Ernie Follows His Nose
Title | Ernie Follows His Nose PDF eBook |
Author | Constance Allen |
Publisher | Golden Press |
Pages | 10 |
Release | 1990 |
Genre | Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | 9780307123213 |
Ernie discovers some wonderful smells, baking bread, the sea shore, flowers, and cologne, but he holds his nose when he passes by Oscar's pile of junk
Ernie Follows His Nose
Title | Ernie Follows His Nose PDF eBook |
Author | Constance Allen |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Ernie Banks
Title | Ernie Banks PDF eBook |
Author | Phil Rogers |
Publisher | Triumph Books |
Pages | 316 |
Release | 2011-04-01 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1617495131 |
Respected by his baseball peers, beloved by Chicago fans and teammates, Ernie Banks did everything there was to do in the game he loved. Everything, that is, except play in a World Series. How and why that experience eluded him during one season of particular promise—1969—is a key storyline of this fresh look at one of baseball's legendary players. Banks, who had picked cotton outside Dallas as a youth, ascended from a barnstorming semipro team to the major leagues after Kansas City Monarchs manager Buck O'Neil placed him with the Cubs. During his time in Chicago, Banks won two MVPs and received an education far better than the one he received in the segregated schools he'd attended, gaining important life skills while playing the game he was born to play.
Little Bunny Follows His Nose
Title | Little Bunny Follows His Nose PDF eBook |
Author | Katherine Howard |
Publisher | Golden Books |
Pages | 36 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | 9780375826443 |
By scratching and sniffing treated strips disguised as part of the illustrations, the reader experiences the same smells as Little Bunny when he follows his nose through the countryside.
How to Read Nancy
Title | How to Read Nancy PDF eBook |
Author | Paul Karasik |
Publisher | Fantagraphics Books |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 2017-10-31 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 1606993615 |
Everything that you need to know about reading, making, and understanding comics can be found in a single Nancy strip by Ernie Bushmiller from August 8, 1959. Paul Karasik and Mark Newgarden’s groundbreaking work How to Read Nancy ingeniously isolates the separate building blocks of the language of comics through the deconstruction of a single strip. No other book on comics has taken such a simple yet methodical approach to laying bare how the comics medium really works. No other book of any kind has taken a single work by any artist and minutely (and entertainingly) pulled it apart like this. How to Read Nancy is a completely new approach towards deep-reading art. In addition, How to Read Nancy is a thoroughly researched history of how comics are made, from their creation at the drawing board to their ultimate destination at the bookstore. Textbook, art book, monogram, dissection, How to Read Nancy is a game changer in understanding how the “simplest” drawings grab us and never leave. Perfect for students, academics, scholars, and casual fans.
Ernie O'Malley
Title | Ernie O'Malley PDF eBook |
Author | Harry F. Martin |
Publisher | Merrion Press |
Pages | 268 |
Release | 2021-09-24 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1785373927 |
Ernie Pyles War
Title | Ernie Pyles War PDF eBook |
Author | James Tobin |
Publisher | Simon and Schuster |
Pages | 346 |
Release | 1999-01-15 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 068486469X |
When a machine-gun bullet ended the life of war correspondent Ernie Pyle in the final days of World War II, Americans mourned him in the same breath as they mourned Franklin Roosevelt. To millions, the loss of this American folk hero seemed nearly as great as the loss of the wartime president. If the hidden horrors and valor of combat persist at all in the public mind, it is because of those writers who watched it and recorded it in the faith that war is too important to be confined to the private memories of the warriors. Above all these writers, Ernie Pyle towered as a giant. Through his words and his compassion, Americans everywhere gleaned their understanding of what they came to call “The Good War.” Pyle walked a troubled path to fame. Though insecure and anxious, he created a carefree and kindly public image in his popular prewar column—all the while struggling with inner demons and a tortured marriage. War, in fact, offered Pyle an escape hatch from his own personal hell. It also offered him a subject precisely suited to his talent—a shrewd understanding of human nature, an unmatched eye for detail, a profound capacity to identify with the suffering soldiers whom he adopted as his own, and a plain yet poetic style reminiscent of Mark Twain and Will Rogers. These he brought to bear on the Battle of Britain and all the great American campaigns of the war—North Africa, Sicily, Italy, D-Day and Normandy, the liberation of Paris, and finally Okinawa, where he felt compelled to go because of his enormous public stature despite premonitions of death. In this immensely engrossing biography, affectionate yet critical, journalist and historian James Tobin does an Ernie Pyle job on Ernie Pyle, evoking perfectly the life and labors of this strange, frail, bald little man whose love/hate relationship to war mirrors our own. Based on dozens of interviews and copious research in little-known archives, Ernie Pyle's War is a self-effacing tour de force. To read it is to know Ernie Pyle, and most of all, to know his war.