Browse Results

Showing 63,401 through 63,425 of 63,980 results

Popular Images of American Presidents

by William C. Spragens

How our Presidents are rated by various groups.

Roger Williams

by Perry Miller

Biography focusing on the impact of the individual on the American tradition.

Around the House and in the Garden: A Memoir of Heartbreak, Healing, and Home Improvement

by Dominique Browning

When divorce tore Browning's home and heart apart, she began seeing with a new perspective. This is her therapeutic journey: she had taken care of the garden, now it would care for her.

Nathaniel Hawthorne (The American Men of Letters Series)

by Mark Van Doren

A brief but cogent biography.

Girls Who Said Yes

by Edward Thorne

TAPE-RECORDED INTERVIEWS WITH GIRLS 16-24 WHO HAVE ACCEPTED SEXUAL PERMISSIVENESS AS A WAY OF LIFE

Jewel of the Desert: Japanese American Internment at Topaz

by Sandra C. Taylor

At the outbreak of World War II, the Japanese Americans who lived in the San Francisco Bay Area were sent to "relocation camps," chiefly to Topaz in the Utah desert. This book, based on interviews and extensive historical research, is a vivid account of the lives of the people who were forcibly confined at Topaz. The book also examines how the internment experience affected these people in the decades after the war. Other books in this subject area are available from Bookshare.

A Girl and Five Brave Horses

by Sonora Carver Elizabeth Land

Sonora Carver, when she was 16 never dreamed that she would be in show business doing an act that was amazing and exciting. But when she ran into Dr. Carver, and saw the Diving Horses act, she fell in love. Sonora had a great life traveling the country, riding and doing shows, and loving the horses she worked with. Klataw, John the Baptist, Juda, Red Lips, Snow, and Lightning, all were her family and her friends. Then one day Red Lips did a very dramatic nose dive and Sonora hit the water with her eyes open and face first. Her life changed after that day and this is her story. This book was the inspiration for the movie "Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken".

I Never Promised You a Rose Garden

by Hannah Green Joanne Greenberg

Hailed by The New York Times as "convincing and emotionally gripping" upon its publication in 1964, Joanne Greenberg's semi-autobiographical novel stands as a timeless and unforgettable portrayal of mental illness. Enveloped in the dark inner kingdom of her schizophrenia, sixteen-year-old Deborah is haunted by private tormentors that isolate her from the outside world. With the reluctant and fearful consent of her parents, she enters a mental hospital where she will spend the next three years battling to regain her sanity with the help of a gifted psychiatrist. As Deborah struggles toward the possibility of the "normal" life she and her family hope for, the reader is inexorably drawn into her private suffering and deep determination to confront her demons. A modern classic, I Never Promised You a Rose Garden remains every bit as poignant, gripping, and relevant today as when it was first published.

A Private Life of Henry James:Two Women and His Art

by Lyndall Gordon

Analysis of the Work of Henry James.

The Quiet Flame: Mother Marianne of Molokai

by Eva K. Betz

Marianne of Molokai, the lady who did not shun lepers, comes alive in this vividly written fiction for young people.

The Gift of Healing: A Personal Story of Spiritual Therapy

by Ambrose A. Worrall Olga N. Worrall

"This is an excellent, thrilling, and highly representative record of the life and ministry of a most lovable, amazing, authentic and committed couple. It is a joy to anticipate that through this book many persons will share the inspiration and strength and faith that accompanies acquaintance with Ambrose and Olga Worrall. I doubt if anyone can adequately estimate the faith which this testimony to the healing power in God's world may have upon many lives."-ROBERT M. COX, Executive Director, The Laymen's Movement

Great Women Teachers

by Alice Fleming

What these ten ladies have in common is that they significantly influenced education in the United States. These ten, short biographies commence with the implementation of education for girls (Willard) in the 1800s and end with a sketch of the twentieth-century teacher (Gildersleeve) who promoted International studies.

Out of the Old Rock

by Frank Dobie Bertha Dobie

The people Frank Dobie liked to write about during his lifetime were the men and women who came "out of the old rock"--genuine, independent, unpretentious people, specialists of one kind or another, whether that specialty was teaching or horseshoeing -- people who were, above all, interesting. There are sixteen such personalities in Out of the Old Rock: a cowboy preacher, a wildcatter, a trail driver, a gunman, an ornithologist, a rancher, a homesteader, several teachers and writers, including artist-novelist Tom Lea, historian Walter Prescott Webb, and folk singer-archivist John Lomax. Most of them Dobie knew personally, some intimately, and they come vividly alive through his portraits--in the familiar way in which a common friend may make you surprisingly knowledgeable about somebody you may never actually have met. Compiled by Frank Dobie's wife and lifelong companion, Bertha Dobie, who also provides the Introduction, this is a memorable collection by a memorable man, rich with Dobie's own special brand of warm insight and humor.

