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Terry Border
Terry Border was born October 16, 1965, and has spent the vast majority of his life in the Indianapolis, Indiana area. He graduated from Ball State University with a B.S. in Fine Art Photography in 1988. Then, because he wanted to be practical and not be an artist (he is from Indiana after all),... show more



Terry Border was born October 16, 1965, and has spent the vast majority of his life in the Indianapolis, Indiana area. He graduated from Ball State University with a B.S. in Fine Art Photography in 1988. Then, because he wanted to be practical and not be an artist (he is from Indiana after all), he worked as a commercial photographer for many years photographing the most mind-numbingly, boring stuff you can think of. If he would have worked harder, he could have gone on to photograph more exciting things, but he figures he probably had a very bad attitude about it all. In 2006 he started what he calls his Bent Objects project, mainly because all the other blog names were already taken. Basically, the project concerns adding wire to ordinary objects to help pose them as living characters, usually telling a story, and then photographing them. For some reason people liked it.He now is concentrating his efforts on children's books and hopes that you like them.

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Community Reviews
My Never Ending List
My Never Ending List rated it 5 years ago
I liked it but it didn't wow me, like I thought and hoped it would. I liked how the three snacks played together but wasn't it smart Cookie who found the note? I thought it was interesting how Cheese Doodle came up with the interesting ideas and Pretzel was the scared one. Cookie was still the smart...
Miss Smyly's Library
Miss Smyly's Library rated it 9 years ago
Peanut Butter and Cupcake is an adorable book about friendship. I would use this in my early elementary classroom. This book teaches that you can be friends with everybody even though everybody is different. I would use this book for Kindergarten - 2nd grade. The guided reading level is K and the Le...
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