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Pinktoes and Other Tarantulas (World Book's Animals of the World)

by Lisa Klobuchar

The book covers the care of tarantulas, as well as their history, other kinds in the wild and how to care for a pet tarantula.

Golden Retrievers and Other Sporting Dogs (World Book's Animals of the World)

by Robert Blackburn Knight

Introduces the Golden Retriever dog breed and talks about other sporting dogs, in a question and answer format.

Box Turtles and Other Pond and Marsh Turtles (World Book's Animals of the World)

by Christina Johnson

Introduces the box turtle and talks about keeping one as a pet.

The Spotted Sphinx

by Joy Adamson

JOY ADAMSON, universally known for her epic of Elsa, the Kenya lioness, and her cubs, has a new and fascinating animal story to tell. This time it is centered on Pippa, a cheetah given to her by her owners, who had raised her as a pet. Mrs. Adamson decided to restore this great and graceful cat to its natural wild heritage, in spite of the fact that no domesticated cheetah had ever consented to return to the bush. Joy Adamson first gained the friendship and trust of her charge; then, with what Julian Huxley termed her "passionate patience and understanding love," she encouraged her to enter the wild life. Eventually Pippa mated with a wild cheetah and lived in the bush. But this did not end her relationship with Joy Adamson: when the first litter was born, Pippa led her to her cubs. The life of a wild animal is harsh--but no less harsh is the life of someone dedicated to keeping in touch (over several years) with a family of wild cheetahs. Against a background of terrifying floods, an alarming bush fire, and the menace of bandits, Joy Adamson kept contact by making long daily treks, always burdened with heavy loads, through bush in which elephants might stampede at any moment, or one might inadvertently arouse the ire of lions and leopards. The record of the three years during which Joy Adamson watched over the development of Pippa and her young is as engrossing and as acutely observed as was her account of her relationship with Elsa. Elsa still looms large in the book as her human friend describes the contrast in character between the elegant, affectionate but enigmatic and elusive cheetah and the magnificent Elsa.

The Man Who Walked Through Time

by Colin Fletcher

Fletcher is the first man ever to walk the entire length of the Grand Canyon. This is the story of his journey, 2 months of struggle against heat and cold, lack of water, dwindling supplies, and almost impassable terrain. But more than a mere adventure story, this is also a spiritual odyssey during which one man began to understand mankind's unique place in the vastness of nature.

Outlaw Red: Son of Big Red (Famous Dog Stories)

by Jim Kjelgaard

From pampered champion... to hunted beast! Irish setter Sean, son of Big Red, is hurled from a moving truck into wilderness where kill-or-be-killed is the pitiless law of life. Now he must match savagery for savagery... forget he has ever been tame! And yet there comes the agonizing call of old friendships. Can Red "reform"? Or is he doomed to be an outlaw, running and hiding for the rest of his life?

Haunt Fox

by Jim Kjelgaard

THE STIRRING SAGA OF HAUNT FOX-- THE BRAVEST, MOST CUNNING FOX OF THEM ALL. He was Star, a big handsome red fox, named for the starshaped white spot in the center of his chest. But his talent for eluding traps and dogs with ghostlike cunning earned him a new name--Haunt Fox. An outlaw who mercilessly raided poultry farms, he was stalked and shot at by every hunter and farmer in the valley. But no one wanted the legendary animal more than young Jack Crowley and his foxhound, . Thunder. Together, they set out on a blazing chase into the heart of the wilderness. It was a chase the brave outlaw fox would never forget.

Julie and the Eagles (American Girls #4)

by Megan Mcdonald

Julie and Ivy are eating snow cones in Golden Gate Park when they hear an odd sound. It's a baby owl-and it needs help. At a wildlife rescue center, Julie meets Shasta and Sierra, two bald eagles. Shasta's wing is injured, and Julie hopes he'll be able to fly again-but that can happen only if the rescue center raises enough money to release the eagles back into the wild. Julie feels sure that if people knew about the eagles, they'd want to help. For Earth Day, Julie thinks of a unique way to tell the public of the eagles' plight. But money isn't exactly pouring in ... and time is running out.

