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Quitter! Is a very harsh word no one would want his child to be tagged. No sane mind would ever want to hear someone calling his child a quitter. To think they are raising a quitter is definitely a dilemma for parents. What do you do when your kid wants to quit an activity that he started not long ago and yet long before he mastered skills he is supposed to acquire on that activity? Do you encouraged him to stay and finish the course or quitting will not be a big deal?

Many children especially at an early age is surely curious of anything that catch their attention. They like to try everything. They want to get involved at anything they thought to be exciting and interesting. However, most of them decides to quit after few days of being part of a certain activity.

Parents often got confused as well when kids start to whine about dropping out of an activity. Some parents might feel like they are being pushy if they insist his child to keep trying and finish the course. But some parents can also have a guilty feeling that they are allowing or tolerating their children to have a mind setting that it's ok to be a quitter and grow that way.

Here is an insight from Dr. David Elkind, professor of child development at Tufts University, and the author of The Hurried Child:

* It's fine for children below 9 yrs old to quit an activity which they are not enjoying because they don't have a clear sense yet on what are the activities they will like.

*  At an early age, there is no evidence of what we call "transfer of training". This only means that that if a child quits an after school activity,  this doesn't transcribe of him being a quitter of any job in the future.

* Don't force your children on any activity. This may only develop anxiety that your child will be more reluctant to try other course or activity and try a new experiences.

* Make sure to let your child take part in the decision making. Thus, making him understand sense of accomplishment in the future.

* You may also wants to know a deeper reason why your child wants to quit. It may be a conflict with the coach or an attitude clash with other team members. Or he may just be too tired and may want some time to relax.

If your child asks to quit something mid-season, don’t rush the decision to give it up. It is best to discuss why and and what are the things both of you can perhaps try. You might encourage him to at least try for few more weeks and if he is not really enjoying it and he fully decided to drop it off. Then that's I guess the perfect time to quit.

However this is the perfect time as well to let him realize the consequences of quitting and let him understand the importance of decision making. This will give him an idea  that if he start something, he must finish it. This will encourage your child to think through his choices the next time he needs to make decisions.

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Christmas is an inspiring time of the year. Despite the differences in cultures and beliefs, there is something about this season that the bridges the heart of every human being. It's as if a magic wand is waved over this world, and behold, everything is more wonderful. People around the world tend to be more kind and tender hearted. The joy of Christmas season overflows every heart to forgive and show kindness to everyone. The lights, decorations, gift giving and reconciliation on any kind of relationship are some of the acts that is so overwhelming to ponder about this season. But what is the real essence of Christmas?

Christmas  is the perfect time to reflect and celebrate the real important things around us - not just the mesmerizing lights and decoration nor the excitement about gifts and get together. Christmas season is surely a perfect time to be happy and express your love and gratitude towards your family, friends and to everyone around you.

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Odyssey of the Mind is an international educational program which main focus is Creativity and Problem Solving and is administered by Creative Competitions, Inc. or  (CCI). This involves students from kindergarten through college. Each team has a maximum limit of seven team members. This encourages  members to work together as a team and  generate solutions to a problem they have not seen before. They will be given predefined long-term problem and will be asked to present their solution to the problem at a competition. The students will learn creative problem-solving methods while having fun in the process through Odyssey of the Mind program. The students will have a opportunity to explore their imagination and hone their creative thinking abilities to show off their skills and surpass new challenges.

Four divisions of Odyssey of the Mind teams:
Division I — Grades K–5 (U.S.):  Members must be less than 12 years of age on May 1 of the competition year (Other International).
Division II — Grades 6–8 (U.S.): Members must be less than 15 years of age on May 1 of the competition year (Other International).
Division III — Grades 9–12 (U.S.): the oldest team member who does not qualify for Divisions I or II and is attending regular school but not a college or university or anything similar (Other International).
Division IV — Collegiate for all teams. All team members must have a high school diploma or its equivalent and must be enrolled in at least one course at a two- or four-year at a certain college or university.

The team's division will be determined by the oldest team member.

