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The Little Ghost – The Little Ghost is a friendly night ghost and the story's main protagonist. During the day it sleeps in an oak coffer in the attic of Castle Eulenstein. Normally, The Little Ghost is very peaceful and does not harm anybody, except if somebody annoys it, like the Swedish General Torsten Torstenson.
Elatsoe is a 2020 young adult novel by Darcie Little Badger marketed to young readers aged 12–18. It is Little Badger's debut novel. It was included on Time's list of the 100 Best Fantasy Books of All Time. [1] Some publications have classed the novel as part of the Indigenous Futurism movement. [2]
Ghosts is a fictional graphic novel written by Raina Telgemeier which tells the story of a young girl named Catrina and her family, who have recently moved to Bahía de la Luna (a fictional town incorporating aspects of Half Moon Bay, Pacifica, and Santa Cruz) in northern California.
Hulls’ graphic memoir “Feeding Ghosts” covers three generations of women, starting with her grandmother, Sun Yi, who herself was once a bestselling author of a memoir. ... AP book reviews ...
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"Little Ghosts, There, Here and Where") [1] is an anime television series by Studio Pierrot. The 50-episode series aired on Nippon Television from April 1991 to August 1992. [2] It is based on the Little Ghosts book series published by Poplar. The story is about three mischievous obake who have taken up different jobs. They mostly cause ...
Little Ghost Laban (Swedish: Lilla spöket Laban [Laban the Little Spook]) or "the ghost who wouldn't haunt", is a Swedish children's book character created by Inger and Lasse Sandberg from Karlstad Municipality. The books revolve around the boy ghost Laban and his family, the Father ghost, the Mother ghost and Laban's sister Labolina. [1]
Ghosts is a 1993 novel by John Banville. It was his first novel since 1989's The Book of Evidence , which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize . The second in what Banville described as a " triptych ", to make "an investigation of the way in which the imagination works."