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What tomgirl growing up in town didn't dream of being a cowgirl and riding off into the sunset? Though bound by the big city, this little girl dreams of the wide-open spaces. Throughout the story, she laments over the girlythings she must do, and explains to her city slicker dad what the life of a cowgirl would be like. She breaks in broncos (her dog), sleeps beneath the moon (on top of their twenty story flat), and rides her piebald mare (the junkyard dog), all the while imagining clouds of cactuses, cattle, and cowboy hats.
The surprise ending to this delightful, rhyming story should serve to inspire all aspiring cowgirls that their dreams (no matter how absurd they may seem), really can come true!
I Want To Be A Cowgirl |
Hardcover, $15.95 | |
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Farethee Well is a woman of strong mind and bodacious beauty, but when suitors come to ask her hand in marriage, can she tell a real cowboy from a fake?
This is a great retelling of Andersen's The Princess and the Pea. Johnston's clever parody is rich with the language and the details of the Wild West. Ludwig's colorful illustrations heighten the story's exaggerated humor.
The Cowboy and the Black-eyed Pea |
Paperback, $5.95 |
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The Bootmaker and the Elves, by Susan Lowell |
Hardcover $16.95 |
Cindy Ellen, A Wild Western Cinderella, by Susan Lowell |
Hardcover $15.95 |
The Three Little Javelinas, by Susan Lowell |
Hardcover $15.95 |
Jack And The Giant, A Story Full of Beans, by Jim Harris |
Hardcover  $15.95 | |
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