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| 41. Shades of Gray by Carolyn Reeder | |
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our price: $4.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0689826966 Catlog: Book (1999-05-01) Publisher: Aladdin Sales Rank: 191477 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description COURAGE WEARS MANY FACES The Civil War may be over, but for twelve-year-old Will Page, the pain and bitterness haven't ended. How could they have, when the Yankees were responsible for the deaths of everyone in his entire immediate family? And now Will has to leave his comfortable home in the Shenandoah Valley and live with relatives he has never met, people struggling to eke out a living on their farm in the war-torn Virginia Piedmont. But the worst of it is that Will's uncle Jed had refused to fight for the Confederacy. At first, Will regards his uncle as a traitor -- or at least a coward. But as they work side by side, Will begins to respect the man. And when he sees his uncle stand up for what he believes in, Will realizes that he must rethink his definition of honor and courage. Reviews (39)
"I don't want to go!" Screams William. 6th Grade Student from OHES ... Read more | |
| 42. P Is For Potato: An Idaho Alphabet (Discover America State By State. Alphabet Series) by Stan Steiner, Joy Steiner | |
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our price: $12.21 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1585361550 Catlog: Book (2005-04-30) Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press Sales Rank: 79359 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description | |
| 43. Desiderata : Words for Life by Max Ehrmann | |
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our price: $8.96 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0439673682 Catlog: Book (2004-06-01) Publisher: Scholastic Press Sales Rank: 67408 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Reviews (5)
The version illustrated by Sally Sturman, currently in bookstores, pales in comparison.
thank you, guy@wfsm.org.za ... Read more | |
| 44. Farewell to Manzanar: A True Story of Japanese American Experience During andAfter the World War II Internment by JEANNE HOUSTON, JAMES D. HOUSTON | |
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our price: $5.85 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0553272586 Catlog: Book (1983-03-01) Publisher: Laurel Leaf Sales Rank: 27136 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description
Reviews (112)
But today post 9/11, the same issues have arisen. This time, it is not Japanese-Americans, but Americans of Middle-Eastern descent. Today, the US Supreme Court announced its decision in "Hamdi v. Rumsfeld" in which a US citizen of Middle-Eastern descent was being held prisoner indefinitely by the US government even though there has been no trial and Hamdi has no access to a lawyer. The Supreme Court wisely said that this was unacceptable. In many sections of the opinion, the Court kept referring to the lessons we learned from the Japanese-American internment experience that is described in this book. When times are stressful and we feel like we are being attacked by the enemy, it is easy to conclude that anyone who looks like the enemy should be detained, even without any evidence that that person did anything wrong. I hope that all people who feel that racial profiling is appropriate (or that all Middle Eastern people are suspect) read this book. Maybe this book will change their minds.
The narrative is full of compelling details of the family's experiences. It is particularly intriguing to watch how the internment camp evolved into "a world unto itself, with its own logic"--a "desert ghetto." During the course of the book the authors discuss many important topics: religion, education, anti-Asian bigotry, the impact of the Pearl Harbor attack, the military service of Japanese-Americans during the war, and more. The Houstons write vividly of the dislocation, humiliation, and injustice faced by the Wakatsuki family. Also powerful is the narrator's struggle to come to terms with her own ethnic identity. For an interesting companion text, I would suggest "Desert Exile," by Yoshiko Uchida; this book also deals with the internment experience, but from a somewhat different perspective which complements that of the Houstons. I was moved by "Farewell." The book is a profound meditation on both the hope and the tragedy of the United States, in which the "American dream" can become intermingled with American nightmares. I consider this book an important addition to Asian-American studies in particular, and to the canon of multiethnic U.S. literature in general. ... Read more | |
| 45. The Little House Collection Box Set (Full Color) (Little House) by Laura Ingalls Wilder | |
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our price: $26.39 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0060754281 Catlog: Book (2004-10-01) Publisher: HarperTrophy Sales Rank: 8658 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Set during the pioneer days of the late 1800s and early 1900s, Laura Ingalls Wilder's books chronicle her life growing up on the Western frontier. For the first time in the history of the Little House books, these new editions feature Garth Williams' interior art in vibrant, full color. Come along for the adventure with this collector's set of the first five Little House books. Reviews (1)
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| 46. A is for Abigail: An Almanac of Amazing American Women by Lynne Cheney | |
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our price: $11.86 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0689858191 Catlog: Book (2003-09) Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Sales Rank: 682 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Reviews (17)
Presented in the format of an alphabet book, A IS FOR ABIGAIL is a remarkable collection of stories about women who have made a difference in the history of the United States. Each beautifully illustrated, often annotated, page is packed with information and quotes. We are shown how women have been able to make a difference in various aspects of life, despite opposition. They have been fliers, artists, business people and inventors, to name only a few occupations. Robin Preiss Glasser finds the most extraordinary ways to present this information. For example, the letter F stands for "First Ladies." Portraits of them are shown on teacups, milk jugs, sugar bowls, coffee pots, and teapots. The women who made their mark in the press are shown on the front of a newspaper, while those ladies who gained fame as performers are shown on a stage. By the time we close this extraordinary book we feel empowered, knowing that women have achieved so much in a world that has not always been hospitable to their successes. We should all be proud of and grateful to Lynne Cheney and her wonderful illustrator for creating such a lovely and meaningful book. --- Reviewed by Marya Jansen-Gruber (mjansengruber@mindspring.com)
