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The Paper Bag Princess is a children's book written by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko. It was first published in 1980 by Annick Press and launched Munsch's career to the forefront of a new wave of Canadian children’s authors. [1] The story reverses the princess and dragon stereotype. [2]
The Robert Munsch Collection: Volume One: 978-1-50404-984-9: The Paper Bag Princess • Stephanie's Ponytail • 50 Below Zero • Pigs • The Fire Station • A Promise Is a Promise • Jonathan Cleaned Up - Then He Heard a Sound • Moira's Birthday • Show and Tell • Mortimer: 2017: The Robert Munsch Collection: Volume Two: 978-1-50404-985-6
Giant or Waiting for the Thursday Boat is a children's book by Canadian author Robert Munsch and illustrated by Gilles Tibo, first published in 1989 by Annick Press.Due to depictions of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God as a little African American girl, as well as threats of violence against God by the titular Giant, it was challenged or removed from school libraries in Canada.
Love You Forever is a 1986 children's picture book written by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Sheila McGraw. The story centers on a mother who sings a lullaby to her son at each stage of his life. During his childhood, she becomes frustrated with his rebellious nature, yet always sings to him after he falls asleep.
The Sundowners is a 1950 American Technicolor Western film directed by George Templeton, starring Robert Preston and featuring John Drew Barrymore (billed as John Barrymore, Jr.), Robert Sterling, Chill Wills, and Jack Elam. [1] The film is also known as Thunder in the Dust in the United Kingdom.
A Bunch of Munsch is an animated anthology television series produced by Cinar. Each episode is based on a book by American-Canadian children's author Robert Munsch . [ 1 ] The show aired from December 7, 1991 to December 2, 1992 on CTV in Canada and Showtime in the United States.
When her husband tells her he wants a divorce, devastated Manhattan lawyer Diane heads upstate with her two teens to Woodstock to stay with her estranged hippie mother. In this charming village, Diane and her city kids get a new perspective on life: poetry-reading daughter Zoe becomes interested in a sensitive young butcher Cole, nerdy son Jake finds material for his first film project, and ...
Stross eventually set up the film with MGM and New York's Cine World Productions, and announced Robert Mitchum would star. [5] According to Mitchum, Alan Ladd was meant to play the lead but the producers drove out to Ladd's house and met him after "he'd just crawled out of his swimming pool and was all shrunken up like a dishwasher's hand.