Craig Paulus

Lawyer, Writer, Husband, Dad

Lover of fun. Lover of snow.

Books

When you hear music, of course, you dance. How much more true is this when there are disco lights?  And if there are disco lights, there must be music.  The Great Polar Bear is a bear apart. He’s singular, the one, the greatest, the most polar, the most bear.  Being the ultimate polar bear is quite a responsibility, and you can expect to learn more about him soon.

 

His favorite drink: Hot Chocolate

His favorite food: Seal

His best friends: The Great Grizzly and Alaska (the most beautiful of the she-bears).

His favorite sport: Swimming

His music: No one knows what the GPB hears when he sees the Northern Lights. He’s mysterious about that.

The Mammoth's Last Dance (2019)

Order your hardback or paperback now!

The Great Polar Bear remembers the mammoths and how they danced every Midsummer. In this book, the GPB tells you what he knows about them and tells more of his story and of how his fate is tied to the Far North itself.

Hard back available for immediate shipping!

Paperback available on Amazon!

When the Bears Hear the Lights (2018)

Written and illustrated by Craig Paulus.

It is a little-known fact that polar bears hear music when they see the northern lights. This illustrated book for children tells the story of the Great Polar Bear, as he describes those few special days before Christmas when this magic happens, culminating in the bears standing guard over Santa’s workshop.

Hardback is back in stock and available for immediate shipping!

Paperback copy available through Amazon!

The Better Half of My Life (2017)

Book of love poems written over the twenty years of marriage.

A collection of poems written for Craig’s wife, given to her on the occasion of their life together becoming the half-way point of their lives. Some of the poems were written as far back as 1994, some more recently.

Paperback copy available

Book Cover

This book is about donuts and magic.  But, it is really about inflation.  the world economy is complicated, but most economic principles are so simple that they belong in a children’s book. These basic principles, together with some common sense, could make the world more prosperous for everyone.  Especially if we stop worrying about who gets credit for it!