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21 result(s) for "Photography Juvenile fiction."
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Chicago Tribune Steve Johnson column
In a business partnership begun during the summer, Chicago Tribune Media Group handles ad sales, printing and distribution for the Chicago print edition of The Onion. \"We're trying to take the Onion comedic brand and to translate it into video as we did first on the Web, and to take it to a large audience and to make people smarter as a result,\" says Hannah, the company's CEO and a true believer in the power of satire.
Ms. Joni is a phony!
On picture day at Ella Mentry School, the strange new photographer wants to turn A.J. into a supermodel and the Picture Day Zombie makes an appearance.
The Wisconsin State Journal Doug Moe column
[...] I understand that some of you may have trouble believing that Brett Favre was sincere in expressing a desire to live quietly out of the spotlight. Since that interview five years ago, Favre has been a publicity-seeking missile. [...] America being what is today, people thought Meredith had gone a little goofy -- a la Howard Hughes -- maybe living in a basement, growing six-inch fingernails and wearing Kleenex boxes on his feet.
The Lincoln project
\"Miss Z, a mysterious billionaire and a collector of rare photographs, is sending her four recruits back in time on a mission to capture, for the first time, one of the most important moments in American history-- Abraham Lincoln giving his famous Gettysburg address\"-- Provided by publisher.
The confusion of Laurel Graham
Laurel Graham's all-consuming ambition is to become the most renowned nature photographer and birder in the world. The first step to birding domination is to win the junior nature photographer contest run by prominent Fauna magazine. When Gran takes Laurel out on a birding expedition, the pair hear a mysterious call that even Gran can't identify. They vow to find out what it is together, but then Gran is involved in a horrible car accident. Now Gran is in a coma, her house is being sold, developers are coming in to destroy the nature sanctuary, and Laurel still can't seem to identify the mystery bird.
Right where you left me
When seventeen-year-old Charlotte Lang's father is taken hostage while reporting on the aftermath of an earthquake in Ukraine, Charlotte, a photographer most comfortable observing life, and her mother, a reserved Russian immigrant who expresses caring through pastries, must repair their strained relationship and find a way to rescue Charlotte's dad.
Operation Photobomb
When Monkey finds a camera, Chameleon has fun photobombing all of the other animals but after ruining one picture after another, his jungle friends find a way to stop him.
Through her eyes
Sixteen-year-old Tansy is used to moving every time her mother starts writing a new book, but in the small Texas town where her grandfather grew up, she is lured into the world of a troubled young man whose death sixty years earlier is shrouded in mystery.
Worth a thousand words
\"Ever since a car accident left Tillie Green with lasting painful injuries, she's hidden behind her camera. She watches her family and classmates through the lens, tracking down misplaced items and spotting the small details that tell a much bigger story than people usually see. But she isn't prepared for class clown Jake Hausmann's request: to find his father\"--Dust jacket flap.