredible true story, told by a skilled writer and reporter who sat squarely in the middle of one of the critical periods in modern financial and cultural history. People will turn to The Zeroes for many years to come, to find out what the era was really like.
  • The Zeroes: My Misadventures in the Decade Wall Street Went Insane

    Randall Lane

    Paperback (Portfolio, Aug. 30, 2011)
    "A delicious, salacious recounting of Wall Street's bloated decade . . . marvelously readable." -BusinessWeek Randall lane never set out to become a Wall Street power broker. But during the decade he calls the Zeroes, he started a small magazine company that put him near the white-hot center of the biggest boom in history. Almost by accident, a man who drove a beat-up Subaru and lived in a rented walk-up became the go-to guy for big shots with nine-figure incomes.Lane's saga began with a simple idea: a glossy magazine exclusively for and about traders, which would treat them like rock stars and entice them to splurge on luxury goods. Trader Monthly was an instant hit around the world. To accelerate the buzz, Lane's staff threw parties featuring celebrities, premium steaks, cigars, and top- shelf vodka. Before long, Wall Street's rich and powerful trusted Lane as a fellow insider-the guy who could turn an anonymous trader into a cover model and media darling.When the crash hit, lane's company and life savings were destroyed. But he walked away with something more lasting: an incredible true story.
  • I'll be O.K.

    Randall L Lange

    Hardcover (JoshCo,LLC, March 15, 1997)
    Jessica's dog Josh, a golden retriever with a stomach problem, goes to the animal hospital to be treated by Dr. Rick.
  • Building a Winning High School Basketball Program: The Devil is in the Details

    Randall L Ervin

    Paperback (Independently published, Nov. 1, 2018)
    Basketball is a simple game. There are two teams and one ball. The basketball goes in the basket to score points! Right! The team with the most points wins the game. What's hard about that? Many players, fans and parents believe the only thing important in a basketball game is shooting the ball and scoring points. This book is designed for high school varsity basketball coaches of both genders. The situation every varsity basketball coach faces every school year is comparable to that of the professional gambler. The gambler has to play the cards he/she is dealt. The varsity basketball coach is blessed or cursed with the athletic quality, mental and physical preparedness of his/her high school students. If a coach inherits good, fundamentally well-prepared athletes, the coach may enjoy two or three winning seasons. A varsity coach faced with a majority of players with bad habits and bad attitudes will have to suffer through an unpleasant season. This book is written for the purpose of reminding all high school varsity basketball coaches that a coach is first and foremost a teacher. The Coach has to teach the game of basketball during practice. The Coach has to coach strategy during a basketball game.Sometimes a radio or television announcer will praise a player in a basketball game as a "coach on the floor." Every player should be a "coach on the floor." Every player should understand the beautiful complexity that occurs with every possession in a game. A varsity coach must teach his/her players that knowledge of the game of basketball requires much much more than shooting the ball at the basket.The fundamental problem every coach encounters in teaching the game of basketball to his/her players is time. A practice session has a limited amount of time and there is always so much that needs to be done to prepare for the next game. This book proposes the varsity basketball coaches of both gender teams create a program to address the problem of coaching upper class students ill-prepared for the game of basketball. A basketball season is but one school year; a basketball program is forever.The details of a program are spelled out step by step in this book. There are two primary aspect to this program. The first is the varsity basketball coach must teach the game of basketball to the players outside of and beyond the limited practice time. The second aspect involves teaching the game of basketball in the lower grades where bad habits begin on the playgrounds, pee-wee games, elementary and middle school games.It's much easier to teach the correct fundamentals and knowledge to young kids than it is to change the bad habits of high school teenagers.
  • Luis Walter Álvarez

    Tina Randall

    Paperback (Raintree, Oct. 11, 2005)
    The famous physicist Luis Walter Alvarez made great advances in a discipline called particle physics. Particle physics is the study of the basic elements of matter, such as atoms. Because of his work on this field, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1968. He received this important world honor for discovering better ways of identifying “subatomic particles,” the invisible elements that constitute the atom. His discoveries also include improvements to devices used to study atoms and the particles that form them, such as the particle accelerator and the bubble chamber.
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