Jan 18 2012

Chipped Back Of Tooth




Chipped Front Tooth


Chipped Front Tooth


$13.68


Chipped Front Tooth

The Tooth


The Tooth


$8.59


Tim Thomas is searching for dinosaur fossils in the hills above Pounamu his grandparents sheep station. His mum drowned when he was four leaving Tim with only a vague memory of her – and of a large tooth embedded in rock. But time is against him as he races to find the exact spot where the tooth lies before the river gully is dammed and the rising waters cover the site. He also has to deal with Sam Mason the school bully and when Tims horse is stolen his attempts to get her back bring him up against a gang of horse thieves. And then when it starts to rain the waters begin to rise and Tim is in trouble. Deep trouble. Des Hunt specializes in exciting action-packed adventures set in the natural landscapes of New Zealand. This is his sixth novel since A Friend in Paradise a 2003 finalist in the NZ Post Childrens Book Awards and follows the success of The Moa Cave 2007 finalist Frog Whistle Mine Where Cuckoos Call and Shadows in the Ice. Des lives on the Coromandel Peninsula.

The Chalice of the Chipped Ruby


The Chalice of the Chipped Ruby


$18.92


This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts – the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.

Chipped


Chipped


$10.05


The pattern on this clear glass is similar to frost forming on a window pane.

Draped Up and Chipped Out, Vol. 2


Draped Up and Chipped Out, Vol. 2


$13.76


Messy Marv has undeniably been the Bay Area’s hottest artist of 2007 and he’s back to end the year with a bang! Continuing his successful Draped Up & Chipped Out series, Messy returns with the second installment- this time with a twist- Draped Up & Chippe

Nice Try, Tooth Fairy


Nice Try, Tooth Fairy


$12.87


Dear Tooth Fairy, My grandfather is here for a visit. Could you please return my tooth so I could show it to him? Emma But instead of Emma’s tooth, the Tooth Fairy brings… …and more — and the animals come to Emma’s room to get their teeth back!

Dear Tooth Fairy


Dear Tooth Fairy


$3.98


Dear Tooth Fairy, Last week it was my birthday. I was six, but I don’t have even one wobbly tooth yet. I’m worried. Yours sincerely, Claire Claire is anxiously awaiting her first loose tooth, and she’s getting impatient. She writes to the Tooth Fairy, and miraculously, the Tooth Fairy writes back — providing Claire with some helpful advice In a delightful exchange of letters between a young girl and the" Tooth Fairy, " Pamela Duncan Edwards and Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick convey the excited anticipation every young child experiences while waiting for the monumental event of losing that first wobbly tooth.

The Apple and the Tooth


The Apple and the Tooth


$9.58


Bibio’s Stephen Wilkinson had a banner year in 2009. He rang it in with Vignetting the Compost, an album that seemed to beckon spring with its delicate, pastoral electronics, then took his music several steps forward with that summer’s Ambivalence Avenue, which was as dazzling as it was eclectic. Wilkinson closed the year with The Apple and the Tooth’s hybrid of new songs and remixes by similarly wide-ranging artists who found plenty of ways to push Ambivalence Avenue’s tracks in even more far-flung directions. Some remixers hone in on the album’s anything-goes feel: Clark, whose fearless sound clashes feel like a major influence on Bibio, takes the already hyperactive “S’vive” to another level of brilliant fragmentation, using sudden stops and starts, layers of dreamy analog synth, and crashing electronic noise to rework the song so drastically it feels like a suite of mini-remixes. Letherette’s transformation of “Lover’s Carvings” from a folky guitar vignette into a soulful, bottom-heavy slow jam is even more radical, even if it’s not as shocking. Other artists tap into Ambivalence Avenue’s reveries. Lone doesn’t tamper much with the hippie bliss of “All the Flowers,” only adding filtered electronics and crunchier beats to its chiming harmonies, while the Gentleman Losers’ take on “Haikuesque” somehow makes the song even more nostalgic. Bibio himself contributes a remix as well, the lovely, chamber pop-ified “The Palm of Your Wave,” but The Apple and the Tooth’s new tracks are more interesting. Ambivalence Avenue’s mix of sunny folk-pop and challenging beats and textures continues on the title track and “Rotten Rudd,” even if neither is quite as jaw-dropping as the songs from that album. “Bones and Skulls,” however, is a standout that proves Wilkinson’s songwriting is growing ever more effortlessly graceful as it segues from a breezy melody into a moodier piano and guitar coda. Even if The Apple and the Tooth is more a summation of where Bibio was in 2009 than another bold step forward, it’s still a very enjoyable look back on his artistic growth that year. ~ Heather Phares, Rovi

Tooth of Crime


Tooth of Crime


$11.02


While T Bone Burnett spent most of the ’90s and the first years of the new millennium honing his craft as a producer, he cautiously re-emerged as a songwriter and recording artist with 2006’s The True False Identity, which was his first new album in 14 years and prompted his first concert tour since 1986. A mere two years later, Burnett has returned with another new disc, Tooth of Crime, and while this project has long been in the works, it’s still significant and welcome since it finally appeared at all. The ten songs on Tooth of Crime were originally created as accompaniment for a revised staging of Sam Shepard’s play of the same name, which debuted in 1996 (one song, “Kill Zone,” obviously dates back even farther, since the late Roy Orbison is credited as co-author), and while it’s likely Burnett savored the opportunity to linger over this material before taking it into the studio, the performances here sound fresh and thoughtful — like a good play — while plenty of analysis and rehearsal went into refining Tooth of Crime’s characters and narrative, there’s still a vital humanity in the work that brings it all to life. The True False Identity was a poorly focused and lyrically scattershot work, but Tooth of Crime better captures Burnett’s strongest suits as a songwriter, and if “The Rat Age,” “Anything I Say Can and Will Be Used Against You,” and “Here Come the Philistines” sound like broadsides, they’re broadsides that communicate and express their rage and disgust with our culture’s many wrong turns in an eloquent and bitterly witty fashion. Burnett is also able to find flashes of compassion in “Blind Man” and “Kill Zone,” and as usual he’s assembled an impressive team of collaborators who do superb work on this set. Burnett’s former wife Sam Phillips brings her lovely, nuanced vocals to five songs and Marc Ribot’s guitar work, at once melodic and sharply angled, is outstanding throughout, while fellow accompanists Jim Keltner, Greg Leisz, Jon Brion, and an imaginatively arranged horn section give this music a broad and atmospheric menace that well suits the songs. Tooth of Crime is a smart, absorbing, and beautifully disquieting collection of songs that could have come from no one else but T Bone Burnett, and it shows that one of America’s best songwriters may be working at a very deliberate pace but he still has some remarkable things left to tell us. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi Performers: Darrell Leonard – Trumpet (Pocket), Pocket Trumpet, Trombonium; Jon Brion – Chamberlin, Guitar (Baritone); T-Bone Burnett – 6-String Bass, Piano, Vocals, Guitar; Dan Kelly – French Horn;

Gay Tooth Brushes Poster


Gay Tooth Brushes Poster


$9.99


Vintage Gay Tooth Brushes Poster adds unique decor to your home or business. Every Gay Products Product Ads collector would love this unusual gift. Gay Tooth Brushes Posters are ready to hang with tabs on back.


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