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Books with title There is a difference

  • There Is a Difference

    Hans Christian Andersen, Glenn Hascall, Spoken Realms

    Audiobook (Spoken Realms, April 9, 2015)
    A short fable from acclaimed author Hans Christian Andersen. In this memorable tale, Andersen tackles the subject of prejudice by looking at the subject through the eyes of an apple branch that assumes he is superior to the dandelion. This story may be viewed as both great story as well as a powerful object lesson. Narrated by Glenn Hascall.
  • There is a Difference

    Hans Christian Andersen

    language (Scandinavia Publishing House, Aug. 27, 2013)
    The apple branch is very much convinced that there is as much difference between flowers as there is between people. It considers itself to be one of the ”chosen few” who belong to the kingdom of the beautiful. It looks down and despises the plain and common dandelion for its apparent ordinariness, unaware that it, too, is an expression of the same beauty that comes from the Maker. About H.C. Andersen Illustrated Fairy Tales===============================Within the fairy tale treasury that has come into the world's possession, Hans Christian Andersen's tales are among some of the most outstanding. His spellbinding stories present deep moral lessons that span both cultural and generational differences. A thread of optimism weaves its way through Andersen's stories, giving hope and inspiration to all readers. It is in this spirit that the Hans Christian Andersen Fairy Tale Classics are published. We have selected 30 of the most popular tales and handpicked the best illustrators for each of them, taking great care to match the style of the illustrator with the specific story. Each tale talks to the heart through both words and pictures uncovering the very essence of life's values.
  • All the Difference

    Patricia Horvath

    eBook (Etruscan Press, July 24, 2017)
    Patricia Horvath's transformation from a visibly disabled young woman to someone who, abruptly, "passes" for able-bodied, reveals cultural and personal tensions surrounding disability and creates an arc that connects imprisonment to freedom. What transpires is both suffocating and liberating. Horvath's confinement keeps her from being seen, but also cocoons a deeply personal sense of selfhood and relationship.Horvath's lyric account of her experiences with severe scoliosis sings the connective tissue between her physical disability and her powerful interior. She is "poorly put together," her "body leans sharply to the left," she is "brittle-boned, stoop-shouldered, with an "S" shaped spine," her words flame up spirited and true. Wry and breathtakingly poignant, this meditative, inspirational memoir delves into that most invisible, vital structure: identity, whose shaping and disfigurement makes all the difference in our lives.This book will particularly appeal to people interested in disability studies, feminist issues, 1970s popular culture, fairy tales, and survival.Patricia Horvath's stories and essays have been published widely in literary journals including Shenandoah, The Massachusetts Review, New Ohio Review, The Los Angeles Review, and Confrontation. She is the recipient of New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowships in both fiction and literary nonfiction and of Bellevue Literary Review's Goldenberg Prize in Fiction for a story that was accorded a Pushcart Prize Special Mention. She teaches at Framingham State University in Massachusetts.
  • There is a difference

    H. C Andersen

    Hardcover (Word Inc, July 6, 1988)
    "Look, with what singular beauty Providence has invested it," she said. "I will paint it, together with the apple branch, whose beauty all have admired; but this humble flower has received just as much from Heaven in a different way; and, various as they are, both are children of the kingdom of beauty."And the sunbeam kissed the humble flower, and he kissed the blooming apple branch, whose leaves appeared covered with a roseate blush.Is there something about the apple branch that seperates him from the dandelion? Whats with the apple branch and the the other flower? Will this be a battle?, Love or Mystery? Well it's what we find out when we read There Is A Difference.
  • The Difference

    Skylar Jones

    language (, April 28, 2014)
    In a dystopian future, a disease: The Difference, has killed millions of people. America decided that the only way to save their people was to force them to live in underground compounds. Suddenly, The Difference breaks out into the underground compound. The only way to survive is to escape.
  • The Difference

    Sparrow Reed

    eBook (, Aug. 6, 2017)
    A little dragon ponders big questions about life and what it means to exist in a world that sometimes feels overwhelming.