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Books with title Puerto Rico: The Isle of Enchantment

  • Puerto Rico The Island of Enchantment

    Mark Drenth

    Hardcover (Sunnyscene LLC, Feb. 25, 2014)
    Puerto Rico, The Island of Enchantment showcases many of the island's picturesque sites in rich beautiful photography, many being panoramics. This book offers a small glimpse into the island's rich history including modern day Puerto Rico through stunning images and text. Old San Juan, being one of the oldest and most famous destinations in Puerto Rico is presented in a spectacular 3-page panoramic fold-out. Vieques and Culebra are also included in the book, as they are the two most popular offshore islands for visitors and locals alike. Old style art maps of Puerto Rico, Culebra, Vieques and the Caribbean are also included.
  • Puerto Rico: Isle of Enchantment

    Lisa Owings

    Library Binding (Blastoff Reader, Aug. 1, 2013)
    "Developed by literacy experts for students in grades three through seven, this book introduces young readers to the geography and culture of Puerto Rico"--Provided by publisher.
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  • Puerto Rico: The Isle of Enchantment

    Marcia Amidon Lusted

    Library Binding (Powerkids Pr, Aug. 15, 2010)
    Describes the history, ecology, geography, economy, and sights of the Isle of Enchantment, Puerto Rico.
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  • Puerto Rico: The Isle of Enchantment

    Marcia Amidon Lusted

    Paperback (PowerKids Press, Aug. 15, 2010)
    Its time to take readers to the Caribbean, where the beaches are inviting and the tropical environ is unavoidably inspiring. This book, loaded with vibrant photographs and engaging text, shares the natural beauty, captivating wildlife, and exciting history of Puerto Rico.
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  • Puerto Rico: the Island of Enchantment

    C. Mahoney

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 28, 2017)
    Explore the tropical paradise of Puerto Rico in story and pictures. Learn about the musical coqui, El Yunque National Forest, El Morro, the blackberry queen, the flower of the maga tree, the gavana root, San Juan, Christopher Columbus, slavery, plantations, conquerors, democracy, independence, music, and more. Enjoy the beautiful postage stamps and flags and the coat of arms that help to tell the story. Perfect for the teacher who wants to share the history and culture of the Caribbean with their students.And if you want more, then take a look at these books:Stamps from Africa: Exploring with Kids (Book ONE)Stamps from Africa: Exploring with Kids (Book TWO)Stamps from Africa: Exploring with Kids (Book THREE)Stamps from Europe: Exploring with Kids (Book ONE)Stamps from Europe: Exploring with Kids (Book TWO)Stamps from Europe: Exploring with Kids (Book THREE)Children from Around the WorldCoat of Arms - AfricaCoins from Africa (A Book for Kids)Coins from Europe (A Book for Kids)Flags from AfricaFlags of Europe (A Book for Kids)Learning about Africa (A Book for Kids)Puerto Rico: the Island of EnchantmentJournal for Kids (Puerto Rico)Exploring the Caribbean - Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, Trinidad and Tobago (Internet Research Projects for Middle School)
  • Puerto Rico: Isle of Enchantment

    Steve Goldsworthy

    Library Binding (Av2 by Weigl, July 1, 2016)
    Briefly describes Puerto Rico, discussing its history, geography, state emblems and other facts about the state.
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  • Puerto Rico: The Island of Enchantment

    Ruth Bjorklund, Richard Hantula

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square, Aug. 1, 2015)
    Surveys Puerto Rico, describing its history, geography, plants and animals, economy, cities, key industries, and people.
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  • Puerto Rico The Island of Enchantment

    Mark Drenth

    Hardcover (Sunnyscene LLC, March 15, 1617)
    None
  • Puerto Rico: Isle of Enchantment

    Steve Goldsworthy

    Library Binding (Weigl Pub Inc, July 1, 2011)
    Describes the geography, industries, history, government, people, arts, and sports of Puerto Rico.
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  • Isle of Enchantment

