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Books published by publisher Trafford

  • Labrador Retriever!: A Day In My Life

    Jeffrey Foss

    Paperback (Trafford, Nov. 12, 2012)
    Book by Foss, Jeffrey
  • Bite-Size Pieces of My Past: Writing your life story in digestible chunks

    Andrea Bargsley Vincent

    Paperback (Trafford, Jan. 7, 2004)
    Bite-Size Pieces of My Past helps you create a cherished keepsake for future generations by breaking down your life into "bite-size" snapshots of events, people, and places.
  • Lady Patriot

    Ted Lange

    Paperback (Trafford, Sept. 16, 2013)
    The inner sanctum of Confederate president Jefferson Davis has been breached. Information is leaking to the enemy. Who is the spy? No one is privy to this information except Jefferson's advisors, and they are beyond repute. Based on a true story, Lady Patriot reveals an intimate look into the prejudices and patriotism of three ladies who lived during the Civil War: Varina Davis, Elizabeth Van Lew, and Mary Bowser. Lady Patriot combines Lange's signature comedy and drama as it peels away traditional stereotypes prevalent in the South during the Confederacy.
  • INCARCERATED DAD. . .: A GANGSTA'S WARNING

    David K. Hudson, Erica I. Roby

    Paperback (Trafford, Oct. 31, 2014)
    I have spent three decades watching young men come in and out of prison. In many instances these youth accept the prison experience as a rite of passage to manhood. They have the idea that being convicted of a felony and sentenced to a correctional facility certifies their street credit and gives them permission to return to society as an honored street soldier. This is a fallacy of a subculture that is destroying generations of African-American families as well as diminishing the foundation of our society. Experiencing prison life and seeing our youths come into the system without any positive male role models to imitate, I am inspired to write the second installment in the Gangsta Rap trilogy and share the untold stories of this subculture - the things you will not hear on inner city streets, in drug houses, in the news, at board meetings, in neighbor-hood barbershops or beauty salons, in school, at church, in college, in the temple, or in the many other places people gather. Understanding that most inner city and rural area youths lack the examples of positive male role models, I've watched the cycle of male-hood continue to perpetuate itself as these young men come into the prison system boasting of fathering several children by different young ladies without any consideration or means for supporting their children. They continue to brag about returning to society and impregnating more unsuspecting girls with the intentions of not accepting the responsibility of traditional fatherhood.
  • Ella Mae and the Great Depression

    B. J. Taylor

    Paperback (Trafford, Aug. 15, 2013)
    This book discusses memoirs from my mother as she grew up and lived before, during, and after the Great Depression. It details some of her experiences. She was from a very poor background educationally and financially, like many people were during those days. It discusses her poor living conditions, her discomforts, and how she lacked any of the conveniences that one has today. It details how hard people had to work at that time and how she persevered to the end-ever, ever struggling to reach her goal of a permanent home. Some of the types of working conditions are described: how difficult it was to get a job that paid enough to live, how hard it was to keep enough food to eat, and how uncomfortable their living conditions were. The homes were poorly built and drafty. It emphasizes the struggle to get rid of lice since they seemed to be everywhere, and just the difficulty to keep warm during winter since there was no central heat or air- conditioning. It discusses her father going to World War I and his war conditions and hazards, such as body lice, gases, death, and not having enough to eat. Then, her husband was drafted into World War II. It touches on the polio epidemic and hospital conditions. It tells how she scrimped and saved unendingly to finally reach her goal of a permanent, warm, and comfortable home. Young people will see a great deal of contrast between living conditions then and now.
  • Pahoe'hoe' And A'a's Beach Day

    Clarice M.S. Strand

    Paperback (Trafford, July 9, 2012)
    Pahoe'hoe' and A'a's Beach Day is an exciting adventure of two unique friends and their great day at the beach. Their adventure begins when they meet a magical reef named Kohola, but little did Pahoe'hoe' and A'a' know that their adventure would turn out
  • Exiles at Home: Jamaican Chronicles

