![9781891852848-1891852841-Missing: Mrs. Cornblossom](https://booksrun.com/image-loader/215/https:__m.media-amazon.com_images_I_41As7uAT0vL._SL500_.jpg)
Missing: Mrs. Cornblossom
ISBN-13:
9781891852848
ISBN-10:
1891852841
Author:
Colleen Anderson
Publication date:
2023
Publisher:
Quarrier Press
Format:
Paperback
100 pages
FREE US shipping
Book details
ISBN-13:
9781891852848
ISBN-10:
1891852841
Author:
Colleen Anderson
Publication date:
2023
Publisher:
Quarrier Press
Format:
Paperback
100 pages
Summary
Missing: Mrs. Cornblossom (ISBN-13: 9781891852848 and ISBN-10: 1891852841), written by authors
Colleen Anderson, was published by Quarrier Press in 2023.
With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other
books. You can easily purchase or rent Missing: Mrs. Cornblossom (Paperback) from BooksRun,
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And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.
Description
Old Edna Cornblossom is gone, and the whole neighborhood misses her. Welcome to Arlington Court, where a trio of ten-year-olds, two eccentric adults, and a mischievous calico cat discover that, together, they carry their friend s beloved memory forward in their own lives. Colleen Anderson has the rare gift of turning the everyday worked into something magical. Missing: Mrs. Cornblossom has a timeless feel. Written with a poet s eye and brimming with heart, readers of this story will be hooked from the very first page. Prepare to be utterly charmed by Inchbald, Toothbucket, Cocobean the cat and, of course, Mrs. Cornblossom. Sarah Sullivan, author of Passing the Music Down, an NCTE 2012 Notable Children s Book in the Language Arts First there was Wonderland, then Middle Earth, not long ago Hogwarts, and now Arlington Court. Colleen Anderson can imagine worlds we want to visit with the best of them, and in her tale of Toothbucket, Inchbald, and Cocobean the cat, we meet friends we want to keep for the rest of our lives. With the language of the poet and the narrative prowess of the storyteller, Anderson shows us that even in the most mundane places there is mystery; that the safest spaces can contain loss, but ultimately joy; and that we often forget to search for beauty where it is most profound in ourselves. Anita Skeen, Director, the RCAH Center for Poetry at Michigan State University and author of Never the Whole Story
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