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Books with title Flower Power

  • Power

    Robert J. Crane

    language (Ostiagard Press, Aug. 7, 2014)
    Sienna Nealon seems like a woman beaten. Imprisoned by her enemies, facing the extinction of her entire race, she is up against overwhelming odds. But overwhelming odds have never stopped her before. With time running out, Sienna must face her fears, face her foes, and then go up against the single most powerful man in the world - Sovereign - in order to save her world from complete and total destruction.
  • Flower Power!

    Courtney Carbone, Dan Schoening

    Hardcover (Golden Books, Jan. 7, 2014)
    Girl—and flower—power! Wonder Woman and Batgirl team up to stop Poison Ivy in their first-ever action-packed Little Golden Book. Girls and boys ages 2 to 5 will love this all-new Little Golden Book featuring the female superheroes of the DC Super Friends.
    H
  • Power

    Aaron Oster, Richard Sashigane

    eBook (, Aug. 25, 2019)
    In a world of titans, where Martial Artists reign supreme, Roy is wholly unremarkable. Without the power to channel the Essence of the world, he is weak and defenseless. Adopted into the Shah clan after his parents' deaths, he is forced to do menial labor day after day, all while enduring the ridicule and physical abuse of his supposed family.Weakness is punishable by death in Buryoku and in the Shah clan, there is no one weaker than Roy. But even the weak can rise up, when pushed to the brink…
  • Flower Power!

    Courtney Carbone, Dan Schoening

    eBook (Golden Books, Jan. 7, 2014)
    Girl—and flower—power! Wonder Woman and Batgirl team up to stop Poison Ivy in their first-ever action-packed Little Golden Book. Girls and boys ages 2 to 5 will love this all-new Little Golden Book featuring the female superheroes of the DC Super Friends.
  • Flower

    Elizabeth Craft, Shea Olsen, Em Eldridge, Harlequin Audio

    Audiobook (Harlequin Audio, Jan. 3, 2017)
    These are the things that I've always wanted: To get the top grades in my class. To make my grandmother proud. And, most of all, proof that I could succeed where the rest of my family has not: a Stanford acceptance letter, early admission. My mother and my sister were obsessed with boys and love and sex. So obsessed that they lost sight of their futures, of what they wanted. And in the end, they lost everything. I'll never let a boy distract me. I promised myself that. But that was before Tate. Before the biggest pop star on the planet took an interest in me. Before private planes and secret dates and lyrics meant for me alone. There's so much I don't know. Like why he left music. Where he goes when we're not together. What dark past he's hiding. But when we kiss, the future feels far away. And now I'm not sure what I want.
  • Flower Girl Power

    Patty Furlington

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Oct. 9, 2018)
    Who says princesses have to be perfect?When Princess Rosie's favorite cousin announces her wedding, she asks Rosie to be her bridesmaid! Suddenly, there's so much to do to prepare. But when gifts start disappearing and the cake is mysteriously destroyed, Rosie suspects someone's trying to sabotage the wedding. Can Rosie figure out what's going on and save the royal wedding?
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  • Flower Power

    Nancy Krulik, John and Wendy

    Paperback (Grosset & Dunlap, Jan. 10, 2008)
    One afternoon Katie overhears Mr. G. say he's cutting off his ponytail and picking up a suit. Mr. G. in a suit? Something strange is going on. Of course, Suzanne thinks she knows exactly what's going on: Mr. G. is looking for another job. The kids in 4A can't let Mr. G. leave! So they devise a plan to make sure he stays for good. But when Katie turns into Mr. G., she discovers that she and her friends may have made their problem even worse . . .
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  • Flower Power

    Carolyn Keene

    language (Aladdin, Oct. 14, 2002)
    It's a blooming mystery! Nancy and her friends agree that the Pink Princess daisies they've grown from seed are the prettiest flowers ever. They're sure to win a prize at the spring flower show. But shortly before the event, the daisies disappear! Snobby fourth-grader Viola Van Hall told the girls that her flowers were going to take first prize. Classmate Orson Wong wanted the daisies for a horrible science experiment. Belle Bridges sprinkles flower petals all over her salads -- she might have eaten the daisies. Have the girls lost the chance to win the contest, or is the answer to the mystery right under their noses?
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  • Power

    Robert J. Crane

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 5, 2014)
    Sienna Nealon seems like a woman beaten. Imprisoned by her enemies, facing the extinction of her entire race, she is up against overwhelming odds. But overwhelming odds have never stopped her before. In the final volume of the epic Girl in the Box Series, Sienna Nealon must face her fears, face her foes, and then go up against the single most powerful man in the world - Sovereign - in order to save her world from complete and total destruction.
  • Power

    Joe Craig

    language (Open Road Media Teen & Tween, March 24, 2015)
    Some people will do anything for power—and Jimmy will do anything to stop them Jimmy is ready to tell the world the truth—about the government, his role in the bombing, and his own genetic alteration. But it may be too much knowledge for people to handle. Still, his country is under attack, his body is poisoned, and time is running out. Jimmy needs to fight back with all the assassin skills he has without becoming the killer he was trained to be. With the clock ticking, he discovers that some people will do anything for power. And to stop them, he will have to use some power of his own—even if it turns him into a killer once and for all.
  • Flower Power

    Irene Trimble, The Thompson Brothers

    Hardcover (Greenbrier International, Inc., March 15, 2006)
    a love-filled hard-back book -- vintage -- closer to the time of 'flower-power' Hippy Years --- bright colors and precious themes fill the book --- no star-ship wars in this one -- all tender and sweet, bedtime story of the sweetest kind.
  • Flower

    Shea Olsen, Elizabeth Craft

    language (Harlequin Teen, Jan. 3, 2017)
    These are the things that I’ve always wanted:To get the top grades in my class.To make my grandmother proud.And most of all, proof that I could succeed where the rest of my family had not: a Stanford acceptance letter, early admission.My mother and my sister were obsessed with boys and love and sex. So obsessed that they lost sight of their futures, of what they wanted. And in the end, they lost everything.I’ll never let a boy distract me. I promised myself that.But that was before Tate.Before the biggest pop star on the planet took an interest in me.Before private planes and secret dates and lyrics meant for me alone.There’s so much I don’t know. Like why he left music. Where he goes when we’re not together. What dark past he’s hiding. But when we kiss, the future feels far away. And now…I’m not sure what I want.