Explore the African plain on an epic safari with your children and learn about all the amazing animals like lions, leopards, and elephants God has created as you follow Dennis on his safari adventures.
Explore the world we call home with your children and visit places like the Great Barrier Reef, the Serengeti, the Taj Mahal and many other incredible places as you join Dennis on his adventures around the World.
Join Dennis with your children as he travels across the United States on a great adventure. Learn about some of the historic landmarks and great history of this amazing country that many call home and one of the greatest countries in the world.
168 pages of amazing landscapes in acrylic and watercolor. Dennis Roux is a South African artist who practiced as an Architect but has painted his way happily through life. He paints the world as he travels it, observing and capturing it's beauty and light. His architectural work comes through strongly in his incredible sense of perspective. This 168 page book spans 70 years of his work through Africa, Europe, Asia and America.
The DENNIS'DISCIPLES VERSION (of the New Testament) Holy Bible makes reading, studying, teaching, or discipleship more insightful, understandable, and engaging for character-building, practical Christian living, and eventual ministry. It is a "Meaningful Transcription". It is Chronological, Themed, Contextual, Expanded, and Amplified. The DDV NT-Holy Bible is developed on the KJV (King James version) and WEB (World English Bible) translations, and structurally laid out in four progressive learning levels especially for disciples and ministers to keep them nurtured, nourished, maturing, and well-prepared for ministry leadership according to God's foundational plans and purposes for the Church and people of Jesus Christ.
The DENNIS' DISCIPLES VERSION (of the New Testament) Holy Bible makes reading, studying, teaching, or discipleship more insightful, understandable, and engaging for character-building, practical Christian living, and eventual ministry. It is a "Meaningful Transcription". It is Chronological, Themed, Contextual, Expanded, and Amplified. The DDV NT-Holy Bible is developed on the KJV (King James version) and WEB (World English Bible) translations, and structurally laid out in four progressive learning levels especially for disciples and ministers to keep them nurtured, nourished, maturing, and well-prepared for ministry leadership according to God's foundational plans and purposes for the Church and people of Jesus Christ.
This book provides a comprehensive overview of Robertson's life and work. Uncovering the sources of Robertson's inspiration and ideas and the all-important causal relationship between the man and his work, this fascinating account is a must-read for all interested in rediscovering this great economist.
Dennis Kelly is one of the UK's finest contemporary dramatists. This second volume of his work collects together: Our Teacher's a Troll, Orphans, Taking Care of Baby, DNA and The Gods Weep. Also features a foreword by journalist, author and critic, Aleks Sierz."Without doubt, Kelly is one of the most multi-talented British playwrights to emerge in the last decade" - Aleks Sierz (from the foreword)
Dennis loves tennis. This book is an inspiring story about the value of hard work, determination, and perseverance. Dennis loves tennis, can tennis love him too?
This book provides a comprehensive overview of Robertson's life and work. Uncovering the sources of Robertson's inspiration and ideas and the all-important causal relationship between the man and his work, this fascinating account is a must-read for all interested in rediscovering this great economist.
Three classic Dennis Lee titles in one beautiful book This giftable and shareable volume brings together three of Dennis Lee's best-loved collections of poetry--Alligator Pie, Jelly Belly and The Ice Cream Store--spanning three decades of his warm and whimsical rhymes. "You can almost hear the skipping rope slapping the sidewalk," wrote Margaret Laurence of Dennis Lee's timeless poetry collection Alligator Pie. One of the first published illustrated books about Canadian children, and featuring Frank Newfeld's instantly recognizable original illustrations, Alligator Pie has sold more than half a million copies since its publication in 1974. Originally published in 1983, Jelly Belly tickles readers with a mix of humour and traditional Mother Goose charm. The vivid illustrations by Juan Wijngaard (winner of the 1981 Mother Goose Award) reveal wonders as readers follow the characters throughout the book and stumble upon new and fascinating visual treasures. In the kid-pleasing collection The Ice Cream Store, originally published in 1991, Dennis Lee delves into the special and imaginative world of children. David McPhail's gorgeous and appealing watercolour paintings of children and animals portray both the familiar and the fantastic, extending the meaning of the poems and providing a colourful feast for the eye.
In this comprehensive book, the author charts the development and production of one of the most famous fire engine manufacturers in the world. After an introduction that outlines Dennis’s early days of manufacturing bicycles and cars in Guildford, the author describes the initial fire engine design in 1908 which was to establish Dennis as a fire engine maker and the principal supplier to the London Fire Brigade. Technical developments were accompanied by export success to Commonwealth countries where the name Dennis became synonymous with fire engines. After supplying fire-fighting trailer pumps that were used in the Blitz, Dennis production continued to be innovative and varied in the post-war years, and the author explains the development of both the small town and country fire engines as well as larger engines, which were the mainstay of city fire brigades. The author brings the story right up to date with the development of both the Dennis Rapier and Dennis Sabre. The Rapier was considered the ultimate fire engine and both models enjoyed export success until the company ceased independent production in 2007.
Dennis Littrell's True Crime Companion lets the reader snuggle up to reviews of some of the more lurid, sensational and frankly unbelievable books written about how the best laid plans of idiots, degenerates, psychopaths and other criminals can go horribly wrong-or right, depending on your point of view. Littrell highlights the JonBen t Ramsey case, and in case you were in doubt, solves it. He recalls the satanic sexual abuse hysteria of the late 1980s and early 1990s and sets the perception of what happened and why straight as a laser beam. The war on drugs? He's got a take on that. Scott Peterson, Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald and other real live (but incarcerated ) American psychos? Littrell steers the reader to an appreciation of some of the best books on those sickies while making the distinction between "sociopath" and "psychopath" as clear as the DSM-IV can make it. And if that isn't enough Littrell reviews some books that demonstrate beyond a shadow of a doubt that the judicial system itself is in dire need of repair.
Boyhood Days - Book two, is part of a five piece collection of Caribbean Narratives which is revered to some extent, on the actual experiences of the author and a host of other people in his time, and collectively combined to form a single story. In reality, all of the events mentioned in the book and played by its main characters are actually a combination of experiences of the author and other persons, which had sometimes occurred in different places, to different persons (other than the author) and at different time periods, but arrayed together to form one consistent line of occurrences. While the entire activities of the book itself are grounded entirely in Guyana (then British Guiana), the book's main imaginary character, Joshua Williams (called Josh) depicts a life that resonates broadly across our Caribbean culture in the 1960's, and more or less, depicts the generally live-loose nature of our Caribbean people in those times. Those were the times when there were no television sets, no Ipods, no computers, no microwaves, no mobile phones, and no major technological innovations. Those were the times when in despite of the absence of these novelties, people lived more happily, showed more tolerance for each other, demonstrated respect for the elderly, and were never knowingly short of food, as every neighbours pot was always open to the other. Those were the times when a man's word was as good as his handshake, and his promise was as genuine as 24 karat gold. Indeed those were the times when children were playful, yet committed to the tasks bestowed upon them. Those were the days when boys played cricket in the streets and endured the black sage whip fuh cussin, and breaking their neighbours' glass windows. Those were the days when you ketch patwa and houri, strayed whole day, and mercilessly steal from the neighbours fruit trees. Yes, my Caribbean friends, those were the wonderful days that you embrace with nostalgia and craze. Yes, you and I would always remember, our "Boyhood Days".