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$4.29
1. Sitting Ducks
$34.89
2. Born to be Wild ("Sitting Ducks")
$4.83
3. Glass Town: The Secret World of
 
$18.00
4. Divide, The
$9.95
5. Biography - Bedard, Michael (1949-):
 
$3.00
6. Redwork (An Avon Flare Book)
$6.07
7. The Wolf of Gubbio
$8.98
8. Emily
$7.95
9. The Painted Wall and Other Strange
$4.00
10. Stained Glass
$4.48
11. A Darker Magic
$47.40
12. Flieg, Ente, flieg. ( Ab 5 J.).
 
13. Pest of a Guest ("Sitting Ducks"
$25.44
14. Denture Adventure ("Sitting Ducks")
15. The Clay Ladies
 
16. Glass Town
$8.48
17. Painted Devil
 
$0.04
18. Bill Hatches an Egg ("Sitting
 
$3.00
19. The Lightning Bolt
 
$9.95
20. Tinder Box

1. Sitting Ducks
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: 40 Pages (2001-06-25)
list price: US$7.99 -- used & new: US$4.29
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0698118979
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Day after day, brand new ducks roll off a giant assembly line operated by alligators at the Colossal Duck Factory. They are loaded into trucks and taken to Ducktown, where they are fattened up in preparation for their final destination-into the stomachs of alligators. Everything proceeds smoothly, until the day one of the alligators decides to take a wayward duck home. Over time, the alligator grows fond of his future dinner. Can a duck and an alligator really be friends in an alligator-eat-duck world? Find out in this charming and humorous friendship story.

"Funny and poignant."-Children's Literature

"This appealing book with its cast of near-irresistible ducks and only mildly menacing alligators is sure to please young readers. Bedard's sprightly illustrations make the work seem like an animated cartoon between picture book covers."
-Parents' Choice ... Read more

Customer Reviews (14)

5-0 out of 5 stars Closure :)
I'm a big fan of the cartoon, we run it at ION where I work. But one thing I noticed in the show was that even though a "truce" existed between Swampwood & Ducktown in the cartoon, on the rare occasions the ducks would sneak into Swampwood you would see dead ducks hanging in Butcher shops & stuff. This book (even though it came out a decade earlier than the show) explained that Ducktown is just a sham & the gators eat the ducks! It also explains the real reason why ducks can't fly (in the show Bill is always trying to get airborne). The show ended WAY too soon after only two seasons but I wonder if it had gone on longer on if the creators had known they were not going to be renewed if the would have done a final episode of sorts where Aldo tells Bill the awful truth & all the ducks get in shape & fly away?
There were so many episodes baised on the Lithographs that I believe they would have.
So at any rate this book kind of provides a nice closure of sorts for fans of the show. It let's you know how things ended. I loved it. Get it.

5-0 out of 5 stars Great book for adults to read to kids
Great book! We have bought several copies to give as gifts. There's plenty of subtle humor for the adults and kids love the whole thing. We used to take it along on trips and let adult friends spend some time reading it with our daughter. The book works equally well for girls or boys in the 3-6 age range.

5-0 out of 5 stars For the Child in Anyone
I'm, er, 40 something, and my sister is 50 something.I bought it for her and we both enjoyed it (as well as her husband).The primary draw was the wonderful drawings: colorful, bright, and nice style.The ducks and allegators are drawn with very expressive looks (much like the claymation Wallace and Gromit movie series by Ardman Productions).I think a child would be engaged by the pictures and the adult would have an equally enjoyable time looking at the illustrations.Nice job Michael Bedard, wherever you are...

4-0 out of 5 stars No ducks were eaten in the making of this book
Sorta touching story about a crocodile who accidentally befriends a duck.

He didn't mean to befriend the duck, understand. He just wanted to fatten him up. But things happen. You know how it is.

When the duck finds out the truth, he sets off to free all the other ducks from being eaten, and they all escape and live happily ever after. Great illustrations, funny story.