The Long, Bitter Trail (Andrew Jackson and the Indians)

by Anthony F. C. Wallace

This account of Congress's Indian Removal Act of 1830 focuses on the plight of the Indians of the Southeast--Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles--who were forced to leave their ancestral lands and relocate to what is now the state of Oklahoma. Revealing Andrew Jackson's central role in the government's policies, Wallace examines the racist attitudes toward Native Americans that led to their removal and, ultimately, their tragic fate.

T. S. Eliot: A Life

by Peter Ackroyd

A careful biography with extensive reference to his works.

Sexual McCarthyism: Clinton, Starr, and the Emerging Constitutional Crisis

by Alan M. Dershowitz

Discusses the issues at that time; the clarifications and comments are still of interest.

Supreme Injustice: How the High Court Hijacked Election 2000

by Alan M. Dershowitz

Argues that the Supreme Court exceeded its authority for the gain of individual justices.

Irish Saints (Vision Series #63)

by Robert T. Reilly

[from dust jacket flaps:] Vision Books * Winner of The Thomas More Assn'n Medal The history of Ireland, like that of many lands, is studded with the names of canonized saints and other good people who have proven that sanctity spans all times. In telling the stories of Patrick and Brigid, the navigator Brendan, missionaries Columcille and Columban, martyrs Laurence O'Toole and Blessed Oliver Plunkett, Mother McAuley and her Sisters of Mercy, the saintly layman Matt Talbot, Father Theobald Mathew, and Bishop Galvin who so long resisted the Communist onslaught in China, Robert Reilly illumines Ireland's history, her people, and the land itself. The Irish saints whose stories are told in this book are "saints" in the broad religious sense. Some have been canonized by the Church; others, though not formally saints, are nonetheless saintly. This rich collection of biographies is for Catholic youngsters from 9 to 15. THE AUTHOR Robert T. Reilly is Director for Special Resources at The Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska. He has an M.A. from Boston University and has taught Irish Literature, of which he has a large collection. Among his previous books are Red Hugh, Prince of Donegal, Massacre at Oak Hollow, and Rebels in the Shadows. Mr. Reilly is the father of nine children. [He has survived captivity by the Germans and held as a prisoner of war.]

Just Another Kid: Each Was a Child No One Could Reach... Until One Amazing Teacher Embraced Them All

by Torey L. Hayden

A year with Torey and a batch of special education children.

Catherine the Queen

by Mary M. Luke

A biography of Catherine of Aragon, first wife to Henry VIII.

Pericles of Athens and the Birth of Democracy

by Donald Cagan

Emphasizes his importance in the development of Athens.

The Song of Bernadette

by Franz Werfel Ludwig Lewisohn

"This book is the fulfilment of my vow. In our epoch an epic poem can take no form but that of a novel. The Song of Bernadette is a novel but not a work of fiction. In face of the events here delineated, the sceptical reader will ask with better right than in the case of most historical epic narratives: 'What is true? What is fiction?' My answer is: All the memorable happenings which constitute the substance of this book took place in the world of reality. Since their beginning dates back no longer than eighty years, there beats upon them the bright light of modern history and their truth has been confirmed by friend and foe and by unbiased observers. My story makes no changes in this body of truth. I exercised my right of creative freedom only where the work, as a work of art, demanded certain chronological condensations or where there was need of striking the spark of life from the hardened substance. I have dared to sing the song of Bernadette, although I am not. a Catholic but a Jew; and I drew courage for this undertaking from a far older and far more unconscious vow of mine. Even in the days when I wrote my first verses I vowed that I would evermore and everywhere in all I wrote magnify the divine mystery and the holiness of man - careless of a period which has turned away with scorn and rage and indifference from these ultimate values of our mortal lot."

Origins: The Lives and Worlds of Modern Cosmologists

by Roberta Brawer Alan Lightman

Biographies and contributions based on interviews.

The Rise and Fall of Athens: Nine Greek Lives

by Plutarch Ian Scott-Kilvert

The lives of Theseus, Solon, Themistocles, Aristides, Cimon, Pericles, Nicias, Alcibiades, and Lysander, by Plutarch.

Refine Search

Showing 63,401 through 63,425 of 63,980 results