Xanthe Fox has faced her first test as a teenage True Witch and survived, but
it's not long before a dangerous new tide of hexes are sparked. As events
become ever more desperate and more people's lives are at stake, Xanthe must
hunt down the source before it is too late...
Thirteen-year-old Phoenix Wainwright is not happy about spending the summer in an old house in the middle of nowhere, especially when he hears that Gravenhunger Manor used to belong to his dead mother, Elvira - a secret which she kept from Phoenix and his father during her lifetime. But this isn't the only secret Elvira had been hiding - something terrible happened at the house during her childhood, something for which she was never able to forgive herself... Phoenix is determined to get to the bottom of the mystery, but as his mother's secret begins to unravel, Phoenix finds himself in grave danger...
Includes reading notes for parents/carers on the inside covers. This work,
presented in a bookbanded format, contains Guided reading cards and teaching
notes.
Two touching, ghostly tales by Harriet Goodwin and Leon Rosselson. In the
first, Joe, struggling to come to terms with his mother's death, finds himself
drawn into a spooky legend that lies deep beneath the water. In the second,
Billy's encounter with a strange girl in a beautiful garden helps to reveal a
long forgotten secret.
Annie, George and Jed are on a school camping trip, and their team hasn't been
doing very well in the activities they've been set. There is one final task -
an orienteering exercise in the nearby woods - and they're determined to win.
But will their differences in opinion hold them back, and what is the howl
they've heard deep in the woods?
This book is about how Ross Goodwin outfitted a Cadillac with a surveillance camera, a GPS unit, a microphone and a clock, all connected to a portable AI-writing-machine designed to input data in real time. He then travelled from New York to New Orleans using this technology to self-generate and print textual data (prose) in response to the journey
Fierce and funny, this memoir in essay and song is full of wonderful tales of art and protest. Leon Rossleson's Where are the Elephants is a rare behind the scenes look at the life and times of one of England's foremost folksingers. This clear-eyed portrait of an activist who never gave up and whose talent, wit, and verve brought the world into finer focus provides a model for a whole new generation of radicals. Fans will love revisiting the lyrics from his hits--and behind the scenes glimpses of the stories and events that inspired his songs, but Rosselson's story of growing from a red diaper baby into a modern troubadour up against the barricades is a tale for the ages.