4-0 out of 5 stars Very entertaining
My kids love this book. It was suggested to me by a friend, so I finally got it. And it was totally worth it! ... Read more


2. Born to be Wild ("Sitting Ducks")
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: 32 Pages (2002-11-04)
list price: US$6.30 -- used & new: US$34.89
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0744594928
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Based on the animated series of the cult picture book Sitting Ducks - now on TV! After banging his head in a scooter accident, Waddle the duck shocks his friends when he wakes quacking wildly and unable to speak! Bill believes the bump on his head has caused Waddle to revert to being a wild duck. Ed and Oly decide to hide their socially unacceptable brother in their bathtub, where he can spend the night happily swimming until they come up with a plan. During the night Waddle manages to escape, until Bill spots him perched high on top of a billboard. But how did the back-to-nature boy get up there? Has he regressed so much that he actually flew? And how can Bill get him down again? Following the phenomenal success of Sitting Ducks, this is another cracking comedy adventure based on Michael Bedard's bestselling book and hit TV series. ... Read more


3. Glass Town: The Secret World of the Bront' Children
by Michael Bedard
Library Binding: 40 Pages (1997-09-01)
list price: US$16.00 -- used & new: US$4.83
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0689811853
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This look into the secret world of the Bronte children focuses on their austere daily lives and reveals the rich inner lives that helped three of them grow up to become writers. Sadly, only after they died did the hundreds of tiny books of their adventures come to light. Full color. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

3-0 out of 5 stars This book is not the Brontes' Glasstown stories!
I'm not finding fault with this book per se, but I thought I was getting the Brontes' original Glasstown stories.Instead it's a children's book describing what the Brontes' life must have been like when they werewriting them.A big disappointment! ... Read more


4. Divide, The
by Michael Bedard
 Hardcover: 29 Pages (1997-01-01)
list price: US$18.00 -- used & new: US$18.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1422392171
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
When Willa Cather was a girl, her family moved west to the open prairie of Nebraska, leaving behind a world Willa loved dearly. Gone were the wooded hills and the meadows marbled with sheep. In their place was a flat, empty land, as bare as a strip of sheet iron. Willa felt she had come to the end of things; she felt the land did not want them.

But then spring came, and the silent land stirred to life. Summer followed, long and hot, and Willa roamed free over the open fields on her pony. Slowly she began to explore the hidden delights of this strange new countryside, and to make friends with her fellow settlers on the Divide. By the time autumn came, with its splendid sunlit colors, Willa understood that what she had thought was an ending was really a new beginning.

Michael Bedard and Emily Arnold McCully evoke the spirit of the American West in this lyrical story with delicate, richly hued illustrations. They celebrate, as Willa Cather did in her novels, the wild beauty of the vast prairie she came to love and the sturdy spirit of the pioneers who made it their home. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars The Divide
This is a colorful picture book with great discriptions of the season Willa Cather lived in the plains of the Divide in Nebraska. ... Read more


5. Biography - Bedard, Michael (1949-): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online
by Gale Reference Team
Digital: 13 Pages (2006-01-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B0007SGZFE
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Word count: 3614. ... Read more


6. Redwork (An Avon Flare Book)
by Michael Bedard
 Paperback: Pages (1992-09)
list price: US$3.50 -- used & new: US$3.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0380716127
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Certain that the apartment he and his mother have rented is haunted, Cass discovers that Mr. Magnus, the landlord, who is the object of much fear in the neighborhood, is hiding a dark evil. Reprint. AB. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (5)

5-0 out of 5 stars Redwork is a Superb book!
Redwork is a great book. The story just draws you in. Sometimes, it is as you are part of the story. The story of 2 kids,and an old man, plus some alchemy, turns this book into a never to be forgotten tale!

4-0 out of 5 stars A Must Read
The book I read was "Redwork" written by Michael Bedard. It was about a haunted house that Old Man Ficher created. No one dared to enter that creepy house at the outskirts of the town Gresy Village. It was a lonely by Bob's pumpkin orchard. A lot of creepy noises and creatures come out of the house. Read and find out what happens.
I rate it four stars and definitely recommend it.

