Leaf By Niggle. Illustrated

The Golden Leaf
The Golden Leaf
The precious Golden Leaf at Tranquillity Valley High School has been stolen by a ruthless Underworld criminal organisation, Obsidian. President Drago Caracas of Obsidian vows to change the world with the Golden Leaf. Now, the principal, Gerard Ramirez, of Tranquillity Valley finds three of his most talented students, Marco Cortes, Zak and Rachel, and urges them to go on a quest to find the Golden Leaf, which is located on Stingray Island. Anyone who has entered the island has never come back out alive. But these three teenagers are highly skilled in martial arts, sword fighting and archery. Can they retrieve the Golden Leaf and stop Drago's evil plans?
10
41 Chapters
The Last Leaf of Devotion
The Last Leaf of Devotion
On the very night Ansel Halberg is in another woman's arms, Odessa Montclair meets a tragic end. The Grim Reaper gives her seven days to return to the world of the living and make one final request. Her only wish is to divorce Ansel and erase every trace of their shared past. She's determined never to cross his path again—neither in this life, nor the next.
27 Chapters
The last Leaf on the tree
The last Leaf on the tree
Kehna had lost her mother when she was young she was only left with her dad who after awhile married her Stepmom. After her mother's death she still hadn't recovered yet, she wasn't doing so well in school anymore but when her dad got married nothing became better it all just became worse.
10
18 Chapters
Waking Up From A 5-Year Dream
Waking Up From A 5-Year Dream
My childhood sweetheart who promised to marry me the moment I graduated proposed to Camille Willow, my sister, during my graduation ceremony. At that moment, Dennis Malcolm, the most eligible and admired bachelor in Blington City's elite circle, stepped forward and confessed his love for me immediately after my childhood sweetheart's proposal was accepted. For five years after our marriage, Dennis showered me with devotion, treating me with such tenderness that it felt as though I were the center of his world. But everything shattered the day I overheard a conversation between him and his close friend. "Dennis, now that Camille's on top, are you really going to keep pretending with Tracy?" "It doesn't matter. I'll never have Camille. Besides, as long as I'm here, she'll never disrupt Camille's happiness," he answered. The paper notes he held dear, each one carefully preserved, revealed a harsh truth. Each one carried her name, accompanied by heartfelt wishes: "May Camille be released from her burdens. May she find peace within herself." "May Camille achieve all she dreams of, and may her heart love freely." "Camille, we were never meant to be together in this life. I can only hope that in another, we will walk side by side." … Five years of devotion shattered in a single moment of clarity. I crafted a false identity and planned an elaborate drowning to vanish without a trace. From this day forward, in this life and all others, we shall never cross paths again.
10 Chapters
The Day I Said I Do
The Day I Said I Do
After eight years of loving him in vain, my boyfriend, Gilbert Hughes, finally proposed. The wedding is set for a week from now. However, just as I'm happily preparing for it, I accidentally overhear a conversation between him and his friends. "I have to give it to Gilbert. The moment he proposes, his first love, Cheryl, gets restless." "But now that Cheryl's back, what are you going to do with your girlfriend?" Gilbert pauses for a moment, then replies casually, "It's fine. I'm not actually going to register my marriage with Jennifer. At worst, I'll just hold a wedding and play along." At the party the next day, he wraps his arm around me dotingly and socializes with our guests. Yet, the moment Cheryl Manning runs out in tears, he instantly lets go of me and chases after her in a panic. I follow quietly and watch them embrace tightly in the dark, kissing each other deeply. With my heart completely shattered, I turn away and dial a number. "Want to get married? I need a groom."
10 Chapters
Love Burned to a Crisp
Love Burned to a Crisp
At the Davenport family dinner, I arrive wearing the same dress Tucker Davenport's true love once wore. His face darkens immediately. He glares at me coldly and orders that my dress be burned on the spot. "Damn it, Willow, can't you show a little self-awareness? Shelby might be too naive to notice, but there's no way I'm letting you appear like this in front of her." The intense heat rushes toward me as the flames consume the fabric. A sharp, burning pain shoots between my legs, crashing over me like a tidal wave. The pain drags me under, but I suddenly jolt awake, barely able to gasp a plea for mercy. Tucker doesn't spare me a glance. He simply turns away to help Shelby cut the cake. Days later, he finally remembers I exist. "As long as you behave and don't bother Shelby again, you'll still be Mrs. Davenport." I stare at the burns on my legs as my tears dry up. I refuse to beg any longer. I'm done being Mrs. Davenport.
9 Chapters

Will The Omega'S Second Chance Mate Get An Illustrated Edition?

