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The loss of a beloved pet is devastating especially for a child. Where is my pet? Is she safe? When Sally comes home to find her beloved dog Puck has unexpectedly passed away, she cries herself to sleep and dreams. Puck joyfully greets her and invites his best friend to visit his new home in the Keeper's Forest under the watchful eye of Keeper Serena. Sally watches as dogs help create beautiful gardens by digging for bones or chase squirrels through the sky who turn into laughing clouds and float away. "This graceful tale escorts the beloved pet Puck into a loving, playful, afterlife which…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The loss of a beloved pet is devastating especially for a child. Where is my pet? Is she safe? When Sally comes home to find her beloved dog Puck has unexpectedly passed away, she cries herself to sleep and dreams. Puck joyfully greets her and invites his best friend to visit his new home in the Keeper's Forest under the watchful eye of Keeper Serena. Sally watches as dogs help create beautiful gardens by digging for bones or chase squirrels through the sky who turn into laughing clouds and float away. "This graceful tale escorts the beloved pet Puck into a loving, playful, afterlife which will console any child or adult dealing with the loss of a pet companion." - Barbara Bottner, Author of the New York Times bestseller "Miss Brooks Loves Books."
Autorenporträt
Dianne V Lawrence is a Los Angeles writer, editor, publisher and artist. From 1980 to 2008 she was active in the Los Angeles art scene participating in group shows and a one-person show. She also curated shows, taught at the Museum of Contemporary Art (1992 -1994), Pasadena Arts Center (1988-1990) and in various artists-in-prisons programs sponsored by UCLA's Artsreach and LA Theatreworks(1983-1986). Dianne also taught weekly and month long workshops called Accessing Creative Process for five years at Esalen Institute (1990-1996). In 2008 she left painting and started a community magazine, The Neighborhood News (2008-2021) and was publishing 14,000 copies every month, distributed for free for 10 years and then 8,000 for the next 3 years. In 2021 she stopped publishing the hard copy and returned to painting.