This is the official 3-in-1 Wurtherngton Diary Color BookThe Little Doll GirlTammy and the Declaration of IndependenceTammy Meets Ali Baba and the Forty ThievesAll three stories appear in the order in which the stories were told by Tammy Wurtherington. Drawings are acompanied with a short desription of each picture. Book One: The Little Doll Girl This is the Origin Book in a series written in a manner similar to books considered to be classics such as Alice's Adventure's in Wonderland, Gulliver's Travels, and The Wizard of ...
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This is the official 3-in-1 Wurtherngton Diary Color BookThe Little Doll GirlTammy and the Declaration of IndependenceTammy Meets Ali Baba and the Forty ThievesAll three stories appear in the order in which the stories were told by Tammy Wurtherington. Drawings are acompanied with a short desription of each picture. Book One: The Little Doll Girl This is the Origin Book in a series written in a manner similar to books considered to be classics such as Alice's Adventure's in Wonderland, Gulliver's Travels, and The Wizard of Oz. As with many illustrated classic stories, it is a story with unique characters and deals with hope, determination, compassion, and much more. In the opening preface, Robert Landsbury discovers the diary in a shed on a newly purchased estate in River Fall, Ohio and passes it along to his associates. The diary is faithfully preserved for today's reader. In it, the reader will discover that a ten-year-old mute girl, Tammy Wurtherington residing in the Wixby estate is the author. She loves to make dolls in a shed out in back of the house. She lives with Lord Wixby and Aunt May in a lavish estate at the edge of town. Aunt May teaches her to use a sewing machine and gives her a small one suited to size as a birthday gift. One day while constructing a toy soldier for her brother, Alfred the Mouse appears and is impressed with her ability to make doll outfits and reluctantly invites her to follow him to Kira if she will bring along the sewing machine....Book Two: Tammy and the Declaration of IndependenceFollow alongside of ten-year-old Tammy Wurtherington, the little doll girl from River Falls, Ohio in this exciting new adventure that is sure to delight any youngster. Her cute associates, Cedric the Mongoose, Zeke the orphaned opossum, and Alfred the mouse accompany her in this trip through history in which they must see that the space-time continuum is maintained and the Declaration of Independence is signed on July Fourth, 1776. The emphasis is on telling a spell binding story that will leave any reader with a firm understanding of the events that led to the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the reasons for the Revolutionary War. Book Three: Tammy Meets Ali Baba and the Forty ThievesRide on a magic carpet with Tammy Wurtherington, the legendary little doll girl, into a the land of Arabian Nights. Like she did in The Declaration of Independence, she and her furry animal friends must "nudge" the space-time continuum and see that the world is returned to its proper order. In this magical tale, Mistress Wurtherington must see the the legendary gold of Mansa Musa is not stolen in the year 1324. Tammy is summoned to Kira by the kind sorceress, Lucinda and given a magic carpet and off she flies with Alfred the mouse, Zeke the orphaned opossum, and Cedric the comical mongoose. Be prepared for a fantasy adventure that is suitable for the entire family transcribed word for word exactly as the remarkable Tammy Wutherington wrote and illustrated it more than one hundred years ago.
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Seller's Description:
Truong, Duy, and Hassan, Nour, and Spencer, Tenda. New. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 66 p. The Wurtherington Diary, 3. Intended for a juvenile audience.