Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Series TitleSeries Title
-
Reading LevelReading Level
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersContent TypeItem TypeIs Full-Text AvailableSubjectCountry Of PublicationPublisherSourceTarget AudienceDonorLanguagePlace of PublicationContributorsLocation
Done
Filters
Reset
8
result(s) for
"Stores, Retail Juvenile fiction."
Sort by:
Pirateria : the wonderful plunderful pirate emporium
2012
Illustrations and rhyming text invite the reader to explore a store that provides everything a privateer, mutineer, or buccaneer might want in the way of high-quality pirate gear, from clothing to classes in smuggling molasses.
Active Readership
by
Beth Nettels
,
George Royer
,
William Aspray
in
American studies
,
Anthropology
,
Antisocial behavior
2011
This chapter explores information issues related to the practice of reading. More specifically, the focus is on comics, detailing the transition of the comics reader from the passive consumer to an active participant in shaping both the future of the medium and a participatory reading culture.
The patterns of readership of comics in America since the end of the nineteenth century form a richly textured tapestry. In his bookComic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America,Brad Wright explains: “Few enduring expressions of American popular culture are so instantly recognizable and still so poorly understood as comic
Book Chapter
Buzz Beaker and the growing goo
by
Meister, Cari
,
McGuire, Bill, 1968- ill
,
Meister, Cari. Stone Arch readers. Level 3
in
Science Experiments Juvenile fiction.
,
Stores, Retail Juvenile fiction.
,
Inventors Juvenile fiction.
2011
Buzz takes a job at the toy store, but his experiments start to go a little too far.
The Denver Post Al Lewis column
2005
The indictment can be viewed as either stingy on details or elegant in its simplicity. Each of the 42 counts lists a stock sale [Joe Nacchio] made between January and May 2001 and fits on a single line across the page. There are also about five pages that allege Nacchio was aware of Qwest's downward trajectory at the time of these trades. In June, attorneys representing Nacchio against a Securities and Exchange Commission civil action argued that he was guilty only of being optimistic about his company, or maybe even engaging in a little \"puffery.\" Nacchio was famous for puffery, particularly when it came to questions about his performance and pay. Nacchio's employment contract at Qwest gave him virtually unfettered use of the company jets. Qwest even paid for air travel for his family between New Jersey, where Nacchio kept his home, and Denver, where he worked.
Newsletter
A good home for Max
by
Terada, Junzهo, 1961- author, illustrator
in
Terada, Junzهo, 1961- Translations into English.
,
Mice Juvenile fiction.
,
Soft toys Juvenile fiction.
2014
Tabi, the little mouse who lives in the general store and cares for the toys, wants his friend Max, the blue dog, to find a good home.
Superstore surprise
by
Stilton, Geronimo, author
,
Cerchi, Daria, illustrator
,
Bigarella, Ivan, 1984- illustrator
in
Stilton, Geronimo Juvenile fiction.
,
Stilton, Geronimo
,
Mice Juvenile fiction.
2020
It's the grand opening of Traps new superstore, but nothing is working. The lights won't turn on, the doors won't open, and the loudspeaker is broken. Geronimo must figure out who is trying to sabotage the grand opening.
What I leave behind
by
McGhee, Alison, 1960- author
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Stores (Retail) Juvenile fiction.
,
Fathers and sons Juvenile fiction.
2018
Since his father's suicide, Will, sixteen, has mainly walked, worked at Dollar Only, and tried to replicate his father's cornbread recipe, but the rape of his childhood friend shakes things up.
It's not like I planned it this way
by
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds
,
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds. Alice
in
McKinley, Alice (Fictitious character) Juvenile fiction.
,
Teenage girls Juvenile fiction.
,
Brothers and sisters Juvenile fiction.
2010
In Including Alice, fifteen-year-old Alice finds it hard to adjust to the changes in her life when her father gets married and her brother moves to his own apartment. In Alice on her way, Alice is adjusting to her new stepmother, her brother's new apartment, her new boyfriend, and getting a driver's license. In Alice in the know, during the summer before junior year, Alice, while working at the local department store, must deal with a friend being diagnosed with cancer, her brother getting dumped by his girlfriend, and her group of friends who have started taking things to an uncomfortable new level.