The book "Newbery on the Net" hypes children to want to read the Newbery Award winners. The format is consistent for each book selection: introduction, assignment internet resources, questions, learning advice, conclusion, educator notes with additional websites and books. 21 books are listed in this format: Sarah, Plain and Tall; Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry; Julie of the Wolves; A Gathering of Days; Joyful Noise, Poems for Two Voices; Lincoln A Photobiography; Number the Stars; The View from Saturday;From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler; Maniac Magee; Missing May; Island of the Blue Dolphins; Dear Mr. Henshaw; M.C. Higgins the Great; Walk Two Moons; The Hero and the Crown; The Door in the Wall; The Midwife's Apprentice; The Westing Game; Out of the Dust; and Newbery sites. The table of contents gives students a chance to choose, and the selections can then be used as independent study or class study. The questions allow flexibility, creativity, and research.
"A Study in Emerald" is a short story written by British fantasy and graphic novel author Neil Gaiman. The story is a Sherlock Holmes pastiche transferred to the Cthulhu Mythos universe of horror writer H. P. Lovecraft. It won the 2004 Hugo Award for Best Short Story.
The Fourth Edition of this highly successful textbook provides a unique and comprehensive introduction to the study and understanding of human relationships.
With this study of Maori and Chamorro, Sandra Chung and William Ladusaw make a valuable contribution to the growing literature on the formal semantic analysis of non-Indo-European languages. Their ultimate focus is on how the study of these Austronesian languages can illuminate the alternatives for semantic interpretation and their interaction with syntactic structure. Revisiting the analysis of indefiniteness in terms of restricted free variables, they claim that some varieties of indefinites are better analyzed by taking restriction and saturation to be fundamental semantic operations.
Originally published in 1897, this is Durkheim's pioneering attempt to offer a sociological explanation for a phenomenon regarded until then as exclusively psychological and individualistic.