2 Answers2025-10-16 10:26:02

Lately I've been keeping an eye on a lot of niche novels getting prettier releases, so when I heard whispers about 'The Omega's Second Chance Mate' possibly getting an illustrated edition, my imagination ran wild. From what I can gather, whether that specific title gets an illustrated release usually comes down to a few predictable things: the original platform and publisher, sales or streaming numbers, how vocal the fanbase is, and whether the author or translator has access to an illustrator willing to collaborate. If the book started as a serialized web novel or BL/omegaverse piece on a site that feeds into light novel-style publishing, there's a decent chance a publisher might greenlight illustrations for a physical or deluxe edition when the time is right.

Another sign to watch is how the title has been treated in other markets. When similar works migrate from web serial to printed volumes, publishers often add bonus illustrations, color plates, or new covers to sweeten preorders. Sometimes there are also limited-run collector editions with an artbook or poster. Independent publishers or fan-funded campaigns (like special Kickstarter runs) can also produce illustrated versions even without a major publisher’s backing. If the author or fan community is proactive, you can sometimes see an artist reveal, a stretch-goal plan, or preorder pages that list illustrated extras months before release.

Practically speaking, I’d look at publisher announcements, ISBN listings, and author or translator socials for the earliest clues. Retailer pages (even if they’re placeholders) sometimes leak edition details. If you enjoy collecting, consider supporting official releases—publishers pay attention to that. And even if a fully illustrated hardcover isn’t announced yet, there’s often an artist who creates unofficial art that later inspires official commissions or merch. All that said, I’d be genuinely excited to see 'The Omega's Second Chance Mate' with character plates and full-color chapter headers; it would add so much atmosphere. I’m quietly hoping the right collaboration pops up soon—would love to own that edition myself.

Where Can I Buy Illustrated Editions Of The Book Of Healing?

4 Answers2025-10-17 05:52:08

If you're hunting down illustrated editions of 'The Book of Healing' (sometimes catalogued under its Arabic title 'al-Shifa' or associated with Ibn Sina/Avicenna), I've got a few routes I love to check that usually turn up something interesting — from high-quality museum facsimiles to rare manuscript sales. Start with specialist marketplaces for used and rare books: AbeBooks, Biblio, and Alibris are goldmines because they aggregate independent sellers and antiquarian dealers. Use search terms like 'The Book of Healing illustrated', 'al-Shifa manuscript', 'Avicenna illuminated manuscript', or 'facsimile' plus the language you want (Arabic, Persian, Latin, English). Those sites give you the ability to filter by condition, edition, and seller location, and I’ve found some really lovely 19th–20th century illustrated editions there just by refining searches and saving alerts.

For truly historic illustrated copies or museum-quality facsimiles, keep an eye on auction houses and museum shops. Major auction houses such as Sotheby’s and Christie’s sometimes list Islamic manuscripts and Persian codices that include illustrations and illuminations; the catalogues usually have high-resolution photos and provenance details. Museums with strong manuscript collections — the British Library, the Bibliothèque nationale de France, the Metropolitan Museum, or university libraries — either sell facsimiles in their stores or can point you toward licensed reproductions. I once bought a stunning facsimile through a museum shop after finding a reference in an exhibition catalogue; the colors and page details were worth every penny.

If you want a modern illustrated translation rather than a historical facsimile, try mainstream retailers and publisher catalogues. University presses and academic publishers (look through catalogues from Brill, university presses, or specialized Middle Eastern studies publishers) occasionally produce annotated or illustrated editions. Indie presses and boutique publishers also sometimes produce artist-driven editions — check Kickstarter and independent booksellers for limited runs and special illustrated projects. For custom or reproduction needs, there are facsimile houses and reprography services that can create high-quality prints from digital scans if you can source a public-domain manuscript scan (the British Library and many national libraries have digitised manuscripts you can legally reproduce under certain conditions).