Five categories of creative problems that the team participants must solve:
Vehicle: this involves building vehicles of different sizes that should perform specific tasks.
Technical: this category involves building an “innovative contraptions”.
Classics: this incorporates knowledge of architecture, art, and literature
Structure: this category will require the designing and building of a structure using only balsa wood and glue, and this should compete to see which structure can hold the most weight
Performance: this last category will require the team to act, sing, and/or dance depending on a given theme

In 1978, Odyssey of the Mind was founded by C. Samuel Micklus and Theodore Gourley. This friendly competition was previously known as "Olympics of the Mind". This very first creative problem-solving competition ever is participated by teams from 28 New Jersey schools.  Odyssey of the Mind is now an  international program with teams participating from different countries which  competes regularly in addition to teams from the United States.  

If the teams who advance from their state or national finals are from outside of the US, they will be invited to join the World Finals. It is the pinnacle of the entire year of Odyssey of the Mind.

Just like any other Olympic games, members of Odyssey of the Mind who made it to the World Finals often purchase a series of pins from their state. These pins will be traded throughout the competition. As they barter for one another's state and country pins, the teams are uniting from all over the world. The 1998 World Finals took place in Disney World. Disney picked up on the concept of pin trading and is now popular throughout Disney World and Disneyland.


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At age twelve, you are already on your way to becoming a teenager. This will be your last year as a kid. A good habit of reading books should be maintained at this age. Even if we are living on a computer age, it is still best if you can read a literal book. The next list will give you a clue on what you can read and share ideas with friends of the same age as yours.


1. Holes (Holes #1) by Louis Sachar
*There is a curse that runs from Stanley Yelnat's great-great-grandfather down through the Yelnat's generations. Stanley was sent to a boys' detention center, Camp Green Lake. This is where boys are ask to  dig holes all day, every single day to build their character. Shortly after being detained, Stanley realized that the warden is looking for something and digging of holes is not just simply character improvement. Stanley tries to dig up the fact in this imaginative, sad and hilarious fable of wrongdoing and castigation and then restitution.


An American children's book writer Louis Sachar is famous for  his Wayside School series and Holes. He is born March 20 of 1954 in  East Meadow, New York, United States. He's been an attorney for so many years but he chose to  devote his time to writing children's books. Louis Sachar is an award-winning author of twenty-five books for children and young adults. Holes was awarded the National Book Award for Young People's Literature in 1998.

2. The Giver (The Giver #1) by Lois Lowry
*Jonas, a twelve year old boy lives in a world which he thought to be perfect. Everyone there is happy. Until Jonas was chosen to be the community's Receiver of Memories and he meets an elder named The Giver. Together, they look at memories of past world or rather real world which is hidden from rest of the community. From the Giver, Jonas learns not only of love and family, but also of pain, war, and all the unhappy truths the world holds. How Jonas perceived the current world has changed completely. He quickly realizes that this community is fake. One day, he discovers that a little boy he names Gabriel, will be terminated. Jonas gives his whole abilities to let him see color, feel pain, and show and receive love in order to save him. But the question is, will Jonas succeed? Can he save Gabriel from being released?


Lois Lowry is an American writer credited with more than thirty children's books. She was born on March 20, 1937, in Honolulu, Hawaii. At the age of eight or nine, Lois already wanted to be a writer. This is where she always excel even at school. Her first novel  - A Summer to Die, which has a very serious drama story. Afterwhich she wrote several children's books for young adults to show the lighter side of her. Lois Lowry is known for her versatility and invention as a writer.

3. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
*The Diary of a Young Girl named Anne was discovered in the attic in which she spent the last years of her life. Annelies Marie "Anne" Frank was a Jewish girl born in the city of Frankfurt, Germany. During the Holocaust in 1942, with Nazis occupying Holland,  Anne and her family hid in the attic of her father's office for the next two years, until their whereabouts were betrayed to the Gestapo. It was during that time that she had recorded her life's experiences in her diary. She wrote a diary while hiding with her family in Amsterdam during the German invasion of the Netherlands in World War II. Anne Frank recorded vivid impressions of her experiences during this period in her diary. Her fascinating commentary on human courage and frailty has made this diary classic over time. This remarkable diary became a world classic. It serves as a powerful reminder of the horrors of war and an eloquent testament to the human spirit. But this compelling self-portrait of a sensitive and spirited young woman was tragically cut short, when she died in Bergen-Belsen, in February 1945, at the age of 15.