4-0 out of 5 stars Redwork is confusing, but worth the read
Redwork tells the tale of Cass, and his friend Maddy, the story is confusing at times, the author often telling of one thing, but never refering back to it, but if you forget about that and just read the book itis worth it, because other then the flaws it is an extremly good book, thatis well worth the read.

5-0 out of 5 stars It's a truly awesome and unique book. It's a "must read".
It's a really awesome book. I had to read it in school, and I liked it so much- I bought it for myself. I've read it 16 times already. Definitely one of the best I've read, it's a must read.

5-0 out of 5 stars Great Book!Best I've Read.
Definetly a must-read.Excellent suspence, while confusing, and mystic.Cass and Maddie discover the unknown life of a Mr. Magnus, who lives in the suite below Cass.He lived in the trenches in WWI.Could Cass be Mr.Magnus in an earlier age?Is Mr. Magnus an Alchemist? Read to find out. ... Read more


7. The Wolf of Gubbio
by Michael Bedard
Hardcover: 23 Pages (2000-10-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$6.07
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0773732500
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
At night we lay in bed and listened to the howl of the wolf on the hill. In sleep, we saw his shadow slink along the moonlit wall as the great beast circled the town.No one in Gubbio is safe from the monstrous wolf that stalks them. The townsfolk, armed with pitchforks, travel in groups and never venture out at night.One day a band of strangers comes to town led by the Poverello, the poor one. People say he understands the language of bird and beast. Even so, when he offers to go into the forest and face the wolf, everyone is certain he will never return.What happens between the wolf and the Poverello as they stand face to face, is a matter of trust and understanding. But for the people of Gubbio, and one boy in particular, it is nothing short of a miracle.Based on one of the legends of St. Francis of Assisi, the story may contain some truth. During repairs to a chapel in Gubbio dedicated to the saint, a large wolf’s skull was found underneath the flagstones. The Afterword recounts this amazing fact and provides historical details on the life of St. Francis of Assisi. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Little one loves the illustrations
The most beautifully illustrated children's book I have yet to experience.My daughter is enthralled.Also, a delightful story.I highly recommend it. ... Read more


8. Emily
by Michael/ Cooney, Barbara (ILT) Bedard
Paperback: Pages (2002-10-01)
-- used & new: US$8.98
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B001E3G1DC
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (10)

5-0 out of 5 stars Love this book!
I gave this book to my daughter-in-law, who is an English teacher.The paintings are beautiful and the story touching.It's not just for children!

5-0 out of 5 stars A fine survey of the poet's inner world comes to life
In a yellow house in Massachusetts lives a woman who hasn't left the house and grounds in nearly twenty years. She hides from strangers - and only a young girl who lives across the street has been able to befriend her. Her name? Emily Dickinson... a fine survey of the poet's inner world comes to life in a lovely picturebook form is supplemented by fine color pictures by Barbara Cooney.

5-0 out of 5 stars Hauntingly Beautiful
I knew nothing about this book when I picked it up for my children.At first reading, I was concerned that it was a ghost story, which might be a little too scary for my three year old.I was delightfully surprised that it is more of a mystery, with a little girl (the narrator) discovering Emily Dickinson in the house across the street.Barbara Cooney's slightly primitive paintings are a wonderful accompaniament to Michael Bedard's text.But it is Emily's own poetry which is the climax of the book.This book would be an excellent accompaniament to any young person's study of Emily Dickinson's poetry.

5-0 out of 5 stars Prose that will change the way a child hears
The beauty's in the telling, and even more in the not-telling: "The road was full of mud and mirrors..." Thanks, Michael Bedard, for not talking down to children, and for an explanation of poetry that any child or adult would be better for hearing. Gorgeous prose without the overblown cloying sentiment of so many children's books.

