Browse all books

Books with title Enchanted Flute, The

  • The Enchanted Wood

    Enid Blyton

    Hardcover (Egmont Childrens Books, Oct. 31, 1990)
    Jo, Bessie and Fanny move to the country and find an enchanted wood right on their doorstep. In the wood stands the magic Faraway Tree where the Saucepan Man, Moon-Face and Silky the Elf live. Together, they visit the strange lands which lie at the top of the tree.
  • The Enchanted Barn

    Grace Livingston Hill

    eBook (Musaicum Books, Dec. 18, 2019)
    After the Hollister family is faced to relocate to the country, their eldest daughter Shirley manages to rent an old stone barn from a wealthy landlord. Slowly and gradually with their simple acts of kindness and unconventional living the landlord is won over. But will Shirley manage to save the day at her work? Will she be able to take care of her entire family as the head of the household? Keep Reading?
  • The Enchanted Forest

    Ida Rentoul Outhwaite, Grenbry Outhwaite

    Hardcover (Angus & Robertson, Aug. 1, 1985)
    Thrown from her horse, Anne awakes in a forest of elves, gobblins, fairies, and dancing bears and is guided by her tame rabbit, Potty
    O
  • The Enchanted Barn

    Grace Livingston Hill

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Dec. 13, 2015)
    Grace Livingston Hill was an American writer during the early 20th century who wrote a prodigious amount of Christian-themed works and romances. Her work still remains popular and widely read today.
  • The Enchanted Egg

    Peggy Burrows, Elizabeth Webbe

    Board book (Rand McNally & Company, Jan. 1, 1956)
    30 page Elf Book Number 577 in the Elf Book series.
  • The Enchanted Pig

    Petre Ispirescu

    Paperback (BestSellers Publishing Academy, July 2, 2020)
    Dear readers! Welcome to the enchanting and ever-magical world of fairy tales. Dive deep into the lore and mystery of a highly renowned Romanian fairy tale written by the 19th century author, Petre Ispirescu.Escape to a world full of fantasy and wonder without boundaries, where imaginations run wild and valuable life lessons are learned.
  • The Enchanted Barn

    Grace Livingston Hill

    eBook (Good Press, Nov. 21, 2019)
    "The Enchanted Barn" by Grace Livingston Hill. Published by Good Press. Good Press publishes a wide range of titles that encompasses every genre. From well-known classics & literary fiction and non-fiction to forgotten−or yet undiscovered gems−of world literature, we issue the books that need to be read. Each Good Press edition has been meticulously edited and formatted to boost readability for all e-readers and devices. Our goal is to produce eBooks that are user-friendly and accessible to everyone in a high-quality digital format.
  • Om the Enchanted

    Mera Malik

    eBook (Sahtva, Oct. 5, 2018)
    Om's life goes from everyday normal to upside down turmoil almost over night. His mom leaves his dad to be with another woman, he has to learn how to live between two homes and he kind of likes a girl. It would all be too much for most kids but Om has a kind of super-power. He uses his vivid imagination to cope instead of escape. In dramatic and descriptive passages Om becomes a space explorer, a secret agent and a top athlete in order to develop courage, strength and understanding. He wants to navigate the world just like everybody else does but he wants to do it with grace, skill, charm and kindness. In a world full of tween angst and confusion, Om keeps a shy but bright light lit in the fog for all those who need to find the safety of shore.
  • Om the Enchanted

    Mera Malik

    Paperback (Sahtva, Oct. 5, 2018)
    Om's life goes from everyday normal to upside down turmoil almost over night. His mom leaves his dad to be with another woman, he has to learn how to live between two homes and he kind of likes a girl. It would all be too much for most kids but Om has a kind of super-power. He uses his vivid imagination to cope instead of escape. In dramatic and descriptive passages Om becomes a space explorer, a secret agent and a top athlete in order to develop courage, strength and understanding. He wants to navigate the world just like everybody else does but he wants to do it with grace, skill, charm and kindness. In a world full of tween angst and confusion, Om keeps a shy but bright light lit in the fog for all those who need to find the safety of shore.
    L
  • The Enchanted Pig

    Alasdair Middleton, Jonathan Dove

    language (Oberon Books, Dec. 9, 2009)
    King Hildebrand is off to war - again. He commands his three daughters not to enter a locked room in the palace. Naturally they do, and in it find the Book of Fate, which announces that two of them will marry handsome Kings, while the third, Flora, must wed a fat pig from the North.Drawing on Romanian and Norwegian folk tales with their origins in the myth of Cupid and Psyche, Alasdair Middleton weaves a fantastic musical story from traditional materials and takes us from palace to pigsty via the darkest corners of the universe in search of Flora's destiny.Funny and tender, miraculous and ridiculous, The Enchanted Pig moves heaven and earth for the sake of love and proves that even the best of men can be pigs. Some of the time. The Enchanted Pig opened at the Young Vic Theatre, London, in December 2006, with music by Jonathan Dove.
  • The Enchanted Coin

    Bob Doerr

    eBook (TotalRecall Publishing, June 4, 2013)
    The Enchanted Coin is a fantasy adventure targeted at Middle Grade readers. Imagine being a fourteen year old again and finding a coin that seems to give off a light of its own. The coin has your name on it, and instructs you to toss it into a fountain next to the Tree of Life. That's what happens in The Enchanted Coin, and what starts my protagonist off on a magical adventure that many young boys and girls would love to have. This book is "G" rated.
  • The Enchanted Barn

    Grace Livingston Hill

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 22, 2014)
    Shirley Hollister pushed back the hair from her hot forehead, pressed her hands wearily over tired eyes, then dropped her fingers again to the typewriter keys, and flew on with the letter she was writing. There was no one else in the inner office where she sat. Mr. Barnard, the senior member of the firm, whose stenographer she was, had stepped into the outer office for a moment with a telegram which he had just received. His absence gave Shirley a moment's respite from that feeling that she must keep strained up to meet his gaze and not let trouble show in her eyes, though a great lump was choking in her throat and the tears stung her hot eyelids and insisted on blurring her vision now and then. But it was only for an instant that she gave way. Her fingers flew on with their work, for this was an important letter, and Mr. Barnard wanted it to go in the next mail. As she wrote, a vision of her mother's white face appeared to her between the lines, the mother weak and white, with tears on her cheeks and that despairing look in her eyes. Mother hadn't been able to get up for a week. It seemed as if the cares of life were getting almost too much for her, and the warm spring days made the little brick house in the narrow street a stifling place to stay. There was only one small window in mother's room, opening against a brick wall, for they had had to rent the front room with its two windows. But, poor as it was, the little brick house had been home; and now they were not to have that long. Notice had been served that they must vacate in four weeks; for the house, in fact, the whole row of houses in which it was situated, had been sold, and was to be pulled down to make way for a big apartment-house that was to be put up.