Scuba Diving: Merit Badge Series

by Boy Scouts of America

A guide to completing the SCUBA diving merit badge for Boy Scouts.

Hiking: Merit Badge Series

by Boy Scouts of America

A guide for completing the hiking merit badge for Boy Scouts.

Cycling: Merit Badge Series

by Boy Scouts of America

A guide for completing the cycling merit badge for Boy Scouts.

Camping: Merit Badge Series

by Boy Scouts of America

A guide for completing the camping merit badge for Boy Scouts.

The Golden Stallion to the Rescue: Golden Stallion #3 (Famous Horse Stories)

by Rutherford Montgomery

When Charley Carter’s mother tries to make some much-needed money for the family by inviting boys to spend the summer at the Bar L Ranch, Rodney, a boy with a passion for geology, is the only one who comes. As he learns about working on the ranch, he spends long periods of time alone, and more time visiting Golden Boy, the beautiful once-wild stallion who keeps the ranch’s mares together. But soon Charley discovers Rodney has a plan for his rich father, an oil man, to drill for oil in the wild mountain country, and Rodney arranges to buy Golden Boy and move him East. It looks like the Carters will lose their ranch and everything they value. Worse, Golden Boy is being left to die by Rodney’s horse trainer who believes the horse is a killer. Can Charley save his life and bring him home?

Living Free: The Story of Elsa and Her Cubs

by Joy Adamson

Even more fascinating than the beloved best seller Born Free is this absorbing story of how Elsa, the world-famous lioness, raised her three cubs in the African bush with the help of her devoted friends, Joy and George Adamson. This stirring story of the cubs' first year of life reveals an unusually rewarding relationship between animals and humans that dissolves the barriers between the two worlds. For although the cubs--impish Jespah, jealous Gopa, and timid Little Elsa--romp through these pages with carefree abandon, the adults--the Adamsons and Elsa--must contend with the ever-present menaces of the wild-charging buffaloes, crocodiles lurking in the shallows, marauding elephants, hostile lions, and, most treacherous of all, enraged African poachers out gunning for Elsa's hide. And Elsa herself must juggle three roles: the cubs' vigilant mother, the Adamsons' touchingly affectionate friend, and the primitive mate of a wild lion. Joy Adamson's sensitive appreciation and concern for all living things, and the remarkably intimate view of Elsa's life with her cubs, give the reader a rare sense of participation in life in the wild. As Sir Julian Huxley points out in his introduction, this unique record of an astonishingly personal relationship between humans and animals makes this book scientifically significant, as well as an intensely moving revelation of human experience.

Born Free

by Joy Adamson

There have been many accounts of the return to the wild of tame animals, but since its original publication in 1960, when The New York Times hailed it as a “fascinating and remarkable book,” Born Free has stood alone in its power to move us. Joy Adamson's story of a lion cub in transition between the captivity in which she is raised and the fearsome wild to which she is returned captures the abilities of both humans and animals to cross the seemingly unbridgeable gap between their radically different worlds. Especially now, at a time when the sanctity of the wild and its inhabitants is increasingly threatened by human development and natural disaster, Adamson's remarkable tale is an idyll, and a model, to return to again and again.

Lost and Found

by Jacqueline Sheehan

After the sudden, unexpected death of her husband, Rocky moves to Peak's Island, Maine, and takes a job as an Animal Control Warden. She becomes involved with a wounded black Lab and several interesting neighbors and residents, solves a mystery, and finds romance and happiness. As an Animal Warden, Rocky experiences much of what real-life animal care and control professionals go through, from rescuing lost and injured pets and wildlife, to the heartbreak of finding pets abandoned by vacationers at the end of their stay, to resolving common conflicts with wildlife.

