Books tagged: pianist

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Found: 5 results

The Prodigy    by Georgiann Baldino
Price: $2.99 USD. 79700 words. Published on December 23, 2010. .

Aubrey Swann catapults onto the concert stage at age four and soon becomes the world's musical darling. Much later, during his transition to mature artist, Aubrey composes his own survival. How does life history shape the creative process? How does art shape an artist? Baldino explores tough questions from a child's point of view.
Milo the Popcorn Moose    by Lisa Trusiani
Price: $0.99 USD. 200 words. Published on January 26, 2011. .

Milo the Popcorn Moose is delightful to read aloud, sing aloud and shout out loud. Once again, Lisa Trusiani creates vibrant, quirky characters that jump off the page like... popcorn. When Milo is separated from his brother and sister, it is his passion for popcorn -- and a new friendship that see him through.
Is Hanon Necessary?    by Cecilia Roesler
Price: $0.99 USD. 18370 words. Published on September 21, 2011. .

This book is a collection of actual transcripts of some rare interviews of world-class pianists regarding their views on the relevance of separate technical exercises for the piano. This volume features the opinions of the following well-known artists: Abbey Simon, Richard Dowling, and Jon Nakamatsu.
Hummingbird Wars    by Regina Russell
Price: $2.99 USD. 19010 words. Published on November 3, 2011. .

Sometimes fun, sometimes serious, Hummingbird Wars takes you into the lives of people who could be your next door neighbors and friends. Hummingbird Wars is written by an author you can trust to give good story telling without the use of vulgarity. Although there is no cursing in any of Regina Russell's books, there are adult situations that may require the maturity of an older teen.
Saints & Sinners    by Kayla Bain-Vrba
Price: $1.49 USD. 3580 words. Published by Less Than Three Press LLC  on February 1, 2012. .

Ephraim's worst nightmare is a Valentine's Day party for single people, yet he lets his friend Andrew convince him to attend anyway. The party shows some promising eye candy, at least, in the form of a bad boy that Ephraim knows would never think of glancing his way.