On a beautiful island called Serendipity, on the south side of the island, was an old wooden fence. The fence stretched for miles and miles with only sweet smelling lilac and an occasional honeysuckle rose. At the very end of the fence was an old farm nestled at the top of a wooded hill. The farm was filled with all sorts of animals. It was here that lived a fluffy, grey cat named Fanny. In many ways Fanny was an ordinary cat. Ordinary, yes, but different too for Fanny had but three legs. Regardless, got around pretty well. In fact she needed no help from any of the other animals in the barnyard. Oddly, the other farm animals never talked to Fanny because they felt it was kind of embarrassing to talk to a creature that was handicapped. It took the love of a little dog named Ruby to teach everyone that a handicap is but a state of mind.
Old Grampa Lop loves to tell stories to the little bunnies of the burrow. Unfortunately, all of the bunny parents are suspicious and refuse to let the baby bunnies listen to his stories. A story about the need for respect for the silver hares.
In the bitter cold of the North Pole lived a lonely little gnome called Alappuu. Worse than being lonely was that he was cold from the inside out. He could warm his fingers, warm his toes, but never could he get his frozen heart to glow. In desperation he packed everything he owned and traveled south to the little town of Nome, Alaska, in search of the answer to his frozen dilemma. Joined by a delightful otter, the two soon discover the heart-warming secret now to be shared by all. The story, wrapped in gentle historic fact, will warm the hearts of young and old alike.
The other jungle animals make Memily the giraffe self-conscious about her size, until a meeting with another giraffe convinces her that she is just right for the kind of animal she is.
When the Gigglesnitcher steals all the laughter from the land of Serendipity, Leo, a rabbit, and Morgan, a unicorn, search for a way to make him give it back.