

Most men would have been lizard kibble in a few moments, but Victors natural ability to empathize with animals has grown stronger, and he finds himself able to control the most docile of the terrible lizards.Victor will have to use his taming powers to provide food, water, and shelter for the three women that he has sworn to protect. His dream of helping animals seems destined to end in a mop bucket.Then Victor is abducted by aliens and deposited in a prehistoric world filled with hungry dinosaurs and beautiful alien women.He doesnt know why he is here or what his purpose is, but he finds himself fighting for survival.

His parents are dead, he struggles to pay rent, and his boss at the animal control shelter has him cleaning cages instead of working in the field. Victor Shelby ends each day wondering when his life is going to get better. Sometimes they’re heavensometimes they’re hell. Can a sex demoness and a holy roller learn to get along? Relationships. Drama ensues and the couple’s future is in question, when in walks the most beautiful angel Ian’s ever laid eyes on. Most dangerous of all: Alaria’s tendency to bed every hot chick she sees. angelic babes! Ian and his succubus Alaria make their way to a gleaming city on the sea where multiple dangers await: a goblin mob boss. Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day is the book children need help them understand the downside of things in a positive way.That time I almost got eaten by a Giant Crocodile | Chap 3 Part 2

Through the story of Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day children learn that everyone has a bad day, but when looked at closely things might not seem so bad after all. However, in the end Alexander finds comfort in the words from his mother when she explains that some days are just bad days … even in Australia.

As the story goes on Alexander discovers that things don’t get immediately better, unlike most children’s story. In Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, Judith Viorst uses a more realistic view of problems children face, and that fact draws children in. Particularly funny to the children I’ve read this story to is the phrase that Alexander repeats to himself when things go south … “I think I’ll move to Australia”. Children will love the mishaps David finds himself in as well as his struggles with his older siblings. From the moment Alexander wakes up and finds gum in his hair he knows it is going to be a bad day, and he is correct. The book tells the story of a young boy named Alexander and his bad day that is filled with one crisis after another. Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day by Judith Viorst is a wonderful children’s book that can be enjoyed by all ages.