4. A Wrinkle in Time (Time Quintet #1) by Madeleine L'Engle
* A Wrinkle in Time is the story of Meg Murry, a high-school-aged girl.  Meg,her younger brother Charles along with her friend Calvin are transported on an adventure through time and space. Together they travel through a wrinkle in time. Their mission is to rescue Meg's father, a gifted scientist, from the evil forces that hold him prisoner on another planet. It is yet for us to know if will they be able to outsmart the evil forces that they will encounter. Let us join these kids on their heart-stopping journey through space.

The author of this Newbery Medal-winning A Wrinkle in Time and its sequels,  A Wind in the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, and Many Waters is Madeleine L'Engle. She was  an American writer best known for her Young Adult fictions. Her works reflect her strong interest in modern science which is very prominently in her writings. Madeleine was born on November 29th, 1918, and spent her developmental years in New York City. Madeleine now lived through the 20th century and into the 21st and has written over 60 books and she still keeps on writing.

5. Little Women (Little Women #1)  by Louisa May Alcott
* This is a story of the lives of March sisters, Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy and their journey detailing their passage from childhood to womanhood. Their father is away serving as a chaplain in the Civil War. These girls are guided in their personal growth by their mother, Marmee and by their religious faith. These four sisters struggle to support themselves and to keep their household running knowing the fact that the family had recently lost its fortune. In the process, they become close friends with Theodore Laurence, known as "Laurie", their wealthy neighbor who will have a special role in the lives of the March sisters.

Louisa May Alcott  was born on November 29, 1832 in Germantown, Pennsylvania.  Their father, Bronson Alcott, who is a philosopher and teacher is the one who educated them. Their mother, Abigail May raised them on the practical Christianity. Louisa May Alcott also has 3 sisters. Little Women was written at Orchard House from May to July 1868. The novel is based on Louisa and her sisters’ coming of age and is set in Civil War in New England.

6. Switch! The Lost Kingdoms of Karibu (Lost Kingdoms of Karibu #1) by Karen Prince
*This is an exciting frontier adventure with a fantasy twist about magic, friendship and bravery. Trouble is about to bloom in Karibu. Gogo Maya, the witch, and her leopard are about to make matters worse. They been working on a risky switch. They suck an ordinary Zimbabwean boy through the vacuum into the mess they left behind them. Now the witch’s leopard starts communicating and giving instructions right into his head. Ethan's thoughts is alarmed. He is about to team up with fearsome characters and travel into dark places. His thoughts is also disturbed about Joe who is in terrible danger unless he learns to use the magic just right in time to rescue his cousin, Joe. Ethan needs to find way quickly before Joe falls into the wrong hands and gets himself killed.

Zimbabwe, a perfect place for someone who always wanted to become a writer. Luckily, Karen Prince was raised on a wildlife farm in Zimbabwe. As a child I spent a lot of time in the bush. Her experiences as a child and her pleas for rescue as she grows made her an avid writer. Switch! Is her first novel in the Kingdoms of Karibu series.

7. Number the Stars by Lois Lowry
*The story is set in the city of Copenhagen, Denmark in September 1943, this is the third year of the Nazi's invasion of Denmark. Annemarie Johansen and her best friend Ellen Rosen used to think about their life before the war. Now their life is filled with school, food shortages, and the Nazi soldiers who keeps on marching through town. Ellen moves in with the Johansens and pretends to be one of the family when the Jews of Denmark are "relocated". On the later part of the story, Annemarie will be asked to go on a dangerous mission, and that is to save her best friend Ellen's life.

"I try, through writing, to convey my passionate awareness that we live intertwined on this planet and that our future depends upon our caring more, and doing more, for one another." - this is the very word of the author, Lois Lowry. She's a middle child and she consider this a fortune because this is exactly where she wanted most to be: on her own. She was a solitary child who lived in the world of books and her own vivid imagination. Her father was a career military officer - an Army dentist. That is why she literally lived in different places, countries and have seen different cultures and era, and come in contact with different people. All of this contributed to her passion of writing which she truly loves doing since her childhood.

