| James Howe - Juvenile Fiction - 1992 - 176 pages
Chester, Harold and Howie are sent to a boarding kennel while the Monroe family goes on vacation. Along with the other residents of Chateau Bow-Wow, the animals plan a mass ... | |
| Deborah Howe, James Howe - Juvenile Fiction - 1979 - 122 pages
Though scoffed at by Harold the dog, Chester the cat tries to warn his human family that their foundling baby bunny must be a vampire. | |
| James Howe - Juvenile Fiction - 1983 - 137 pages
Chester the cat is more than ever convinced that Bunnicula is a vampire when there is a harvest of white vegetables on the morning after the night that Bunnicula was probably ... | |
| James Howe - Juvenile Fiction - 1987 - 136 pages
More hilarious and hare-raising tales of Bunnicula, that best-selling cotton-tailed vampire. "(The) humor is brilliantly blended with vampire lore and the immediate predicament ... | |
| David T. Greenberg - Juvenile Fiction - 2009 - 35 pages
A million times worse than octopus armpits Or sniffing an elephant trunk Is the galling, appalling, truly enthralling Glorious stink of a skunk! There's nothing quite as sly ... | |
| James Howe - History - 2002 - 342 pages
An anthropological analysis of the importance of meetings in Kuna village-level politics. | |
| James Howe - Cricket stories - 1987 - 44 pages
A wise spider helps a despondent cricket realize that he is special in his own way. | |
| James Howe - Juvenile Fiction - 1996 - 52 pages
Pinky learns the importance of identity as he defends his favorite color, pink, and his friendship with a girl, Rex, from the neighborhood bully. | |
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