New ebooks From Canadian Indies

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Lily and the Paper Man

Lily and the Paper Man

by Rebecca Upjohn, illustrated by Renné Benoit
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover
tagged : homelessness & poverty, values & virtues
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Meyers' Creek

Meyers' Creek

by Connie Brummel Crook
edition:eBook
tagged :
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Midnight in the Mountains

Midnight in the Mountains

Audio Enhanced Edition
by Julie Lawson, illustrated by Sheena Lott
edition:eBook
tagged : environment
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Mister Got to Go Where Are You?

Mister Got to Go Where Are You?

by Lois Simmie, illustrated by Cynthia Nugent
edition:eBook
tagged : cats
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Mom and Mum are Getting Married!

Mom and Mum are Getting Married!

by Ken Setterington, illustrated by Alice Priestley
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover
tagged : alternative family
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Moonsnail Song

Moonsnail Song

by Sheryl McFarlane, illustrated by Sheena Lott
edition:eBook
tagged : marine life, environment
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More Blueberries!

More Blueberries!

by Susan Musgrave, illustrated by Esperança Melo
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover
tagged : cooking & food, siblings
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Excerpt

Blueberry cheeks, blueberry chin
Blueberry teeth, blueberry grin

Blueberry fingers, blueberry nose
Blueberry lips, blueberry toes

Yummy! Tasty!
More blueberries!

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Music By Morgan

Music By Morgan

by Ted Staunton, illustrated by Bill Slavin
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover Paperback
tagged : humorous stories, halloween, hockey
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Excerpt

Chapter 1
Thwack, thwack, scrape, THUNK.
I hear that every time my friend Charlie scores on me. Charlie scores on me every time.
We are playing ball hockey in my driveway. Charlie plays forward. I'm in net. Aldeen Hummel, the Godzilla of Grade Three, is on defence. The thwack thwack is Aldeen's stick as she mashes at Charlie's feet. Luckily for him, Charlie is way too fast. The scrape is Charlie getting off a wrist shot. The THUNK is the tennis ball hitting the garage door behind me. Every time. I stink at hockey.
Oh-oh. Here we go again. Thwack, thwack, scrape, THUNK.
"Shoots, he scorrres," Charlie says. When we started, he'd shout and shoot his arms up over his head. Probably his arms are tired by now.
"No fair," says Aldeen. Her glasses are steamed up and her witchy hair looks as if it has exploded. It is fair. It's just that it's no fun. "Do it again," Aldeen orders.
Instead, Charlie flops in the fallen leaves on the grass. "In a sec," he says. "What are you going to be for Halloween? I'm going to be a hockey player."
Aldeen snorts. "You can't be a hockey player. How are you going to walk around in skates?"
Charlie shrugs. "I'll carry them over my shoulder."
Aldeen's Granny Flo pulls up in the taxi cab she drives. Sometimes Aldeen comes over after school until her mom or her grandma can get off work and come to get her. Granny Flo waves and goes inside.
Aldeen says, "Well, I'm going to be a scary monster."
I look at Charlie. He looks at me. We're both thinking, You won't need a costume. We don't say that. We both like living too much.
"What are you going to be, Morgan?" Charlie asks.
"I dunno yet," I say. Halloween makes me think of treats. I like eating way better than hockey. "Let's get snacks," I say.
We go in. Mom is in the kitchen, talking with Aldeen's grandma. They are looking at a booklet. We get juice and one cookie each. I'm about to sneak another one when I hear what they are talking about.
Mom says, "The community centre runs good programs. What are you signing up Aldeen for?"
"Piano," says Granny Flo. "She's artistic. She needs to try something new. But we don't have a keyboard at home."
"We've got one in the basement," Mom says. "She can practice here after school if she wants. We're signing up Morgan for floor hockey. Something active."
I freeze. Aldeen looks at me. Her eyes are bigger than the cookie jar. I can tell we are both thinking the same thing: Oh, no.

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