9. Island of the Blue Dolphins (Island of the Blue Dolphins #1) by Scott O'Dell
*This novel tells the story of Karana, an Indian young girl who was stranded alone for years on an island off the California coast. This is based on the true story of a Nicoleño Native American who was left alone for 18 years on San Nicolas Island during the 19th century. Karana and her tribe, led by her father, lives on the Island of the Blue Dolphins in the Pacific. There are times that the Aleuts come and bother them to take otter from the island. There was one time that the conflict with the Aleuts grew worse and ended up in a huge fight. Many of the men on the island are killed. The new leaders decide to leave the island and go to the mainland to find better fortune. In the rush to leave the island, the rescue boat left Karana's little brother Ramo. Karana jumped off the boat to accompany her brother in the island but eventually, Ramo was killed by the wild dogs. Karana is now left alone on the Island of Blue Dolphins. She watched one season pass from year into another. She waited for a ship to take her away. However, on the process, she kept herself alive by building shelter, making weapons, finding food, and fighting her enemies, the wild dogs. It is not only an unusual adventure of survival, but also a tale of natural beauty and personal discovery.

Scott O'Dell was an American children's author who is famous in writing 26 novels for young people. Island of the Blue Dolphins (1960) won the 1961 Newbery Medal as well as a number of other awards. Scott O'Dell grew up in a California that was still wild and natural. No freeways, no asphalt, no hundred-story buildings. He wrote novels to encourage young people and make them realize that history had a very real connection to their lives. The heroes and heroines of his novels are smart and plucky, learning to take what life throws at them and work for their own independence.

10. The Lightning Thief (Percy Jackson and the Olympians #1) by Rick Riordan
* On this novel, we will meet Percy Jackson. He is twelve years old. Just after his sixth-grade year, Percy discovers that he is half blood: half-human, half-god. To keep him safe from monsters that like to attack half-bloods, he is taken to Camp Half-Blood in New York. This is where Percy learns more about himself. He knew that he's a brother to Zeus and his father is Poseidon. He also learns that the the master's bolt of Zeus was stolen and must be return to him before he declare war with Poseidon whom he accused of stealing his power to create lightning. So, Percy decided to embark in a quest to find the  Lightning thief. Grover, Percy's best friend and Annabeth, a smart demi-goddess and daughter of Athena helped Percy on this journey. Percy has a great time living the life of a hero at Camp Half-Blood. After telling Percy that he is proud of him, Poseidon gave him a choice whether he will stay in the camp or he can go home to his mom's apartment in New York.

Richard Russell Riordan Jr. or better known as Rick Riordan is known as the #1 New York Times bestselling author of many books which includes the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series. He is a two-time Mark Twain Award winner (2008 & 2009), as well as winner of the Children's Choice Books Awards for Author of the Year in 2011.

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At age ten, I know you are almost about to leave your little kids' book and starting to explore on the books your older brother or sister are reading. So, a combination of a fun and full of fantasy stories and a little more serious stories are collected for you to enjoy. Here's the list of books ideal for children at around age ten.

1. Harriet the Spy (Harriet the Spy #1)  by Louise Fitzhugh
* Harriet M. Welsch is a spy. One day she decided to get out of the usual spy route. Instead, she writes down everything she saw about the people around her. Every little thing she noticed on everyone, she jots it down on her notebook. Some lines on her notes goes like this:
"I bet the lady with the cross-eye looks in the mirror and feels just terrible."
"Pinky Whitehead will never change. Does his mother hate him? If I had him I'd hate him."
Fate plays a little harder with Harriet. She lose track of her notebook and unfortunately, it landed on the wrong hands. Before Harriet can stop it, her friends already read everything on her notebook. They already saw the always truthful and most of the time awful things she’s written about each of them. It is yet for us to know is Harriet can find a way to win her friends back.  

Louise Fitzhugh is not just a writer but also an illustrator of children's books. Aside from  the Harriet the Spy, other novels she wrote were two Harriet sequels, The Long Secret and Sport, and Nobody's Family is Going to Change.  Many of Fitzhugh's books were illustrated by her and she had works exhibited in Banfer Gallery, New York and  other galleries in 1963.

