Tuckerbean has a fabulous time during his week-long stay at the Puppy Inn, but his late-night activities leave him too full for breakfast, convincing the inn's owner that he misses his family.
Molly is upset when she finds out that Candy is carrying the flag in the Fourth of July parade, but Molly proves she is a good citizen when she helps Candy obey all the rules for handling the flag.
In a story designed to demonstrate the virtue of courage, Super Ben the bear cub rides his bicycle to his friend Molly's house all by himself for the first time.
After Molly's mother tells her that she can only go to the zoo with Ben the brown bear after she makes her bed, Molly spends her time doing other things until she realizes what she needs to do if she
In a story designed to demonstrate the virtue of cleanliness, Super Ben the bear cub washes his hands before eating and sneezes into his arm to fight germs and keep from getting sick.
On his 100th day of second grade, Super Ben writes a letter to his grandmother as part of his class project to perform 100 acts of kindness on that day, in which he lists the reasons that he loves her
After Ben misses the school bus because Molly keeps running back into the house to retrieve something she forgot, Molly realizes that her actions have hurt Ben and she apologizes.
When Molly breaks her crown by jumping on the couch after her father tells her not to, she is afraid to tell him the truth, but then reconsiders her action.
"Can poetry matter to Christian Theology?" David Mahan asks in the introduction to this interdisciplinary work. Does the study of poetry represent a serious theological project? What does poetry have