All The Way, Boys (1973)
by admin on Thursday, November 12th, 2009 | No Comments
Can you identify this book?
A young boy gets lost on his way home and enters a forest. At first he is very frightened but encounters magical trees that grow different things like glasses of lemonade and basketballs, I think ice cream cones too. After he finally gets out he has all these things the trees have given him and he decides he wants to come back the next time. It is a typical elementary story/picture- book. I read it between 1973-76, so it probably came out during or slightly before that time.
Post this question at www.whatsthatbook.com. Hopefully, someone there will remember your book.
Traffic – Shoot out at the Fantasy Factory 1973
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If We Fall in Love Tonight
Track Listings 1. If We Fall in Love Tonight 2. For the First Time 3. When I Need You 4. So Far Away 5. Have I Told You Lately That I Love You [Studio Version Remix] 6. My Heart Can't Tell You No 7. You're in My Heart (The Final Acclaim) 8. The First Cut Is the Deepest 9. I Don't Want to Talk About It 10. Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright) 11. Sometimes When We Touch 12. Downtown ... |
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All the Way Boys [VHS]
$19.99 ... |
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All Star Batman & Robin, the Boy Wonder #2 Frank Miller Cover
$1.00 All Star Batman & Robin, the Boy Wonder #2 Frank Miller Cover... |
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All the way with the boys of the 329th Field Artillery
$30.13 This book, "All the way with the boys of the 329th Field Artillery", by Melton William R, is a replication. It has been restored by human beings, page by page, so that you may enjoy it in a form as close to the original as possible. This book was created using print-on-demand technology. Thank you for supporting classic literature.... |
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All the way round, or, what a boy saw and heard on his way round the world: a book for young people. and older ones with young hearts
$34.95 This book, "All the way round, or, what a boy saw and heard on his way round the world: a book for young people. and older ones with young hearts", by Addis Emmet Carr, is a replication. It has been restored by human beings, page by page, so that you may enjoy it in a form as close to the original as possible. This book was created using print-on-demand technology. Thank you for supporting classic... |
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All the Way, Boys!
$22.61 All the Way, Boys! |
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Franco Corelli and Renata Tebaldi: Live in Tokyo 1973
$25.28 Our DVD brings the complete recording of the concert that Renata Tebaldi and Franco Corelli gave at the NHK Auditorium in Tokyo on 21st November 1973. Both singers, well-loved in the land of the rising sun, exemplified vocal types that are characteristic of Italian opera. It is often said that opera has grown old and can no longer speak to a young public, but listening to and watching this DVD we realize that even rituals that seem so trite and banal can be filled with life and meaning in the presence of performers of such stature. The first to appear on stage was Franco Corelli, who opens the concert with two romanzas, the first by Luigi Denza (O begli occhi di fata) and the second by Vincenzo Bellini (Soave sogno), chosen as is customary at the beginning of the evening to warm up his voice without too many about interpretative questions. Corelli then leaves the stage to Renata Tebaldi, greeted, like Corelli, by warm applause. From this moment on the concert gets under way, with the first vocally demanding piece of the evening, La donna mobile, from Verdi's Rigoletto. This brings us to the first truly memorable moment of the evening, when Corelli and Tebaldi together sing the opening notes of the duet from the first act of Giuseppe Verdi's Otello. A recital by Italian singers cannot, of course, be lacking in comic or at least lighter elements. O soave fanciulla from Boh me by Giacomo Puccini, and rightly greeted with a hurricane of applause. With O soave fanciulla the official part of the programme is concluded, and is then followed by no fewer than five encores, no longer with the orchestra but with piano accompaniment. Corelli first brings us a Neapolitan song (Tu ca nun chiagne by Marcello di Capua), then a Tosti romanza. Then comes Renata Tebaldi's turn with Donizetti's Me voglio fa' na casa, likewise much applauded. But the climax of the evening comes in Franco Corelli's third and final encore, the piece that the Japanese audience had been longing for from the start of the evening, one of his favourites, the Neapolitan song Core ngrato by Salvatore Cardillo. Here the tenor from Ancona, completely at his ease, shows off all his resources as he enchants and hypnotises his audience in an extraordinarily moving, pathetic reading, yet one that is spectacular in terms of vocal skills, with exceptional filatura effects (even more exceptional when we remember that this was at the end of an evening, after a performance in which Corelli had given his all) and with impressive control of sound. The concert then concludes in beauty with Renata Tebaldi's second encore, again one of the soprano's favorite pieces, O mio babbino caro from Giacomo Puccini's Gianni Schicchi. The concert ends in a genuine delirium of applause, with the public thronging around the stage not seeming to want to leave, a really extraordinary testimony of the enthusiasm that opera and singing can always stir when performers of outstanding stature appear on the stage of a theat |
