literature teachers

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literature teachers

A novel love story

"Eileen Merriweather knows a thing or two about romance. As a professor of literature, she teaches prestigious courses on history's greatest romantics, but one week out of the year she abandons her dusty textbooks and makes a pilgrimage to the Hudson Valley with her best friend Pru to meet their Super Smutty Book Club in person, and celebrate the romance series that brought them together - Quixotic Falls. It's a week of wine and happily-ever-afters. Or it's supposed to be. Pru bails at the last minute, and Elsy winds up lost in Hudson Valley - alone. In a thunderstorm. When she takes shelter in a bookstore, she immediately gets on the bad side of its grumpy (and infuriatingly sexy) owner, and finds herself in a quaint town that feels like it's right out of a book... Because it is. Eloraton can't be real, and yet... she's here. The town is everything she imagined from her favorite series, where the candy store's honey taffy is always sweet, and the local bar's burgers are always a little burnt, and rain always comes in the afternoon. It's perfect. A place built on meet-cutes and storybook endings. Except, there's something off in Eloraton. Because nothing changes, nothing moves, trapped in the last place the late author of Quixotic Falls left them. Which must be why Elsy is here: to find an ending to this last story, the one the author never finished. The only problem? The bookstore owner never wants the story to end, and he might be the one person who can help her imagine this final happily-ever-after. And maybe find one for herself"--.

Dead clever

a novel
2003
Lily Pascale, having finally landed a great job teaching crime fiction at a small university, is drawn into a real-life mystery when her fellow instructors start turning up dead and her boss, the eccentric Professor Valentine, starts acting crazy.

Charlotte Huck's children's literature

a brief guide
2010
Provides information designed to help teachers research, evaluate, and use children's literature in the classroom, from prekindergarten through eighth grade, looks at different genres of children's literature, and presents a cross-curricular perspective on the teaching, planning, and evaluating of literature-based programs.
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