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Books published by publisher Readers Digest

  • Taste of Home: Busy Family Favorites: 363 30-Minute Recipes

    Taste of Home

    Paperback (Readers Digest, June 2, 2011)
    "Hey, Mom. I'm hungry! What do we have to eat?"It's the shout from down the hall that can stress out the time-starved cook. Not to worry. You can save time-and your sanity-with Taste of Home Busy Family Favorites. This collection of 363 family-pleasing recipes will help you stock up on homemade snacks and get a delicious dinner on the table fast. There is also a chapter on breakfast that appeals to hurried households, and appetizers to keep kids quiet while you prepare dinner.Try tempting dishes such as: Tortellini Soup Italian Patty Melts Pork Chops with Apple Dressing Apricot Chicken Drumsticks Best Chicken 'n' Biscuits Fantastic Fish Tacos Potato Wedges Creamed Corn with Bacon Banana Split Shortcake Gingersnap PearsEach recipe features a short ingredient list, simple prep techniques and easy cooking methods. Plus, there are over 200 full-color tempting photos!
  • Dinosaurs

    Paul M. A. Willis, Karen Clarke, Jimmy Chan

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, May 1, 1999)
    Introduces dinosaurs, discussing the different categories, what they looked like, what they ate, how we know about them through the study of fossils, and why they may have become extinct
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  • Dinosaur Skeletons and Other Prehistoric Animals

    Jinny Johnson, Elizabeth Gray, Steve Kirk

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, Sept. 1, 1995)
    Illustrations of prehistoric animal skeletons allow for close examination of skeletal structure
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  • A Home for Little Turtle

    Ariane Chottin, Deborah Kovacs, Pascale Wirth

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, Aug. 1, 1992)
    A little turtle feels uncomfortable with her big, ugly shell, envying the freedom of her friends, until a sympathetic snail points out the advantages of having a portable home and teaches her a lesson in self-acceptance.
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  • Evolvers Fire: Charmander, Charmeleon, Charizard

    David Roe

    Paperback (Readers Digest, July 1, 2000)
    Flip the pages and watch your Pokémon evolve!
  • Journey to the Center of the Earth

    Nicholas Harris, Marc Gave, Gary Hincks

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, April 1, 1999)
    Takes the reader on a 4,000-mile-long-journey through the different layers of the Earth, all the way to its core
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  • Look Out for Ghosts!

    Annette Tison, Talus Taylor

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, Aug. 1, 1992)
    A boy starts seeing ghosts everywhere while he and his sister are playing together
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  • Reader's Digest Condensed Books

    Mary Higgins Clark, Robin Cook, Deborah Smith, Douglas Kennedy

    Hardcover (Reader's Digest, March 15, 1997)
    Reader's Digest Condensed Books, Select Editions authorized condensed editions of: Pretend You Don't See Her by Mary Higgins Clark; The Big Picture by Douglas Kennedy; A Place To Call Home Deborah Smith; Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook, Volume 6, 1997.
  • Mama Loves Me

    Mara Van Fleet, Claudine GĂ©vry

    Board book (Reader's Digest, Dec. 27, 2005)
    In this delightful companion book to Caterpillar Spring, Butterfly Summer, a cute baby elephant shares his admiration for his mom's specialty talents - using her trunk (a colorful cloth-covered spring that runs through the pages) to reach up high, to play hide-and-seek with him, to give him a quick shower, and to cuddle and kiss him at goodnight.
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  • Dinosaurs

    Neil Clark, James Field, Alex Pang

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, June 1, 1995)
    Discusses the origin of the dinosaurs, plant and meat eaters and how they lived, possible causes of their disappearance, and dinosaur discoveries, and provides detailed illustrations of their internal structure.
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  • The Kindness Diaries: One Man's Quest to Ignite Goodwill and Transform Lives Around the World

    Leon Logothetis

    Hardcover (Reader's Digest, Dec. 30, 2014)
    The incredible journey of one man who sets out to circumnavigate the globe on a vintage motorbike fueled by kindness.Follow the inspirational journey of a former stockbroker who leaves his unfulfilling desk job in search of a meaningful life. He sets out from Los Angeles on a vintage motorbike, determined to circumnavigate the globe surviving only on the kindness of strangers. Incredibly, he makes his way across the U.S., through Europe, India, Cambodia, and Vietnam, and finally to Canada and back to the Hollywood sign, by asking strangers for shelter, food, and gas. Again and again, he's won over by the generosity of humanity, from the homeless man who shares his blanket to the poor farmer who helps him with his broken down bike, and the HIV-positive mother who takes him in and feeds him. At each stop, he finds a way to give back to these unsuspecting Good Samaritans in life-changing ways, by rebuilding their homes, paying for their schooling, and leaving behind gifts big and small. The Kindness Diaries will introduce you to a world of adventure, renew your faith in the bonds that connect people, and inspire you to accept and generate kindness in your own life.
  • Killer History: A Gruesome and Grisly Trip Through the Past

    Clive Gifford

    Hardcover (Readers Digest, Feb. 7, 2013)
    A gruesome and grisly trip through the past, Killer History explores the tradition, customs and fascinating stories that pertain to death, including burial customs, weapons, capital punishment and epidemics.Some kids are natural bookworms and others you have to chase down with a book. But every kid, even the ones that scowl when you say “read” will devour this mega mix of history’s grisly stories. From all corners of the globe and dating back to ancient Egypt, this book leaves no tombstone unturned to deliver a glimpse at some of the weirdest traditions, most gruesome methods, craziest causes, and most fascinating facts surrounding death in history. Kids will discover: The ancient Egyptians didn’t mummify and bury their dead alone. Oh, no. They also entombed cats, dogs, hippos, crocodiles, and even beetles with their dearly departed. As queen, Marie-Antoinette lost her head for all the fine things France had to offer, and she delighted in them as the country grew poorer and poorer. When the revolution came, she literally lost her head for her frivolity. The guillotine was used for almost 200 years in France. It was the cutting edge of death technology when it was invented in 1792 and stayed in style until 1977. History’s most surprising murder weapons The top-ten potent poisons The worst epidemics in history
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