ABOVE THE CLOUDS – What Really Happens in Heaven During a Thunderstorm, tells the sweet story of a little girl named Grace who is afraid of thunderstorms. Her mother comforts her by telling her what’s REALLY responsible for the thunder, lightning, wind, and rain – namely heavenly parties complete with jammin’ tunes, selfie stations, paparazzi, and dancing angels. Adorable, full-color illustrations bring every page to life.
Created by 14-year-old Carley Barton, her mom Stephanie, and grandmother Sue Milon, the story was inspired by an off-the-cuff explanation Stephanie gave Carley, then a first-grader, to alleviate her fears during an especially scary thunderstorm. Without rain, nothing grows.
Inklings are bright, colorful and unique plush toys and books that spark a child’s imagination. Gus, Ollie, Wobby are lovable creatures who come to life through the imagination of children. The Inklings remind us that as long as you have your imagination, you’re never really alone.
Because children are free to imagine and create without limitations and free to love. Inklings are borne from a tiny spark in a child’s imagination that turns into something wonderful and unique. The stories that accompany each Inklings doll show how a single idea can create a caring, imaginary best friend. Imagination is as important as knowledge.
Misfits Market is a box full of fresh and delicious food that is delivered to your home. .Misfits Market buys up unwanted foods from across the country and bring it to your doorsteps, saving you money and helping you save the world.
Misfits Market is a subscription box of sometimes funny-looking, always delicious produce, designed to break the cycle of food waste. Think of them like an online grocery store, except one that specializes in rescuing food that is unnecessarily thrown away, Misfits Market sources high-quality organic produce that has a few quirks because grocery stores only want “perfect” foods on their shelves.
You can order either a smaller Mischief Box or larger Madness Box of produce for 25-40% less than it would cost at your local grocery store. We fill up that box with our organic fruits and veggies. You choose to receive a box either every week or every other week.
You get do choose what you want delivered in the Misfits Market box. It’s easy and you can cancel at anytime.
Are you looking for a unique gift idea? The gift to give that special sports fan in your life, then you need to check out Ballpark Blueprints
Ballpark Blueprints have original handcrafted architectural art of more than 140 iconic stadiums, arenas and ballparks across the country, including Yankee Stadium, Madison Square Garden, Wrigley Field, and Fenway Park, among others. Favorite venues from baseball, football (pro and college), basketball, hockey, golf, and more are all part of its extensive collection. Ballpark Blueprints offers that special sport fan a way to display their love of the game with a variety of gift ideas at every price point from high-end framed, canvas, and metal art ($80-$195), museum-quality unframed art prints ($60), and wall murals ($150), to golf headcovers ($85), fleece stadium blankets ($70), t-shirts and hoodies ($32-$42), ceramic mugs and metal travel mugs ($23-$40), among others. As we’re all missing out on in-person sports this year, Ballpark Blueprints offer a sophisticated and classic way for sports fans to reminisce and display their love of the game..
Ballpark Blueprints was the first sports architectural art company when it was founded in 2002 on an authentic passion for the history and architecture of baseball. The company has since expanded into other sports lines and continues its tradition of creating hand-rendered original designs using custom ink and museum-quality paper to ensure a unique and high-end aesthetic for the dedicated sports enthusiast. Code GROOVIN at checkout takes 10% off all orders, no limits!
No Reading Allowed:The WORST Read-Aloud Book Ever by Raj Haldar and Chris Carpenter is all about how absurd and fun language can be when homophones, homonyms, and tricky punctuation are at play.
This book began with Haldar and Carpenter devising sentences that could simultaneously teach readers about the world around them, near and far, while exploring the strangeness of homophones (EX: ‘The new deli clerk runs a pretty sorry store’/ ‘The New Delhi clerk runs a pretty sari store’).
There are few books that really go down the rabbit-hole showing the sheer absurdity of the English language, and No Reading Allowed is one of those rare books that allows children and their parents to laugh together while (subversively) learning something new. Reading makes your mind sharper.