    Precious Mckenzie

    Paperback (Rourke Educational Media, Aug. 1, 2015)
    Isle of Enchantment features 96 pages that are filled with a fun storyline, vocabulary, discussion questions, and more to engage transitioning readers and strengthen their comprehension skills. Each World Adventure Chapter Book dives into a specific country, and readers tag along for the adventure as they encounter memorable monuments, places, culture, and history. As the story's characters venture throughout each country, they address topics such as family, friendship, and growing up in a way that the reader can relate to.Great for independent or group reading, each book in the World Adventure Chapter Book series features 96 pages filled with complex sentences and chapters. With minimal illustrations, readers must rely on the descriptive text to understand the setting, the characters, and the plot of each book. Each book contains several detailed episodes, all centered on a single plot that will challenge the reader.
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  • Isle of Enchantment

    Precious Mckenzie

    language (Rourke Educational Media, Nov. 30, 2018)
    Isle of Enchantment features 96 pages that are filled with a fun storyline, vocabulary, discussion questions, and more, to engage transitioning readers and strengthen their comprehension skills. Each World Adventure Chapter Book dives into a specific country, and readers tag along for the adventure as they encounter memorable monuments, places, culture, and history. As the story's characters venture throughout each country, they address topics such as family, friendship, and growing up, in a way that the reader can relate to.Great for independent or group reading, each book in the World Adventure Chapter Book series features 96 pages filled with complex sentences and chapters. With minimal illustrations, readers must rely on the descriptive text to understand the setting, the characters, and the plot of each book. Each book contains several detailed episodes, all centered on a single plot that will challenge the reader.
  • The Island of Enchantment

    Justus Forman, Howard Pyle

    language (Didactic Press, Jan. 14, 2015)
    Evil tidings have their own trick of spreading abroad. You cannot bury them. The news which had come secretly to Venice was known from the Giudecca to Madonna dell'Orto in two hours. Before noon it was in Murano.Young Zuan Gradenigo, making his way on foot from the crowded Merceria into the Piazza di San Marco, ran upon his friend, the young German captain, whom men called Il Lupo—his name was Wölfart—and learned, what almost every other man in the city already knew, how Lewis of Hungary, taking excuse of a merchant ship looted in Venetian waters, was on his way to a second invasion, and had given over the Dalmatian towns to the ban of Bosnia to ravage.The two men were still eagerly discussing the matter and its probable outcome, half an hour later, standing beside one of the gayly painted booths which, at this time—the spring of 1355—were clustered about the foot of the great Campanile, when a servant in the livery of the doge touched young Zuan's arm and, in a low tone, gave him a message.Gradenigo turned back to the German."My uncle wishes to see me at once in the palace," he said. "If you are not pressed, go to my house and wait for me there. I may have important news for you." Then, with a parting wave of the hand, he went quickly across the Piazzetta and under the gateway to the right of St. Mark's.At the head of the great stair two men were awaiting him, and they led him at once through a narrow passage with secret sliding-doors to an inner cabinet of the private apartments of the newly elected doge, his uncle, Giovanni Gradenigo.The doge sat alone in a great carven chair before a table which was littered with papers and with maps and with writing-materials. From a high window at one side colored beams of light slanted down and rested in crimson and blue splashes upon the dark oak of the table and what lay there, and upon the rich velvet of the doge's robe, and upon his peculiar cap of office. He was not a very old man, but he was far from strong. Indeed, even at this time he was slowly wasting away with the disease which carried him off a year later, but as he sat there, bowed before the table, he looked old and very worn and tired. His face had no color at all. It was like a dead man's face—cold and damp.And yet, although he was ill and seemed quite unfit for labors or duties of any sort, he was in reality an unusually keen and shrewd man, capable of unremitting toil. There burned somewhere within the shrunken, pallid body an astonishingly fierce flame of life. He had been elected to office hard upon the Faliero catastrophe partly because his name was one of the very greatest in Venice—two others of his house had worn the cap and ring within the century past—but chiefly because his sympathies were as remote as possible from the liberal views of the poor old man who had preceded him. He was patrician before all else, and fiercely tenacious of patrician rights—fiercely proud of his name and possessions...