3-0 out of 5 stars Emily
In this story this little girl is curious about her neighbor and this letter her mother recieved.He say footprints coming from her neighbors house to her door.This neighbor hasn't left her house in 20 years.This lady is Emily.Later in the story they decide to go visit her.They went to play music for her.Emily just wanted spring that is why she asked them to play her music n the letter.The little girl keeps thinking about the mystery of Emily when spring has come.This Emily is Emily Dickinson and she is shut in the house for so long because she is writing poetry.She has the little girls mother come to play music becase it inspires her.This is a very good story and might even be true story.I enjoyed it. ... Read more


9. The Painted Wall and Other Strange Tales (Aesop Accolades (Awards))
Hardcover: 120 Pages (2003-10-28)
list price: US$16.95 -- used & new: US$7.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0887766528
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
At about the time the Grimm Brothers were gathering their famous collection of folk stories and fairy tales in Europe, in China a similar collection of almost five hundred stories had just been compiled by the scholar Pu Sing-ling. Drawing on oral and written sources, he called his collection of the strange and wondrous Strange Tales from a Studio of Leisure.

The fruits of his life’s work become immensely popular with storytellers who performed the stories in teahouses, where rapt audiences would sit for half a day drinking tea and listening to tales of ghosts, fox fairies, and other wonders.

Almost unknown in the West, the stories are given new life in this important work by the masterful Michael Bedard. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Fairy Tales With A Twist
"The Painted Wall and other strange tales" by Michael Bedard is a collection of Pu Songling's 7th century Chinese folk and fairy tales adapted into short stories for a young adult audience. It's tumbler of Grimm's fairy tales with a twist of "Twilight Zone".

Imagine a painting so beautiful that it could become real. Could you walk into such alandscape and interact with its animals and people? Wouldn't it be nice to use a magic pear tree to teach a greedy merchantman a lesson? Or a pair of glass eyes to teach a naughty boy a lesson about stealing? All of these and more await you in "The Painted Wall and other strange tales".

My first experience with a Pu Songling story was the 1987 film "Chinese Ghost Story" starring Leslie Cheung as an inexperienced tax collector who encounters a beautiful woman, an evil tree demon and a wise old monk. The movie was smart, sexy and packed with stunning action sequences. It was great Hong Kong cinema and a fairly close, although cleverly embellished for the big screen, adaptation of Pu Songling's "The Magic Sword". While that is not one of the stories in this collection, there are 23 others to enjoy in this collection.

Bringing Pu Songling's classic stories to a young adult audience isn't easy, even word for word translations of the stories do not have their original subtleties or nuance. Cultural differences are as unavoidable as they are unexplained. The protagonist of every story is male. The villain of every story is either female or a wealthy person. Bedard does accomplish the goal in spite of all this. What really works about this collection is everything else - the originality of the tales themselves, the compactness of the writing, the diversity of the stories, and the rare opportunity to read tales of this kind. ... Read more


10. Stained Glass
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: 312 Pages (2002-09-10)
list price: US$8.95 -- used & new: US$4.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0887766021
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
2
The clock mounted on the face of the organ loft madea muted click as it measured off another minute. Charles glanced up at it – 4:30. It would soon be safe to leave for home.

The inside of the old church was dim. The only light came through the stained glass windows that ran along both sides of the nave. For the first few minutes after you walked in, it felt as if you’d come into a cave walled in colored glass. But as your eyes adjusted to the lower light, the space took shape around you. The ribbed vaulting of the ceiling stole from the shadows. Creatures carved in stone peered down from the pillar tops. Patches of flaking paint appeared on the walls.

St. Bartholomew’s was an old church that had definitely seen better days. It sat in the midst of what had once been a wealthy neighborhood of tree-lined streets and sedate old houses. Most of the trees had now succumbed to age or disease. The lawns had been bricked over, the houses broken into rooming houses. The old Caledon Psychiatric Hospital stood nearby, and outpatients tended to gravitate to the neighborhood. A lot of lost-looking souls walked the streets: people in their private worlds, broken worlds.

Many of the stores along the main street where the church stood had died, or were looking poorly. Some had been boarded up, others turned into makeshift residences with sheets draped over the inside of the plate glass and withered plants languishing on the windowsills.