2. The Witches by Roald Dahl
* If you are thinking that this story is a fairy tale, then you are wrong. This is about real witches who do not ride around on broomsticks. The real witches, they don't wear cloaks and hats. These witches are vicious, slick, and awful individuals who  veils themselves as friendly, common women. To know that you are facing one of them is quite a challenge and you really have to be aware when you face them. So if you don't know yet on how to recognize a witch, this is your very chance to get to know them. Let's read on find out!

Roald Dahl was a British novelist, short story writer who was very prominent on writing novel for both children and adults. He later became one of the world's bestselling authors.

3. The Best Christmas Pageant Ever (The Herdmans #1) by Barbara Robinson
*The Herdman kids are known to be the worst kids in town . They are a kind of kids every parents want their children to avoid. Ralph, Imogene, Leroy, Claude, Ollie, and Gladys Herdman are an awful bunch. These kids burn down Fred Shoemaker’s toolshed,
they blackmailed Wanda Pierce just to get her charm bracelet and they smoke in bathrooms. Well, that’s just the start! One day the Herdman siblings show up at church for the free snacks, they take over the annual Christmas pageant and turn it to the best if not the worse Christmas Pageant ever. The Herdmans has never heard the Christmas story before. So they started to reimagine their own hilarious yet heartwarming tale.
This year’s Christmas pageant will surely be special.

Barbara Robinson starts writing at a very early age. She writes poems, plays, stories and she just never can't quit it. She got her love for books from her mother. She grew up in  Portsmouth, a small town in southern Ohio River. The atmosphere set on her hometown affected her writings and has became her inspiration. Love for reading runs through generations from her mother down to her own grandchildren.

4. The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare
* Katherine Tyler, our headstrong heroine is a young orphan who travels from island of Barbados to Puritan colony of Connecticut. As she glazed at the shore of Connecticut Colony for the first time, she knew that her new home will never be like the shimmering Caribbean island she left behind. She felt like a bird in cage, left alone and lonely. Kit only felt release when she is in the meadows. Here she felt completely free and happy. This is where she meet Hannah Tupper, known as the witch of Blackbird Pond. Problems arise when this friendship with the witch is discovered. She was also accused of witchcraft. Now, she has to face suspicion, fear and anger.

The author, Elizabeth George Speare was born in Melrose, Massachusetts, but lived all her life in New England and this is the place she calls home. She loves to travel. When she married  Alden Speare, that is the time she came to Connecticut. The only time that she finds time at last to sit down quietly with a pencil and paper is when both her children were on Junior high. She never had difficulty to start writing again. She turned naturally to the things which had filled her days and thoughts and she began to write magazine articles about family living. Then one day, a true story from New England history. She thought of the character who seemed an ideal heroine and that is when she started with her first novel- The Witch of Blackbird Pond.

5. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking-Glass (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland #1-2) by Lewis Carroll.
* One warm summer afternoon, young Alice tumbles down a rabbit hole and the strangest adventures in Wonderland started and continued to enchant readers even after more than 100 years. On this book, the young and imaginative Alice encounters the anxious White Rabbit, the laconic Cheshire Cat, the terrifying Red Queen,the Mad Hatter, the weeping Mock Turtle, and a host of other outlandish and charming characters.

The Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson is well known by his pen name Lewis Carroll. He was an Oxford scholar, Church of England Deacon, University Lecturer in Mathematics and Logic, academic author of learned theses, gifted pioneer of portrait photography, colourful writer of imaginative genius sequels.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel is just one of his famous writings. His famous poems are "The Hunting of the Snark" and "Jabberwocky". He is considered to be a literary genius.

6.  Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine
*Ella was visited by a young fairy named Lucinda, her fairy godmother. Lucinda bestowed her a magical talent to obey whatever she is told to do so. This turns to be more of a curse rather than a blessing to Ella. When her lovely mother died, she was forced to live with a loathsome stepmother and two treacherous stepsisters. This embarks Ella to go on a quest to find Lucinda and convince her to reverse the spell. On her way, she befriends elves, and fall in love with a prince. Ellah Enchanted is a remarkable and delightful version of Cinderella with some satisfying twists and deviations from the original story.

