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Jean Van Leeuwen (born December 26, 1937) [1] is the author of over forty children's books, including the Oliver Pig series, and Bound for Oregon. She studied journalism at Syracuse University and currently lives in Chappaqua , New York .
Spindlewood Series: Pip and the Wood Witch Curse (2011) Pip and the Twilight Seekers (2011) Pip and the Lost Children (2011) Pirates 'n' Pistols (2012) Pocket Pirates Series: The Great Cheese Robbery (2015) The Great Drain Escape (2018) The Great Flytrap Disaster (2019) The Great Treasure Hunt (2019)
The success of the book led Rance's publishers to ask him to write a companion volume about French cheeses. After six years of research by Rance and his wife all over France The French Cheese Book was published in 1989. [1] The leading French expert on cheese, Pierre Androuët, rated it the best there had ever been on the subject. [2]
Gnome Press was an American small-press publishing company active 1948 – 1962 and primarily known for fantasy and science fiction, many later regarded as classics. [1]Gnome was one of the most eminent of the fan publishers of SF, producing 86 titles in its lifespan.
Basil and the Big Cheese Cook-Off (2018) Basil and Dawson journey to Paris to solve a mystery threatening the world-renowned international cheese cook-off cooking competition. Basil and the Royal Dare (May 2019) Basil and Dawson come to the aid of the British and Bohemian Royal Families (of mice), when several royal teens go missing.
Comic book wall, Laarmans in Antwerp. based on the comic book version by Dick Matena of Cheese. The story is about Frans Laarmans, a clerk at the General Marine and Shipbuilding Company in Antwerp. Van Schoonbeke, the wealthy friend of his brother Karel (who is a general practitioner) offers him a job.
The Great Cheese Robbery is a silent short animated film made by Bray Productions featuring Krazy Kat.It marks the first Krazy film produced by Bray after the International Film Service (IFS) ended its run in making films in the series.
The project for the Great Books of the Western World began at the University of Chicago, where the president, Robert Hutchins, worked with Mortimer Adler to develop there a course of a type originated by John Erskine at Columbia University in 1921, with the innovation of a "round table" approach to reading and discussing great books among professors and undergraduates.