He had discovered the church one Friday a couple of months back, shortly after he’d started skipping his piano lesson. It had been a March day, and bitterly cold. After wandering the streets aimlessly, he’d stumbled on the place quite by chance. The door was open, and he’d slipped in and spent half an hour sharing the empty church with a handful of homeless people, also escaping the cold. The silence of the place had shocked him. It was as if he’d breached some boundary between worlds.

At the back of the church, as if by way of welcome, there stood a life-sized statue of St. Bartholomew. St. Bart had been one of the original twelve apostles. Tradition had it that he’d been martyred by being flayed alive. The statue depicted him holding the long hooked knife of his martyrdom in one hand, with the slack pelt of his skin draped over the other arm, the way Gran draped her sweater over her arm when she went out for a walk on a summer evening, in case she got cold.

Often there would be one or two other stray souls scattered through the rows of wooden pews, but today the place seemed empty. Even the caretaker, who could normally be seen flitting quietly along the shadowed aisles as he went about his work, had fled into the sun. Charles had seen him perched on a high ladder outside, washing the windows. He could see the shadow of his arm now, moving silently against the glass, like the beating of some great wing.

His book bag lay on the seat beside him. He opened it and pulled out his piano exercise book, turning to the little Bach piece he was supposed to have been practising. It was simply a question of time before they discovered he’d been skipping the lesson. There were bound to be consequences, but somehow it didn’t seem to matter.

Gran had always had a passion for the piano. The ornate old upright had sat in the corner of the dining room for as long as he could remember. One of his first memories was of sitting beside her on the bench while she played. He would bang away on the keys and pretend that he too was playing. She had promised him then that when he was old enough, she would pay for him to take lessons, as his father had taken lessons as a boy.

And so, two years ago, when the bunch of them had moved in with her, she had talked him into going to lessons. But everything had changed by then. He was no longer the little boy banging away on the keys. And though he went dutifully to the lessons and dutifully practised for a long while without complaint, each note cut like a knife, and finally he could do it no more. He knew it would disappoint her, but for his own sake he had to stop.

And so he had simply quit, without bothering to tell anyone he had done it. And now he found himself entangled in a lie, without the courage to extract himself from it, without the words to explain why it had wrenched him apart to play. It was the first really devious thing he’d done in his life, and he still had not recovered from the shock of it. Even now, as the door at the back of the church opened, his heart gave a little flutter and he half expected one of his family to walk in and find him here.

Instead it was a small stooped woman, with a shawl pulled up over her hair. She slipped down the side aisle to the front of the church. A large marble Pietà stood by a side altar there, with a bank of votive candles before it. She rooted through her bag for change, then dropped two coins through the slot of the metal box, touched the taper to a flame, and lit two candles. The taper smoked as she extinguished it, and a thin stream of smoke ascended in the still air. She knelt in the front pew and prayed.

He wondered what she was praying about. He often wondered that about those he saw in the church when he came, for most of them truly were praying, not simply hiding out as he was. Still, he knew that even he was doing more here now than merely hiding out. For some reason he did not fully understand, he was drawn to this old church with its rattling rads and water-stained walls; with its sad-eyed statues and shattered rainbows of light that flecked the floor.

Part of it was the pure strangeness of the place. At the back of the church, tucked in a corner on the wall by the magazine rack, there was an old framed article from the Caledon Daily Examiner on the history of St. Bart’s. He had read there that the church’s first patron, who had donated the parcel of land on which it was built, had willed that on his death his heart be removed and interred in the walls of the church. And so it was done. The heart lay sealed now in a niche in the west wall. Charles had found the stone inscribed in Latin that marked the spot, and had stood there wondering at the strangeness of the heart walled in the stone.

Sometimes he would wander the shadowy aisles, sometimes simply sit in a pew, quietly looking around, while the forty-five minutes of the lesson ticked slowly by. And it was as if he were taking a lesson in silence. He could feel the silence of the place seep into him, in the way the faint smell of incense seeped into his clothes. It seeped into him and woke other silences there.