A few practical tips from my own hunting: always examine seller photos and condition reports carefully, ask about provenance if you’re buying a rare manuscript, and compare shipping/insurance costs for valuable items. If it’s a reproduction you’re after, scrutinize whether it’s a scholarly facsimile (with notes and critical apparatus) or a decorative illustrated edition — they’re priced differently and serve different purposes. Online communities, rare-book dealers’ mailing lists, and specialist forums for Islamic or Persian manuscripts are also excellent for leads; I’ve received direct seller recommendations that way. Good luck — tracking down an illustrated copy is part treasure hunt, part book-nerd joy, and seeing those miniatures up close never fails to spark my enthusiasm.

Who Illustrated Claimed By My Ex'S Father-In-Law Manga Edition?

3 Answers2025-10-16 13:12:04

Surprisingly, the manga edition of 'Claimed by My Ex's Father-in-Law' is illustrated by Hana Yuzuki. I dug through the credits and edition notes when I picked up a physical copy, and her name is the one consistently credited for the adaptation work. Her linework brings a softer, almost watercolor-like touch to the characters, which contrasts nicely with the sometimes tense romance beats in the story.

I’ve got to say, I appreciated how she handled facial expressions and body language — the emotional beats land better because she gives small, readable details to eyes and hands. If you’ve seen her other pieces (she’s done a few romance one-shots and magazine illustrations), you can spot similar traits: delicate cross-hatching, tasteful screentone use, and a tendency to favor close-ups during heavy dialogue. The print edition also includes a couple of color pages and a glossy frontispiece that really shows off her palette choices.

Beyond the art itself, it was fun comparing her interpretation to the original novel's descriptions: some scenes felt more intimate in manga form because of her framing, while others were expanded visually in ways that added depth. Overall, Hana Yuzuki gives the manga a distinct visual identity that I found very appealing; it made rereading certain scenes a fresh experience for me.

Who Illustrated The Wings Of Fire Cover For Book One?

1 Answers2025-09-03 17:19:45

Oh, I love how a good cover can pull you into a new world — the blue-and-gold dragon on the first 'Wings of Fire' book definitely did that for me. That said, the simple truth is that it depends a bit on which edition you mean. Different printings and regions sometimes use different cover artists, and Scholastic has updated covers over the years. If you’re asking about the original novel, the best place to find the illustrator credit is actually inside the book itself: check the copyright/title verso page where publisher credits and art credits are usually listed.

If you meant the graphic-novel adaptation of 'The Dragonet Prophecy' (the comics-style retelling that started coming out later), that one is easy to pin down — the art for the graphic novels is by Mike Holmes, and his style gives the dragon characters a really lively, dynamic feel that’s fun to compare to the prose covers. For the prose novels though, I’ve noticed Scholastic has used different artists for US paperbacks, UK editions, and special releases, so you might see multiple names depending on which cover you have. I often end up comparing ISBNs on the back to figure out which print run my copy is from, then cross-referencing the publisher page.

If you want a quick way to be certain: flip to the copyright page of your specific copy and scan for an art or cover illustration credit, or look up the ISBN on the publisher’s catalog page (Scholastic’s site usually lists credits). Another neat route is to check Tui T. Sutherland’s official site or her social posts — authors sometimes post shout-outs to the cover artists and share behind-the-scenes sketches. Library catalogs like WorldCat or the Library of Congress entry will often list detailed publication info too, which can include illustrator names. I’ve done that a bunch when I was trying to track down who did a particular UK variant cover I wanted to buy.

If you’d like, tell me which edition or show me a picture of the cover you have (hardcover vs. paperback, US vs. UK, or the graphic-novel style) and I’ll help track down the exact illustrator credit. I find it fun to trace who made those first impressions — sometimes the same artist will do an entire series run, and sometimes each book is a little surprise.

Are There Illustrated Carmilla Kindle Editions For Collectors?

4 Answers2025-09-03 05:55:02

Honestly, if you're collecting editions of 'Carmilla', Kindle can be both a blessing and a headache. I love digging through ebook stores late at night, and yes—there are Kindle editions that include illustrations. Some are modern re-illustrations by small presses or indie artists, and others are scans of older print editions that retain original engravings or woodcuts. The trick is checking the product details: look for words like 'illustrated', 'with illustrations', or mentions of an artist, and use the 'Look inside' preview on Amazon to confirm image quality.

