The classic "Little Red Riding Hood" with the best bits of other wonderful stories added in!
♥ The Witch With No Name is an artful blend of story and game ♥
Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy written early in the career of William Shakespeare about two young star-crossed lovers whose deaths ultimately unite their feuding families. It was among Shakespeare's most popular plays during his lifetime and, along with Hamlet, is one of his most frequently performed plays. Today, the title characters are regarded as archetypal young lovers.
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"Is the Witch in Love?" is a subtle blend of stories, games and cartoons.
Discover --- or rediscover --- "The Witch with No Name" in a new interactive adventure full of emotion and magic.
The witch thinks she’s in love with the handsome and famous sorcerer Merlinor. She dreams of being invited to the big party that he throws every year for Halloween...
"Alizay, pirate girl" is an artful blend of story, game and cartoon
“Peepo and the Unfinished Story” is an artful blend of stories, games and cartoons.
"The Little Witch at School" is an artful blend of stories, games and cartoons.
♥ The Witch With No Name is an artful blend of story and game ♥
♥ "Victor’s cold!" An artful blend of story and play for pre-primary school kids♥
The adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
A review from the PENN STATER, Sept./Oct. 1997: ". . .Braund's descriptions of his agricultural mission will interest some readers.
Twenty-four-year-old Jane Marshall is unattractive, poor, struggling to educate herself.
Twelve British Statisticians provides a description of the lives and contributions of a dozen scientists.
These two stories by Koos Rozemond, with English translations by Aart van den End.
A 400-year-old puzzle, a modern-day hunt to the death.
The secret Society for Emigrant Women runs an international rescue operation for runaway women.
At the height of the Cold War a Russian girl plots to steal the mummified body of Lenin.
Don't Try and Sell Me No Pink Flamingos: From the forward by George Garrett York Harbor.
Our meddling intellect misshapes the beauteous forms of things; we murder to dissect.