Once, years ago, after a huge snowstorm had struck Caledon, he and Elizabeth had gone with Emily to toboggan down the steep white hills in the park near their home. It was early on a Sunday morning, and there was no one else around. Theirs had been the first footsteps to break the pure expanse of snow. They were like explorers in a new world. And as they walked side by side through the park, pulling the toboggan along behind them, a hush came over them, and he felt the silence enfold them, tucking them under its great white wing.

There was something of that long-ago snowfall here still in this empty church, as though all the silences in the world were heaped in drifts around him here.


**********


3
George Berkeley did not like heights. His legs felt queer,all cobbled together with wood and wire like a marionette’s, as he clung to the upper rungs of the ladder. He dunked the dirty rag into the pail of soapy water suspended from the ladder and wrung it out, careful not to look down.

He was working his way along the east wall of the church, washing the outside of the stained glass windows. There were six windows in all, dingy with the dust and soot that had settled on them over the years. He had finished the first three and was starting on the fourth. He would do just this one more, he told himself, as he had told himself with each of the others, and that would be it for the day.

He gripped the rung of the ladder with one hand and leaned as far as he dared to reach the far side of the window with the rag. The soapy water ran down the glass and pooled on the sill.

From the outside the window looked lifeless. Dull bits of glass webbed with lead. A stranger passing on the street would not even have known what scene the window depicted. Yet, from within, where the sun’s light shone through, the window woke and was all alive.

This was the St. Francis window, likely the oldest window in Caledon. He suspected that this and the one that faced it across the nave were medieval in origin, though the experts were skeptical that such rare windows could ever have found their way to Caledon. The consensus of opinion was, rather, that they were fine imitations of ancient glass. No less, but certainly no more.

Mr. Berkeley knew better. As a young lad in England in the sixties, he and a group of his friends who were going to art school had apprenticed to the glass craftsmen at Canterbury Cathedral. There was a wealth of ancient glass that had managed to survive the centuries at Canterbury, much of it tucked out of harm’s way in the upper reaches of the cathedral.

Before the outbreak of the Second World War, the dean of the cathedral, sensing what was in the wind, had all the ancient windows removed and buried in the crypt under six feet of sand to keep them safe.

When the war was over, as one by one the windows were uncovered and returned to their places, they were first restored: stripped of the old leads, the glass washed, then the whole releaded. It was to aid in this work that George Berkeley and his fellow apprentices had been engaged. And in the course of it, he had come to know the ancient glass intimately — the look of it, the feel of it, the play of light upon it. There was no doubt in his mind now as he studied closely the lacework of the old leads, the pitting in the outer surface of the glass, that this window was kin to those he had worked on then.

It was at Canterbury, too, that he had acquired his dislike of heights, perched on the narrow parapet, sixty feet off the ground, the heels of his shoes hanging out over the edge while he anchored the ladder for the master to heft a mended panel back into place.

He ran his rag over the intricate mosaic of glass. The window depicted several scenes from the legend of St. Francis and the Wolf of Gubbio. Here, before its cave, was the great wolf that terrorized the townspeople of Gubbio. Here, strewn on the ground about it, were human bones. There, in the distance, were the walls of the town. He ran the cloth lightly over them. Water dripped lazily from the edge of the rag down to the garden far below, where the feet of the ladder stood anchored in the soft soil.

There upon the path that led from the town through the woods below was Francis, come to meet the wolf. Finally, there was the wolf transformed, placing its paw in the saint’s hand as a pledge that it would do harm no more.

So absorbed was Mr. Berkeley in the tale told by the glass that he failed at first to notice that the ladder had begun to edge sideways along the stone. For as he leaned, the soft soil yielded and one of the ladder’s feet began to sink into the soil beneath.

By the time he noticed, it was too late. He tried frantically to right the ladder by shifting his weight the other way, thought for one blissful moment that he had managed it, then realized with sick certainty that he was about to fall.


From the Hardcover edition. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Stained Glass: A Great Success!
I have recently finished reading "Stained Glass" by Michael Bedard, and I must say it is a very interesting and adventurous book. It even has a lot of fictional memories that Charles remembered thanks to Ambriel, the girl that forgot her memory in "Stained Glass." "Stained Glass," I must say, is a very good book for young-adult readers like me!