The Duckfooted Hound

by Jim Kjelgaard

Old Joe was the biggest, fightingest, craftiest coon in the Creeping Hills. No one had ever been able to catch him; not even Precious Sue, a bluetick hound peerless in tracking down coons. But Harky felt that this autumn the hunting would be different. Old Joe was in for trouble. Precious Sue had a pup who looked like a natural-born coon hunter. With his web-footed paws he was as skillful in the water as any coon. And on land, Duckfoot had a nose that beat every other hound. Harky had a few troubles of his own. First there was school. Miss Cathby was nice, but she was a teacher. She called Old Joe a raccoon. And she said he could not live forever because he was mortal. Then there were girls. More specifically, there was Melinda--the bossiest, uppitiest young lady for miles around. And she wanted to hunt. Jim Kjelgaard's story of people and hounds captures all the glory and excitement of coon hunting on a crisp autumn night. Marc Simont has illustrated the story with wit and brilliance.

Trueboy: The Story of a Great Dog (Famous Dog Stories)

by Thomas C. Hinkle

A dog story in which the animal, losing for a time home and master, learns to live in the wilds. Young Don Hudson claimed TrueBoy as his own. He was a large wolfhound and they needed a large dog to bring down Old Roarer, the lobo wolf. An act of fate separates TrueBoy from Don for quite some time. But they found each other again after some trying times for the great dog. Join him in his fight for survival.

Norah's Ark

by Patsey Gray

Norah is traveling from Arizona to visit her Grandma in Washington for Christmas when the bus leaves without her because she is carsick. Norah chases the bus along a flooded riverbank, until the river swallows her up. She clings to a board, and wakes up to find herself inside a hunt club very near the sea, with a boy a couple of years younger than she, named Karl, who saved her. Over a period of several days, the two save an Arabian mare, and later her newborn colt; a friendly dog; an unfriendly cat; a duck; a canary in a cage; and a lamb from the roiling river. But when their food runs out, the electricity goes off, and the clubhouse is certain to break loose and be driven out to sea, Norah must get to shore and find help to save her friends.

The Golden Stallion

by Theodore J. Waldeck

The clear, cold air of the mountain heights, the sense of space and freedom that is to be found in the peaks of the Sierras and their valleys, the thundering beauty and intelligence of wild horses--all this, and more, is to be found in The Golden Stallion, the first book with a North American background to be written by Theodore Waldeck, famous explorer and author of African and South American jungle stories. Young Bob, brought up by his rancher father to know and love horses, lives for the day when he can have one of his very own. Golden Blaze is the name he gives the beautiful wild horse which is captured for him, and their adventures together, with a surprise ending, form this thrilling story of life in the American West, a story which adds to Mr. Waldeck’s firmly established reputation for taking his readers on stimulating adventures.

Wild Palomino: Stallion of the Prairies (Famous Horse Stories)

by Stephen Holt

The wild Palomino is a magnificent gold and silver stallion roaming the prairie with his band of mares. Des Harmon knows that if he can capture Rocket and bring him home, the great horse will sire enough colts to put the Twin Anchor Ranch back on its feet. There are others, too, who want the Palomino, among them the ruthless El Gato. Des finally captures the horse, but his troubles have only begun for El Gato claims prior ownership of Rocket. Setting out to compete in a rodeo, Des picks up a clue from a talking crow and plays an unexpected part in the search for a lost mine. The rodeo is a wild, exciting affair with Rocket at first proving unmanageable but then coming through magnificently. Until the final thrilling moment when Des returns in triumph to the ranch there is a grand, galloping pace to all his adventures with “the biggest gold horse in the world."

Derry's Partner (Famous Dog Stories)

by Hubert Evans

Derry, a pedigreed Airedale, lived in the wild open country of the Northwest. Quite different was Derry's partner, Mac--half Newfoundland and half husky. This is the story of these two dogs and their master, Ed Sibley. It recounts their adventures in the wilderness--and the bravery of the dogs against man and beast who tried to do their master harm. Sometimes it was a battle with wolves, again it was a fierce fight with a bear, once it was Derry's partner that succeeded in running down a criminal and saving his master from disgrace. And there is something beyond story in this book. The author knows dogs and writes about them with understanding. No one can read the story of Derry and Mac without learning a great deal about the way to handle a dog--and without loving dogs more than ever as the finest of companions both at play and at work.

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