That said, collectors often value tactile things—deckled edges, sewn bindings, tipped-in plates—so for serious collecting I still hunt down limited physical runs from specialty publishers. If you want an illustrated ebook that feels premium, search for fixed-layout or Kindle Print Replica editions (they preserve layout and image fidelity better than reflowable text). Also consider buying from small presses directly; some will sell DRM-free EPUBs you can convert and archive. I personally balance both: a high-quality illustrated Kindle for casual reading and a physical collector's copy for the shelf.

Who Illustrated The Ninjabread Man Book Edition?

3 Answers2025-09-06 14:13:37

Nice question — I get why that little mashup title sticks in your head. I don't have the illustrator name for a specific 'The Ninjabread Man' edition without more details, because titles like that can be published in multiple editions, countries, or reprints and each can use a different artist. What I usually do when a book’s illustrator is elusive is check the copyright page inside the book (that’s where illustrators are credited), or hunt down the ISBN — the ISBN will point to the exact edition and often to publisher metadata that lists the illustrator.

If you can’t open the book right now, try a quick image search for the cover, then click through to listing pages on sites like Google Books, WorldCat, or a bookseller that has a ‘Look inside’ feature. Publishers’ pages and library catalogs usually show illustrator credits. If the book is out of print or obscure, a scan of the title page and copyright page shared in a community forum or to me would get you the answer fast. I love these little detective missions — sometimes a UK edition has gorgeous watercolors and a US edition uses bold digital art, which is fun to compare — so if you tell me which cover or edition you’re looking at, I’ll help track the artist down for you.

Which Illustrated Editions Of The Wind And The Sun Are Best?

3 Answers2025-08-24 21:55:31

I get a little giddy whenever someone asks about illustrated versions of 'The Wind and the Sun'—it’s one of those fables that lets illustrators do so much with mood and motion. If you like a classic, slightly antique feel, try to hunt down editions pulled from early-20th-century 'Aesop' collections: the line work and plate-style illustrations (often wood-engraving or pen-and-ink) let the wind appear as frantic, scribbly gusts while the sun is drawn calm and steady. These older plates often come in Dover or reprint editions if you don’t want to pay collector prices. The reproduction quality matters here: creamy paper and faithfully scanned plates keep the texture of the originals, which I adore when I’m flipping pages slowly at a café.

On the other end of the spectrum, modern watercolor treatments—think big, warm washes for the sun and cool, translucent strokes for the wind—make the fable feel very tactile and child-friendly. These editions often come with expanded retellings or author notes that place the moral in context, which is handy if you’re teaching or prepping a short read-aloud. For something artsy and minimal, there are indie picture-book versions where illustrators simplify the forms into bold shapes and a few colors; those highlight the story’s contrast between gentle warmth and bluster and can be surprisingly profound.

Practical tip: if you want a book to live in a kid’s hands, look for sturdier bindings and bright, saturated color. If it’s for a bookshelf or coffee table, chase a cloth-bound reprint with high-quality plates. I personally keep one vintage-style reprint for rainy-day nostalgia and a modern watercolor kids’ edition for bedtime—both make 'The Wind and the Sun' feel fresh in very different ways.

Who Illustrated Early Editions Of The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz Book?

3 Answers2025-08-30 08:51:49

I still get a little thrill when I flip through the old black-and-white plates — they have that bold, slightly zany feel that hooked me as a kid. The early editions of 'The Wonderful Wizard of Oz' were illustrated by William Wallace Denslow (usually credited as W. W. Denslow). His heavy lines, simple yet expressive figures, and occasional color plates gave Dorothy and her companions a look that feels both classic and a little theater-like, which makes sense because some of his designs were used in stage versions and merchandising early on.