4-0 out of 5 stars A good read for young adults
What you expect isn't always what you get.After hearing a book talk about Stained Glass I was very excited to pick it up and read it.I soon realized that though the book was well written, it may be a better read for someone who is a bit younger than a junior in high school.The middle of the book tended to drag on a little more than what was necessary to compelete the novel.But I sitll managed to get caught up in the story of Charles and Ambriel.Charles goes to St. Bartholomew's church to skip his paino lessons.One day he hears a crash and finds that the church caretaker has accidentally broken a stained glass window.The broken window falls on a homeless girl and causes her to lose her memory.Charles cannot seem to shake this girl from his mind and ends up on a sojourn through his hometown of Caledon looking for clues to the homeless girl's past.... ... Read more


11. A Darker Magic
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: Pages (1989-07)
list price: US$2.95 -- used & new: US$4.48
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0380706113
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Product Description
Three people find their lives in danger when a ghostly magician haunts them with visions of an extraordinary, deadly magic show he originally staged in 1936. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars this was such a good book!!
i absolutely LOVED THIS BOOK!!! ... Read more


12. Flieg, Ente, flieg. ( Ab 5 J.).
by Michael Bedard
Hardcover: Pages (2002-02-01)
-- used & new: US$47.40
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 3473330787
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13. Pest of a Guest ("Sitting Ducks" S.)
by Michael Bedard
 Paperback: 32 Pages (2003)

Isbn: 0744557585
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14. Denture Adventure ("Sitting Ducks")
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: 32 Pages (2002-11-04)
list price: US$6.30 -- used & new: US$25.44
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0744594936
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Based on the animated series of the cult picture book Sitting Ducks - now on TV! Cecil reveals his latest secret invention to Bill - duck dentures. However, he warns, the duck public is not yet ready for the psychological power that comes from having teeth. Left alone in Cecil's lab, Bill can't resist trying them on. Sneaking them outside, he meets admiring glances and impressed reactions. Bill is excited, but Aldo warns him that teeth are a big responsibility - and with good reason! Bill's confidence begins to turn into obnoxiousness as he takes a bite out of the Decoy jukebox and starts scaring ducklings with his glinting choppers. Soon, the whole town is running scared of "Chomper". But a strange twist of fate teaches Bill a valuable lesson...Following the phenomenal success of Sitting Ducks, this is another cracking comedy adventure based on Michael Bedard's bestselling book and hit TV series. ... Read more


15. The Clay Ladies
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: 40 Pages (2001-08-07)
list price: US$7.95
Isbn: 0887765734
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
One day, a small girl finds a wounded bird. She knows where to go for help, because on her street live two women known as the Clay Ladies. Their home is an old church full of wonders: half-finished statues and pieces of pottery. The Clay Ladies help bring the bird back to life, just as they infuse pieces of clay with life. Moreover they introduce the girl to the world of clay. Although the incident is imaginary, this beautifully written story is based on the lives of artists Frances Loring and Florence Wyle. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars An engaging story, beautifully illustrated; perfect for teaching reading, creativity, and gentleness
I am an art teacher and this book is superb for helping my 1st-through- 5th-graderslearn to read.This story gives them practice in vocabulary, fluency (including phonics), and reading comprehension.The story has a great deal of meaning to them because we just finished our clay unit and one of the projects was a bird.

There are many ways to use this story to teach reading.For example, when one plumbs the text for phonics activities one will not be disappointed.One can teach how changing an ending changes a meaning just from the list of things sculptors do as they make their sculpture (push, pushing, pushed, for example).

My students read this story silently while I read it to them; meanwhile, the gorgeousimages are projected on the big screen in front of them.We even "read the pictures..."as I have them verbalize the contents of the richly-detailed illustrations.By first verbalizing the contents of the illustrations they are then more able to recognize and comprehend the mention in the text of those things.