    Dereck C. Sale

    Paperback (Trafford, Oct. 17, 2014)
    Beginning around the middle of the last century when, after centuries of colonization, Jamaica began moving to cut its ties to England, many Jamaicans, especially those of the old establishment, became nervous about the island's future and their place in a newly constituted sovereign state. During two decades following Independence, their fears-real or imagined-were either realized or seemed about to be. In either case, the alternative for them was to leave or prepare to leave the island, with the hope of finding a continuation of their former lives abroad. A generation of them did, some with more difficulty than others, but until they departed Jamaica, they were exiles at home. The five pieces in this book are fictional stories. The first four are set in Jamaica; the fifth, in anticipation of the main theme, is set in England.
  • I'm Ready To Go To My New School

    Rupi K. Sandhu, Gauri Sharma

    Paperback (Trafford, March 2, 2005)
    This story is about a boy, Harman, who with his parents has just emigrated from India. Starting a new school in a new country is full of anxiety for him. He's worried that he will not be able to make new friends. Understanding the concerns of her son, his mother provides comfort and facilitates his preparation for the new school. An extremely valuable book that addresses concerns of the children prior to adjusting in different cultural settings. This dual language (Punjabi-English) book is also a useful tool to aid second language learning.
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  • Flames and Explosions: An Introduction to Teaching Chemistry from Demonstration-Experiments

    Henry A. Bent

    Paperback (Trafford, July 18, 2014)
    Education in chemistry occurs best when the three components of the "Triangle"-an experiment, a description of the experiment, and an explanation of the experiment-are at the same place at the same time. Lectures in a main chemistry building on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays and labs in another building on Tuesdays or Thursdays are not the same experience.
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  • The MisAdventures of Frida

    Derek Morell, Gordon Tobul

    eBook (Trafford, Aug. 24, 2013)
    In her everyday dilemmas a South American spider, Frida shares her old fashion values in facing her fears to do what is right.In Home is where the heart is, Frida is forced on a journey to find a new home and she quickly learns that home is where she is and what she makes of it.
  • Bird from Hell

    Gerald McIsaac

    Paperback (Trafford, Aug. 8, 2012)
    As children, we are captivated by stories of huge fantastical creatures, such as the wooly mammoth and the pterodactyl. The prevailing wisdom is these species are long extinct, but new evidence uncovered by author Gerald McIsaac casts doubt on these widely held assumptions. McIsaac gathered stories from the elders of the First Nation-those who were formerly referred to as Indians, Native Americans, or Aboriginals. First Nation elders provided McIsaac with detailed descriptions of six species long thought to be extinct. These species include the Devil Bird, the Hairy Elephant, the Wilderness Wolf, the Rubber-Faced Bear, the Lake Monster, and Sasquatch. In Bird from Hell, McIsaac separates fact from fiction by comparing eyewitness accounts of these species with scientific opinion concerning their identity. His conclusion is that these huge species are not extinct, but he needs assistance in gathering evidence to substantiate this claim. By following the simple directions provided in Bird from Hell, you can help prove these various species still exist.
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  • Christmas Tails

    Jennifer Miller, Vanessa Knight Simek

    eBook (Trafford, Nov. 18, 2009)
    A delightful story of a needy family of squirrels who are kicked out of their village, because of their tattered clothes and nests. Abandoned and in search of friends to accept them, they travel many roads of rebuilding their lives and befriending a new village of friends. Thus the story begins! Their enemies never far away. One in particular, the evil witch of the forest! Hunted, made fun of because of their being poor, and searching for food in the winter months, their faith and love of one another keeps them strong and their survival skills are sharpened with the determination that they will fight the evil forces of their enemies.This is a book of encouragement and lessons to be learned for all . A book of strength, encouragement and loyalities. A precious story that being poor, is just as special as being rich! Famiies sticking together, helping one another and forming a deep bond that only strengthens their chances to survive!