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Books with title The Garden Of Eden

  • The Garden

    Gwendolyn Hooks, Shirley Ng-Benitez

    Hardcover (Lee & Low Books, June 5, 2018)
    In this new book in the popular Confetti Kids series, Lily and her friends volunteer to help at the public garden, where they learn that plants need water, sun, and--just like them--time to grow. Five friends from diverse backgrounds learn how to navigate common childhood challenges, new experiences, and the world around them in the realistic and kid-friendly Confetti Kids early chapter books. In this story, Lily still misses having a backyard with flowers and a vegetable garden. Then she remembers the public garden in the neighborhood and tries to convince her friends gardening is fun. Her friends are a little reluctant--it sounds like a lot of waiting and work. But in the end, they enjoy learning what a plant needs to grow, and that patience can sometimes yield something delicious.
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  • At the End of the Garden

    Penny Dolan, Martin Impey

    Paperback (Crabtree Pub Co, March 15, 2008)
    A child observes a scarecrow in the garden in all kinds of weather.
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  • Garden of the Dead

    Allan McCarville

    Paperback (Library and Archives Canada, Sept. 4, 2019)
    Maggie's a quiet easy-going young woman. But when her family is threatened and an evil spirit wants to possess the body of her young brother, she'll do whatever is necessary to protect them - even if it means entering the world of the dead.
  • In the Garden

    Kate Riggs, Monique Felix

    Board book (Creative Editions, Feb. 25, 2020)
    Unfold the flaps of this board book to watch what grows in a garden environment.
    E
  • The Garden of Eatin'

    Rod Merten, Susie Lones

    language (, July 9, 2019)
    The Garden of Eden from the animal's point of view and an alert to environmental change consequences
  • The Garden of Eden Adventure

    E M Wilkie

    eBook (IndieGo Publishing, )
    None
  • The Garden

    Emily Shore

    Paperback (Clean Teen Publishing, Sept. 17, 2019)
    Serenity is willing to do anything to find her sister, the twin Force has raised in the Temple since birth. But when Sky refuses to help, Serenity has no choice but to go to Luc—whose plan is to use Serenity as bait. Together, they embark to Force’s island vacation spot—the Garden, an exotic Museum that displays girls as Flowers. When their plan takes a turn for the worse, Jade, the Garden Director, captures Luc and Serenity. With both their lives in the balance, Serenity has no choice but to bow to Jade, who may be even more ruthless and determined than Luc. Serenity will become the Skeleton Flower. The Jewel by Amy Ewing meets Tricks by Ellen Hopkins in this gritty Young Adult Dystopian that tells of a fear-inducing future where the world of sex trafficking has become a social norm and where woman aren't treated as humans and are no safer than they were than they were in The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.
    Z+
  • The Giant Garden of Oz

    Eric Shanower

    Paperback (Dover Publications, Nov. 18, 2015)
    When Dorothy visits Aunt Em and Uncle Henry's new farm in Oz, all the crops suddenly grow to gigantic, unmanageable proportions. Determined to help her aunt and uncle, Dorothy sets off at once with Toto, her faithful dog, and Billina, the spunky yellow chicken, to get help from the Emerald City. But when her companions mysteriously disappear, Dorothy must travel on alone, meeting old and new friends along the way, in an amazing adventure that takes her across the world and even underground. Forty striking black-and-white pictures illustrate this enchanting addition to the Oz canon by Eric Shanower. Author and artist of five Oz graphic novels, Shanower is an Eisner Award recipient whose additions to the Oz canon are cherished by Emerald City enthusiasts.
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  • War in the Garden of Eden

    Kermit Roosevelt

    language (, May 4, 2015)
    It was at Taranto that we embarked for Mesopotamia. Reinforcements were sent out from England in one of two ways—either all the way round the Cape of Good Hope, or by train through France and Italy down to the desolate little seaport of Taranto, and thence by transport over to Egypt, through the Suez Canal, and on down the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf. The latter method was by far the shorter, but the submarine situation in the Mediterranean was such that convoying troops was a matter of great difficulty. Taranto is an ancient Greek town, situated at the mouth of a landlocked harbor, the entrance to which is a narrow channel, certainly not more than two hundred yards across. The old part of the town is built on a hill, and the alleys and runways winding among the great stone dwellings serve as streets. As is the case with maritime towns, it is along the wharfs that the most interest centres. During one afternoon I wandered through the old town and listened to the fisherfolk singing as they overhauled and mended their nets. Grouped around a stone archway sat six or seven women and girls. They were evidently members of one family—a grandmother, her daughters, and their children. The old woman, wild, dark, and hawk-featured, was blind, and as she knitted she chanted some verses. I could only understand occasional words and phrases, but it was evidently a long epic. At intervals her listeners would break out in comments as they worked, but, like "Othere, the old sea-captain," she "neither paused nor stirred."
  • War In The Garden Of Eden

    Kermit Roosevelt

    language (, Nov. 17, 2014)
    It was at Taranto that we embarked for Mesopotamia. Reinforcements were sent out from England in one of two ways—either all the way round the Cape of Good Hope, or by train through France and Italy down to the desolate little seaport of Taranto, and thence by transport over to Egypt, through the Suez Canal, and on down the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf. The latter method was by far the shorter, but the submarine situation in the Mediterranean was such that convoying troops was a matter of great difficulty. Taranto is an ancient Greek town, situated at the mouth of a landlocked harbor, the entrance to which is a narrow channel, certainly not more than two hundred yards across. The old part of the town is built on a hill, and the alleys and runways winding among the great stone dwellings serve as streets. As is the case with maritime towns, it is along the wharfs that the most interest centres. During one afternoon I wandered through the old town and listened to the fisherfolk singing as they overhauled and mended their nets. Grouped around a stone archway sat six or seven women and girls. They were evidently members of one family—a grandmother, her daughters, and their children. The old woman, wild, dark, and hawk-featured, was blind, and as she knitted she chanted some verses. I could only understand occasional words and phrases, but it was evidently a long epic. At intervals her listeners would break out in comments as they worked, but, like "Othere, the old sea-captain," she "neither paused nor stirred."
  • The Garden

    Carol Matas

    Mass Market Paperback (Simon Pulse, Dec. 1, 1998)
    After leading a group of Jewish refugees to Israel after World War II, sixteen-year-old Ruth joins the Haganah, the Jewish Army, and helps her people fight to keep the land granted to them by the United Nations
    W
  • The Gardens of Easter

    Joan Petersen Tietz

    Paperback (Concordia Publishing, Jan. 4, 2013)
    A favorite for more than four decades, Arch Books captivate children with colorful pictures and creative poems. Each book presents a complete Bible story in a fun-to-read way children ages 5-9 will understand and remember. Gardens of Easter tells the story of Easter as found in Genesis 3:1-15, Mark 14:32-41, John 19:38-41 and John 20:1-18. And in that dark Gethsemane, Our Savior was betrayed. Soldiers came and arrested Him. It had to be that way.
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