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All the Way
$22.61 The adult-oriented comedy All the Way concerns a man named Steve who must pay the bank 30,000 dollars in 30 days or else his family's home will be taken. In order to raise the cash, Steve and his friends decide to create a pornographic film, something they have never done before. Soon they learn that they may have to actually act in the film themselves, and that they had no idea how difficult a venture they had undertaken. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi |
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All Boys
$18.11 Markku Heikkinen directs this documentary following the growth of Eastern Europe's adult film industry after the fall of the Berlin Wall. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi |
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Celine Dion - All The Way...A Decade
$9.84 Celine Dion - All The Way...A Decade |
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Boys on the Side
$5.71 This emotion-filled story stars Whoopi Goldberg, Mary-Louise Parker, and Drew Barrymore as three women from different walks of life who find comfort in each other through tragedy. Parker plays Robin, an HIV-positive real estate executive who meets Jane (Goldberg), a lesbian lounge singer on her way to the West Coast who needs a driver. Robin volunteers for the job, and along the way, they stop in Pittsburgh to visit her friend Holly (Barrymore), who is pregnant and abused by her boyfriend. In an attempt to save Holly, all three decide to head West together to begin a new life. But they get only as far as Arizona before Robin falls ill and the three are forced to learn to rely on one another for growth and emotional sustenance. Jane, though concerned about Robin's condition, also finds herself with a romantic interest in her ailing companion. Holly confronts her need to be with abusive men, while Robin comes to grips with her fear of being alone and the realization of her own impending death. Fans of Herbert Ross' earlier Steel Magnolias (1989) might appreciate this movie, which tackles some of the same themes. Sometimes referred to as a "feminist road movie," the film deals with women who find one another in a time of crisis and realize that the bonds among women are more powerful than any of life's obstacles. ~ Don Kaye, Rovi |
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The Golden Boys
$9.25 Adapted from Joseph C. Lincoln's best-selling novel Can'n Eri, this gentle tale of three retired sea captains living together and looking to get their house in order features an all-star cast including David Carradine, Rip Torn, Bruce Dern, and Mariel Hemingway. The story begins in turn of the century Cape Cod, where Captain Jerry Burgess (Torn), Captain Perez (Dern), and Captain Zeb (Carradine) decide that the only way to get their house in order is for one of them to get married. When no one jumps at the prospect of taking a bride, they decide to flip a coin and Captain Jerry is selected as the groom-to-be. After placing an ad for a mail-order bride in a big-city newspaper, the trio gets a response from Martha Snow (Hemingway), who hails from nearby Nantucket. The plan seems to be going along just fine until Captain Jerry gets cold feet, prompting Captain Perez to work overtime to keep Martha from leaving. But as Captain Jerry attempts to work up the confidence to propose, a strange thing happens: Captain Zeb falls in love with Martha and proposes. Now, if Captain Jerry can just find it within himself to forgive and old friend, this seafaring trio may find that everything will work out in the end. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi |
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Lost Horizon (1973)
$15.44 Based on the classic James Hilton novel, with an all-star, award winning cast, Lost Horizon is the ambitious musical remake ofthe Frank Capra classic. With deleted Burt Bacharach songs and sequences restored to the theatrical version of the film including: The Fertility Dance/ Living Together, Growing Together (Reprise), If I Could Go Back, When Knowledge Ends (Faith Begins), and I Come to You, along with special vintage featurettes, this much sought after version of the film is packed with extras. When a group of passengers survive a plane crash in the Himalayas they end up in the mystical world of Shangri-La, an idyllic oasis where art, culture and the knowledge of the world are treasured. In Shangri-La, the survivors learn about beauty, peace and serenity - and, for some, true love. Newly remastered. 1973/color/149 min/G/widescreen. |
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Scratch: All the Way Live
$11.06 The time of the DJ is upon us, and in an era where one man and a turntable can get an arena full of people on their feet as easily as a four-man band, director Doug Pray captures a historical concert featuring live performances by some of the hottest DJs on the scene. Filmed during the historic Scratch Tour, Scratch: All the Way Live features killer performances by Mix Master Mike, X-ecutioners, Z-Trip, The Original DJ Jazzy Jay, and Shepard Fairey that just go to show there's much more to being a DJ than putting a record on a turntable. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi |

