PD Allen

PD Allen

About

PD Allen lives in a cabin in aremote section of the PorcupineMountainsin Michigan's Upper Peninsula. His cabin is equipped with a hand pump to draw water.Electricity is provided by a bicycle hooked to a small generator.

He spends his days hunting, fishingand foraging. He travels around the UP a great deal, gathering folklore andexploring various mysteries. He also practices shamanism, and can sometimes beseen traveling through the wilderness, flying from treetop to treetop under theinfluence of Amanita Muscaria. Occasionally he assumes the form of a large redfox.

On clear nights when there is afull moon, locals say you can hear him playing his fiddle high up on themountaintops. The Indians say he plays for the little Manitou, which come outto dance and caper.

At least once per week, he travels twenty-five miles on foot to thenearest cybercafé. There he updates his blog — PD Allen: Stories, Rants,& Raves.

The Golden Rule Coloring Book

The Golden Rule Coloring Book

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Description

<p>What if you treated others the way you’d like to be treated? If everyone did that, what kind of world could there be? Please join the children’s quest to discover how to follow the Golden Rule and to share it with others. </p><p>This coloring book version of Sherrill S. Cannon’s best-selling children’s story, The Golden Rule, allows kids to enjoy reading in rhyme, as well as illustrating their own version of how children can help us be kind to each other.</p>

Story Behind The Book

This is the first volume of Tales of da Yoopernatural, a series of supernatural horror and contemporary fantasy stories set in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Each volume strives to be an example of the fine art of storytelling.

Reviews

<p class="MsoNormal">&quot;This is beautifully written, utterly engaging and rather scary. Everything it sets out to do, it accomplishes brilliantly.&quot;</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Daisy Anne Gree, author of Babylon</p> <p class="MsoNormal"></p><br /><p class="MsoNormal">&quot;Your clever way of mixing well research anthropological and geological material into your story has me believing everything. It seems so real. The relationship between Phil and Connie is so parasitical and common in universities.&quot;</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Alexie Aaron, author of Decomposing</p>