Nevertheless, I took it home with me for three reasons: Exactly like the one in the cover of The Entertainer and the Dybbuk. Stine’s Night of the Living Dummy from his Goosebumps series, I developed a phobia of the classic ventriloquist’s dummy, the wooden kind with a creepy grin on its face. When I picked up The Entertainer and the Dybbuk from the library, I felt a sense of eeriness just by looking at the book cover. Yankee Doodle, sir.” Click on the image to be taken to the websource. “Well, well, howdy,” said the ventriloquist, startled. In the deep shadows the intruder glowed faintly, as if sprayed with moonlight. After all, we’re still in our bimonthly theme of Circus, Carnivale, and Paranormal Twists. Today, I bring you the creepy tale of Sid Fleischman’s The Entertainer and the Dybbuk. While it’s still Valentine’s Day in my part of the globe, I decided to come up with something different in this season of hearts. Poster courtesy of our treasured Iphigene Asian Festival of Children’s Content (AFCC).Literary Voyage Around The World Reading Challenge 2018.#WomenReadWomen2019 (A Year Of Women Reading Women) Reading Progress.#ReadIntl2020 (Year Of International Literature) Reading Progress.#DecolonizeBookshelves2022 Reading Progress.#DecolonizeReading2023 Reading Progress.
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