The Lost Kingdom of Bamarre, Stolen Magic, The Two Princesses of Bamarre and Fairest are just some of the amazing books written by the same author, Gail Carson Levine. She was born and raised in New York City, New York. She credits her love for writing from her parents. The success of Ella Enchanted made Gail decide and retire from government work and pursue writing full-time.

7. Betsy-Tacy (Betsy-Tacy #1) by Maud Hart Lovelace
*Betsy Ray badly wants to have a friend and playmate of her age. There are lots of children on Hill street but no one is of the same age as hers. Betsy hopes there's a little girl that she can play with. One day, a new family move in the house just across the street and sure enough she meet a five year old girl, Tacy. Since Betsy's fifth birthday, they became very best friends. People start to think they are just one person - Betsy-Tacy. From then on, they shared lots of fun together. They make a playhouse from a piano box, have a sand store, and they also love to dress up. More surprises come when a new found friend Tib came along.

Maud Hart Lovelace was born on April 25, 1892, in Mankato, Minnesota. She used her own family as a model for the fictional Ray family. A newly moved in neighbor Frances, nicknamed Bick, is her model for Tacy. Tib is the character she used for Marjorie or Midge. She's the other little girl who lived nearby  in a large house designed by her architect father. These three little girls (Maud, Bick, and Midge) became lifelong best friends so as Betsy,Tacy and Tib)

8. The City of Ember (Book of Ember, #1)  by Jeanne DuPrau
*The city of Ember was created many hundred years ago. The builders created this city to contain everything that is needed for human survival. It works real fine in the past but corruption is rapidly spreading throughout the city while the storerooms are almost out of food and crops. To make things worst, the lights are starting to fail. Not long enough, Ember could be engulfed by darkness. One day, Lina and Doon discover fragments of an ancient parchment. The two children start to wonder if there could be any other way out of Ember. Let's join them in their journey. Let's see if they can decipher the words from long ago and will they find a new future for everyone? Their greatest struggle will be the people of Ember, will there be anyone of them who will listen to them?

Jeanne DuPrau finds writing a hardwork. She has this quote from Thomas Mann taped to her wall: "A writer is someone for whom writing is harder than it is for other people". This quote gives her so much courage to continue writing. She also love gardening and a dog lover. She lives with her two nephews, a niece, and her dog named Ethan.

9. Anne of Green Gables (Anne of Green Gables #1) by L.M. Montgomery
* The unmarried siblings, Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert lived on their ancestral farm, Green Gables. It's in the quiet town of Avonlea in Prince Edward Island, Canada. Matthew being sixty, realized that he is getting old and decided to adopt a boy from an orphanage  to handle the farm work with him. Due to a misunderstanding, the orphanage sends a red-headed girl named Anne Shirley. instead. Anne is highly imaginative, eager to please the elderly and quite dramatic at times. She did everything to win the elderly siblings and eventually,  the Cuthberts quickly become attached to Anne and decide to keep her.

Lucy Maud Montgomery was a Canadian author. she is best known for a series of novels. Anne of Green Gables is Lucy's first novel. Lucy Maud Montgomery, was born at Clifton, Prince Edward Island on Nov. 30, 1874.

10. The Hidden Staircase (Nancy Drew #2) by Carolyn Keene
*Nancy decided to help the relatives of Helen Corning to solve the mystery of the ghost haunting their old mansion. A mysterious visitor came to Nancy to warn her that her father, Carson Drew is in danger. Nancy discovers an underground passage and staircase. She also find the missing property owner,  Willie Wharton, and learned that her father is a prisoner in the tunnel. The disappearance of Mr. Drew, the thefts and all the mysterious goings on at Twin Elms along with the discovery of a hidden staircase, ushers Nancy to resolve these baffling mysteries.

Carolyn Keene is a writer pen name that was used by many different people- both men and women- over the years. The company owner hires different writers and they all used the pseudonym Carolyn Keene to assure anonymity of the creator.

This list of books is surely good enough to fill your free time. You may grab a copy of the book so that whenever you have spare time, you may just sit on the corner and start reading. You'll surely love and enjoy these books and the stories which you can remember all the days of your life.

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