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Books with title Flowers of the Garden

  • The Land of Flowers

    Thea Stilton

    Hardcover (Scholastic Paperbacks, Oct. 10, 2017)
    Fairies, folklore, and magical creatures await Thea Stilton and the Thea Sisters in every Special Edition adventure!Join Thea Stilton and the Thea Sisters as they travel to help a new magical land! The mice encounter fairies and other strange and fantastical creatures as they work together to solve a mystery to save the realm from peril. It's a fabumouse adventure!
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  • Flower Garden

    Eve Bunting, Kathryn Hewitt

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 13, 2000)
    “An urban African-American girl and her father buy plants, potting soil, and a window box at the supermarket, ride the bus to their apartment, and put together a colorful gift for the child’s mother. Rhyming verse carries the brief story, while wonderful, warm, full-color illustrations present scenes from novel angles, and depict a loving family with a sense of intimacy, sincerity, and joy.”—School Library Journal
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  • The Garden of Three Hundred Flowers

    E. K. Johnston

    language (Disney Hyperion, Nov. 8, 2016)
    Three hundred girls, murdered with his own hands.Three hundred families, grieving in his own desert.And my mother, who still had need of the king.Several years after she drove the demon from the king, the young queen must learn to lead her people while her husband grapples with the aftermath of his actions. But can a kingdom heal after such violence has been inflicted upon it? And can love ever grow from that hard earth? #1 New York Times best-selling author E. K. Johnston weaves a lyrical tale that transports readers back to the world of A Thousand Nights and its upcoming companion novel, Spindle.
  • The Land of Flowers

    Thea Stilton

    language (Scholastic Paperbacks, Oct. 10, 2017)
    Join Thea Stilton and the Thea Sisters as they travel to help a new magical land! The mice encounter fairies and other strange and fantastical creatures as they work together to solve a mystery to save the realm from peril. It's a fabumouse adventure!
    S
  • Flower Fairies of the Garden

    Cicely Mary Barker

    Hardcover (Warne, May 1, 1991)
    Twenty-four illustrated poems depict the fairies who live in the garden among the crocuses, snapdragons, and other flowers.
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  • The Flowers of Evil

    Charles Baudelaire,

    eBook (Heritage Books, Aug. 30, 2019)
    Les Fleurs du mal is a volume of French poetry by Charles Baudelaire. First published in 1857, it was important in the symbolist and modernist movements. The poems deal with themes relating to decadence and eroticism.
  • Flower Fairies of the Garden

    Cicely Mary Barker

    Hardcover (Warne, March 13, 2008)
    First published in the 1920s, Cicely Mary Barker’s original Flower Fairies books have been loved for generations. Like the pre-Raphaelite painters whom she so admired, Barker believed in re-creating the beauty of nature in art and drawing from life. Her Flower Fairies watercolors have a unique combination of naturalism and fantasy that no imitators have matched. Now newly rejacketed in the style of bestseller Fairyopolis, this new edition makes a perfect gift for a new generation of Flower Fairy fans. The book features poems and full-color illustrations of over 20 flowers and their guardian fairies.
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  • Flower Garden

    Eve Bunting, Kathryn Hewitt

    eBook (HMH Books for Young Readers, April 28, 2015)
    “An urban African-American girl and her father buy plants, potting soil, and a window box at the supermarket, ride the bus to their apartment, and put together a colorful gift for the child’s mother. Rhyming verse carries the brief story, while wonderful, warm, full-color illustrations present scenes from novel angles, and depict a loving family with a sense of intimacy, sincerity, and joy.”—School Library Journal
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  • The Garden of God

    Henry De Vere Stacpoole

    eBook (e-artnow, July 8, 2019)
    The Garden of God is a sequel to novel The Blue Lagoon and it picks up precisely where it left off, with Arthur Lestrange in the ship Raratonga discovering his son Dicky and niece Emmeline with their own child, lying in their fishing boat which has drifted out to sea. It turns out that Dicky and Emmeline died and the child is drowsy but alive and is picked up by the sailors. Arthur has a dream-vision of the pair; they ask him to come to Palm Tree, the island where they lived, and promise he will see them again. Arthur takes the child, which gets the nickname Dick M, and takes his ship to Palm Tree, where he plans to stay with Dick M and Kearney, a volunteer from the crew who grows fond of Dick. The rest of the crew leave with a promise to return the next year, but they get swallowed up in a storm out at sea, and the trio stays stuck on the island.
  • The Flowers of Evil

    Charles Baudelaire

    eBook (, Sept. 15, 2020)
    The Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire
  • Flower Garden

    Eve Bunting, Kathryn Hewitt

    Hardcover (HMH Books for Young Readers, April 29, 1994)
    “An urban African-American girl and her father buy plants, potting soil, and a window box at the supermarket, ride the bus to their apartment, and put together a colorful gift for the child’s mother. Rhyming verse carries the brief story, while wonderful, warm, full-color illustrations present scenes from novel angles, and depict a loving family with a sense of intimacy, sincerity, and joy.”—School Library Journal
    J
  • The Flowers of Evil

    Charles Baudelaire, Marthiel Mathews, Jackson Mathews

    Paperback (New Directions, Oct. 17, 1989)
    In the annals of literature, few single volumes of poetry have achieved the influence and notoriety of The Flowers of Evil (Les Fleurs du Mal) by Charles Baudelaire. Banned and slighted in his lifetime, the book that contains all of Baudelaire's verses has opened up vistas to the imagination and quickened sensibilities of poets everywhere. Yet it is questionable whether a single translator can give adequate voice to Baudelaire's full poetic range. In compiling their classic, bilingual edition of The Flowers of Evil, the late Marthiel and Jackson Mathews chose from the work of forty-one translators to create a collection that is "a commentary on the present state of the art of translation." The Mathews' volume is a poets' homage to Baudelaire as well. Among the contributors are: Robert Fitzgerald, Anthony Hecht, Aldous Huxley, Stanley Kunitz, Robert Lowell, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Karl Shapiro, Allen Tate, Richard Wilbur, Yvon Winters.