- Allie couldn't enjoy any of the smaller animals we saw early on, since she was so afraid I would forget to take her to the pony ride. Next year we'll do that FIRST. Maybe there will be less than an hour wait earlier in the day. After the long wait, the actual ride was pathetic, 3 times around the circle, but she loved it.
- Kylie was taken with the HUGE oxen. Seriously they were taller than my head! IMPRESSIVE. When we got to the small animals I took her granola bar away so she could hold a chick instead. WRONG MOVE! She threw a tantrum and shoved the animals away until she had her snack back in her hands.
- Allie was all smiles holding the little turtle, but when it moved she panicked and dropped it. She was embarrassed afterward and wouldn't hold it again. She was interested in the snakes and want to look BUT NOT TOUCH! Aliyah, however, did hold it.
- Notice that Kylie is eating AGAIN in the photo with the Easter Bunny. She was a muncher all day long, but it was a LOT of walking. I made her walk until noon when I went back to the car for our sack lunch and the stroller.
a perfect alternative to a massive public egg hunt. The kids 'hop' around the store following arrows and get treats at different stops. Seriously mykids got a handful of goodies at each of about 8 points, including chips and a Capri sun juice. Oh, the balloon was Kylie's favorite. We could have left with only that and she would have been happy.

























When readers of the bestselling fantasy novel The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins reach the last page, many of them will be eager to know, “But what happens next??” Unfortunately, we can’t tell you yet, but we can show you, for the very first time anywhere, the cover for the sequel, Catching Fire. Scholastic is publishing the book on September 8 with a 250,000-copy first printing (Scholastic Audio Books will release a simultaneous audio edition).
house on a “need to read” basis only. “It’s the most secrecy I’ve had about any project I’ve ever worked on.” Why such secrecy? Levithan says it’s not a ploy for attention—they really don’t want the book’s plot to become public. “We want as many readers as possible to find out what happens in the book itself,” he explains. “We don’t want a Midnight Sun to happen [an early draft of Stephenie Meyer’s companion novel to Twilight was 










