The Age of Fable; Or, Beauties of Mythology
by Thomas Bulfinch and John Loughran Scott
Musica de Todo El Mundo (Cuentamelo Otra Vez)
by Elena Beatriz Mansilla Sepulveda
Leyendas de Todo Mexico
by Becky Rubinstein, Isabel Suarez, and Tere Remolina
La Llorona Can't Scare Me / La Llorona No Me Asusta
by Xavier Garza
Sing, Little Sack!; Canta, Saquito! (Bank Street ready-to-read)
by Nina Jaffe
Captured and kept inside a sack by a strange little man, a young girl is forced to sing until her mother hears her song and realizes that it is not the sack that is singing.
Thomas Alfred Spalding described "Elizabethan Demonology" as an 'Illustration of the Belief in the Existence of Devils, and the Powers Possessed By Them, as It Was Generally Held during the Period of the Reformation, and the Times Immediately Succeeding with Special Reference to Shakespeare and His Works.' Now, nereusmedia presents a newly annotated edition with an Introduction by August Moldenhauer with special attention not only to the Elizabethan Era of Shakespeare, but to the spiritualism a...
Mitologia Mexicana Para Ninos (Literatura Infantil)
by Gabriela Santana
Skeletina Y El Hada Malvada [Spanish Ed] (Skeletina and the In-Between World)
by Susie Jaramillo
Leyendas de América Latina contadas para niños (Brujula y la Veleta)
by Fernando Martinez Ruppel
Legends are stories that explain the phenomena of nature. Many legends have their roots in indigenous cultures and have been transmitted from generation to generation, remaining in the minds of both indigenous and non-indigenous people even today. This book presents a representative selection of Latin American legends.
Benita loves to read in bed but keeps getting interrupted by a whistling Tunche, a scary Supay and other spooky creatures from Peruvian lore. To the creatures’ disbelief, Benita is so absorbed by her book that she’s not the least bit scared of them. This humorous celebration of bedtime reading puts a global twist on taking the “scary” out of monsters.