Denslow was Baum’s first big visual collaborator, and his imagery shaped how generations pictured Oz. After that first book the illustration baton eventually passed to John R. Neill for many of the later Oz novels, who brought a more whimsical, intricately detailed approach. If you want to see Denslow’s originals, the 1900 first edition (published by the George M. Hill Company) is the one to look for — Project Gutenberg and library archives often have scans that show his full set of illustrations and color plates. I still love tracing the differences between Denslow’s big, graphic shapes and Neill’s later, more ornate world — they feel like two different childhoods of Oz, both delightful in their own way.

Where Can I Buy Illustrated Harry Potter Books Cheaply?

3 Answers2025-08-31 09:07:42

If you're hunting down illustrated 'Harry Potter' books without blowing your budget, I get that buzz — the art makes them feel like a whole new world. My usual go-to is to start with used-book marketplaces like AbeBooks, Alibris, and ThriftBooks. They often have multiple copies, sometimes ex-library or slightly shelf-worn editions at a fraction of new price. I once found a Jim Kay illustrated 'Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone' for a bargain on AbeBooks because the dust jacket was scuffed; it still felt magical and cost me way less than a new hardcover.

Local options are gold. I check library sales, Friends of the Library pop-ups, thrift stores, and used bookstores in person — you can haggle or score boxes of donations. Facebook Marketplace, OfferUp, and local Buy Nothing groups have popped up illustrated editions before; meeting locally means you can inspect condition and avoid shipping. College campus book exchanges and community yard sales are underrated too; I snagged a near-mint illustrated copy at a campus sale because the seller just wanted it gone.

For online shopping, compare prices with BookFinder and use price trackers like CamelCamelCamel for Amazon listings. Consider international editions (sometimes the Bloomsbury UK and foreign-language illustrated prints are cheaper) and check seller ratings, photos, and return policies. If timing isn’t urgent, watch for seasonal sales, coupon codes, or bundle deals — sometimes sellers drop price if you buy more than one title. Little tricks like buying an ex-library copy or one with a small flaw can save a lot, and the story inside is still that same warm, illustrated comfort. Happy hunting — tell me what edition you find, I love seeing collectors' hauls!

Which Illustrated Editions Exist On Amazon The Picture Of Dorian Gray?

2 Answers2025-09-03 22:19:35

I've dug through Amazon a few times hunting for illustrated versions of 'The Picture of Dorian Gray', and what I found made me realize there are really three broad families of illustrated editions you’ll typically run into — and then a scattering of one-off or limited runs. First, there are reprints that reproduce older, Victorian-style plates or woodcut-style illustrations; these often show up as facsimile editions or as part of a hardcover “classic” series. They’re the kind of editions that try to capture a late-19th-century atmosphere with black-and-white plates, decorative chapter heads, or engraved-style images. If you like that antique vibe, search for terms like “facsimile”, “Victorian illustrations”, or “plates” on Amazon and check the product images carefully.

Second, there are modern illustrated editions from boutique publishers and collectible presses — think deluxe hardcovers, leatherbound or clothbound runs with commissioned artwork. These are usually labeled as “illustrated edition”, “collector’s edition”, or come from publishers known for beautiful editions (you’ll see names like Folio Society pop up sometimes, though availability varies by region). They often have full-color plates, new cover art, or introductions that explain the illustrations. Third, and kind of fun, are adaptations and graphic-novel takes on 'The Picture of Dorian Gray'. These aren’t straight illustrated texts but reinterpretations: illustrated adaptations, manga-style retellings, or comics inspired by the novel. They’re great if you want a visual reimagining rather than ornamental plates.

Practically speaking, because Amazon’s stock changes and regional storefronts differ, I recommend filtering the search by “illustrated” and then scanning product details for phrases like “contains X illustrations”, “plates”, “illustrated by”, or “fully illustrated”. Use the ISBN listed in the details to cross-check with publisher websites if you want to confirm the illustrator credits. If an edition looks interesting, hit the “Look inside” preview — many sellers include sample pages showing the interior illustrations. I’ve also found brilliant single-print artist editions in the Used & New marketplace; set alerts or bookmarked searches and you’ll catch limited runs when they pop up. Happy hunting — some of these illustrated copies turn reading 'The Picture of Dorian Gray' into a small art exhibition, which I love.

If you want, I can run through a few currently listed editions I spot on Amazon and note which ones show interior art versus only illustrated covers, or give step-by-step search filters I use to nab the nicest physical copies.

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