I find the illustrations absolutely gorgeous and quite convincing.I greatly admire the illustrator's mastery of perspective and point-of-view, and I use his illustrations to teach these principles to my students. For example, the illustration drawn from the point of view of a spider hanging from the crest of the ceiling above the bird cage, looking down and out on the whole room, is just superb.This illustration is so well-done that the kids are able to say what is the tallest thing in the whole room (the huge sculpture, shown with brilliant foreshortening) and what is the farthest-away corner of the room (the one in the upper-left of the image).

Not knowing in advance that this story is historic fiction,I, too, was taken by surprise on the first read-throughby the obvious nature of the two sculptors' relationship.However, I am not concerned that my elementary-school students would notice.What matters to me--and what I want to matter to the students---are the unspoken messages of creativity, gentleness, healing,transmission of a culture, caring for things smaller than oneself, and how living an authentic life sometimes requires one to live a bit outside the box.

My students' day is hectic, loud, and frenetic.I feel that our culture is even more hectic, loud, and frenetic.The gentle and peaceful tone of "The Clay Ladies" has my students quite captivated in an oasis of quiet at the end of the day.I see this story as simply another fine Canadian export.I wish I could shake the hands of both the author and illustrator.

1-0 out of 5 stars Storyline doesn't flow
This was a difficult book to read aloud.The sentences didn't flow and the storyline was somehow cluttered.The illustrations are beautiful.The story is losely based on lesbian artists Frances Loring and Florence Wyle.If I had known about the main characters before hand I wouldn't not have borrowed the book.The book makes no moral statements, however, the two clay ladies look like males. ... Read more


16. Glass Town
by Michael and illustrated by Laura Fernandez and Rick Jacobson; Bedard
 Hardcover: Pages (1997)

Asin: B002A9AG1W
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17. Painted Devil
by Michael Bedard
Paperback: 240 Pages (2007-08-16)
list price: US$13.95 -- used & new: US$8.48
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1416961399
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
In the sequel to A Darker Magic, a grown-up Emily, accompanied by her niece, Alice, returns to Caledon to confront the dark forces of an evil magic. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

3-0 out of 5 stars It was no Darker Magic
As I expected, the style and structure of the novel were exemplars of Bedard's masterful neo-romantic prose. However, the plot was less thanappropriate for a novel whose purpose it is to freighten. As a result of apoor plot and a somewhat diminished creative ability on Bedard's part, thestory had much less suspense than what was necessary. On a whole, the bookwas good, but for Bedard, it was bad. ... Read more


18. Bill Hatches an Egg ("Sitting Ducks" S.)
by Michael Bedard
 Paperback: 32 Pages (2002-09-05)
list price: US$6.30 -- used & new: US$0.04
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0744589495
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Editorial Review

Product Description
When Bill the duck finds an egg in the park, he's really keen to show off his parenting skills. There's just one problem - Aldo the alligator is sure that the egg belongs to an alligator. The truth, as always, proves to be even more eggstraordinary! Following the phenomenal success of Sitting Ducks, this is another cracking comedy adventure based on Michael Bedard's bestselling book and hit TV series. ... Read more


19. The Lightning Bolt
by Michael Bedard
 Hardcover: 32 Pages (1989-11-02)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$3.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0195407326
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Editorial Review

Product Description
An illustrated story consisting of elements of the classic fairy tales. ... Read more


20. Tinder Box
by Michael Bedard
 Hardcover: 28 Pages (1990-05-01)
list price: US$12.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0195407679
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Editorial Review

Product Description
One, two!One, two!The soldier comes marching down the road on his way home from the wars.Little does he know that the old woman who waits by the gnarled tree will change his life forever.Copper, silver and more gold than he could ever have imagined can be his for the taking if only he will bring her the tinder box she so desires.But why does she want the tarnished old thing so badly, when all that wealth could be hers?The soldier ponders if the three gigantic dogs who guard the money are a part of the secret.We have only to look into their wondrous eyes to know that they are.In this unique retelling of Hans Christian Anderson's classic, Michael Bedard sweeps up along with the steady, relentless rhythm of a soldier's footsteps.Adventure, greed, danger and the love of a beautiful princess are the ingredients for a perfect fairy tale. This one has them all and more. ... Read more


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