Reynold Jay has written a 2-part political thriller "Forty Days to Armageddon" The trilogy, "Seeds from Heaven" is now available worldwide. He is the winner of the 2014 Best HUB Fiction Writer award. Reynold Jay is noted for using impaired characters in his writing and is an advocate for Somalia, seniors, and the handicapped. A family 8-part series "The Wurtherington Diary" is now available.
The Little Doll Girl: Book One
Tammy and the Declaration of Independence
Tammy, Meets Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves
Tammy and the California Gold Rush
Tammy Meets William Tell
Buffalo Bill and the Pony Express
Buffalo Bill and the Indians
Robin Hood and the Magna Carta
"...A delightful tale of a brave little girl that will enthrall readers of all ages." C. Miller
Fully Restored and Illustrated edition for all ages.
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 Falls, 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.
Tammy keeps a diary of her exploits in Kira which is ruled with an iron-hand by a pair of sorceresses, Catherine and Lucinda. Tammy and Alfred find their way through a fantasy underground transportation system that ends up with the pair mistakenly ending up in a wicker-basket in the middle of the ocean. Tammy finds her voice for the first time and Alfred explains that it is a "talking spell that allows virtually everyone to talk including the pesky (giant) flowers."
From this point you will discover many wonderful characters like Zeke, the Flying Opossum, and Cedric the Mongoose, who accompany Tammy on her journey to Capira to present a petition t...
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