Books tagged: portrait

The adult filter is active; content marked as adults-only by the author is not listed.

Full Search
Found: 6 results

We Are All Here And That Is Just How It Is    by Keemo 
Price: $7.99 USD. 9920 words. Published on September 2, 2010. .

50 works of art by Keemo. This book illustrates that the literary world and the art world can peacfully coexist. Keemo's portraits are equal parts painting and words and give unique insight into his subjects, the artist and the world around us. This is a book for the art lover, artwork for the book lover, and in the end each painting and each story is really about each one of us.
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.
Christmas Mystery    by Robert R Anderson
Price: $4.99 USD. 37380 words. Published on February 10, 2011. .

A teen-age girl returns home from school on Christmas vacation to a world of fox-hunts, house parties, murder and mystery.
Micah    by karl addison
Price: $2.99 USD. 30 words. Published on April 23, 2011. .

A 24 page drawn zine based on a drawing by Karl Addison of MIcah.
...so I did    by Giulio Saggin
Price: $3.99 USD. 23800 words. Published on June 22, 2011. .

In 1998 Giulio Saggin hitchhiked all the way around Australia, photographing everyone who gave him a lift and writing about each hitch. His journey lasted eight-and-a-half months and he hitchhiked in excess of 23,000km - over halfway around the world. ...so I did recounts in words and photos his extraordinary journey, and proves that everyone has a story to tell.
My Father's America - Volume Two - The Colonies    by Walter Lorenz
Price: $4.99 USD. 175370 words. Published on November 7, 2011. .

England was ready. Of all the nations in Europe, 17th-century England was most peculiarly suited to succeed in peopling the North American continent. This was a strange turn of events. England had been the very last of the Western powers to show any kind of interest in the world beyond Europe. Yet once they got started, the English were destined to succeed in the most spectacular way.