The back of this book includes Notes on the Text that provides details about all 28 of those poets and some of the First Ladies. The illustrations are by Robin Preiss Glasser, who collaborated with Cheney on "America: A Patriotic Primer." Hopefully one day young readers will be able to appreciate the details that Glasser puts into her art, such as having Carol Burnett in the infamous curtain dress from the "Gone with the Wind" parody and doing the painting of Mary Cassatt in the style of a Mary Cassatt painting. This book intends to bring to light the "remarkable (although often unmarked) achievements of American women." Young readers should be captivated just by what they learn about Abigail Adams on the opening spread of this engaging volume, and if what little they learn here about Althea Gibson, Elizabeth Peabody, Jane Addams, Nellie Bly, Anne Sullivan and the rest of these American women inspires them to find out some more details about even a half-dozen of them, that would certainly be a step in the right direction. ... Read more | |
| 47. Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder | |
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our price: $6.29 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0064400026 Catlog: Book (1953-10-14) Publisher: HarperTrophy Sales Rank: 4013 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description The adventures continue for Laura Ingalls and her family as they leave their little house in the Big Woods of Wisconsin and set out for Kansas. They travel for many days in their covered wagon until they find the best spot to build their little house on the prairie. Soon they are planting and plowing, hunting wild ducks and turkeys, and gathering grass for their cows. Sometimes pioneer life is hard, but Laura and her folks are always busy and happy in their new little house. Reviews (53)
Their covered wagon makes a great camping vehicle and they enjoy a nice camping trip on their way. They would stop driving for the day, Pa would go out hunting, Ma and the girls would set up camp, and Pa would come back with the evening's supper. They cooked it over a fire, ate the leftovers for breakfast, packed up, and were back on the road for the day. When they arrived at what Pa said was "home", it was nothing but a big space of grass. Where would they live? No problem. But they do get money. Why? Because Pa is a hunter, remember? And a good one. He sells the furs, and the hunting is so plentiful in this area that he has no trouble at all. The neat thing about this book is that it describes how to do many things: How to build the house, How to make a rocking chair, How to cook over the fire, and describes a clever way to protect your home from a prairie fire that really works! Many popular songs are also included as Pa plays the fiddle in the evening. Some we remember and some we wish we knew. Because of these things and because of the indians, this was a book that my boys enjoyed right along with my daughter. My husband, the couch potato, even became interested and rented some "Little House" videos. This is the best kind of history. It's like talking to your grandma and hearing the real story of what things were really like for real people. If you like history, you will love this book.
Those were the things I loved about it as a child, and still love now. But as an adult I've also come to appreciate how quintessentially American this book is. It's the kind of book that makes you think about our heritage, and makes you proud to be American. In these books, Laura and her family keep facing hardships and meeting them head on. When necessary, they pick themselves up and move on to a new place, starting from scratch. They don't expect anything from anybody, and yet they care about their community and their neighbors. You often hear the words "pioneer spirit" used to describe America's best values, but after you read Little House that's not an empty phrase. You, and the child you read it to, understand it in your heart.
This is a charming book. It's almost a collection of short stories with many chapters being a self-contained event. Still, through these pages, we get a good picture of life on the American frontier 130 years ago. The book gives plenty of detail about their everyday life without getting bogged down. And it is interesting. Frankly, some of the chapters are so harrowing I felt my pulse quicken. Often I found myself shaking my head in awe at what the Ingalls dealt with on a daily basis. This is a good way to make anyone appreciate just what we have today. These books are still popular 70 years after they were first written for good reason. They are an entertaining and enlightening look at a bygone era.
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| 48. Samantha: An American Girl (The American Girls Collection/Boxed Set) by Susan S. Adler | |
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(price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0937295779 Catlog: Book (1990-09-01) Publisher: Pleasant Company Publications Sales Rank: 32371 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (3)
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| 49. The Journal of William Thomas Emerson: A Revolutionary War Patriot (My Name Is America) by Barry Denenberg | |
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our price: $8.21 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0590313509 Catlog: Book (1998-09-01) Publisher: Scholastic Sales Rank: 67724 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (19)
It is written in journal form so you learn about the people he meets and everything that happens first hand. At the end it tells you what happened to each person from the story...the part my son found most interesting.
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| 50. Laura's Album: A Remembrance Scrapbook of Laura Ingalls Wilder by William Anderson | |
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our price: $14.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0060278420 Catlog: Book (1998-10-01) Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Sales Rank: 7222 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Though best known as the author of the Little House books, Laura Ingalls Wilder led a full, rich life that spanned almost a century of American history. All through her life Laura saved mementos of her past, including early writings, letters, drawings, and photographs, which have been lovingly preserved in private and public collections across the country. Now, for the first time ever, these photographs, writings, and memorabilia have been gathered together in one incredible volume by noted Little House historian William Anderson. Each gorgeous page of LAURA'S ALBUM is a doorway into the private world of Laura Ingalls Wilder, and offers a unique glimpse of what her life was like. Here is the fascinating true story of this remarkable pioneer woman's life as well as an unforgettable tale of our own American past. Reviews (4)
But as a Laura-junkie, I'd shave a 1/2 a star off as I wanted more, more, more!
In addition to showing many of Laura's memories in photo-form, this book also give a basic history of her life by decade. It's a great supplement to her LITTLE HOUSE books, and is comprehensive enough to give a lot of extra information to those who are interested in Laura's "real life."
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| 51. The Little House Cookbook : Frontier Foods from Laura Ingalls Wilder's Classic Stories (Little House) by Barbara M. Walker | |
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our price: $8.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0064460908 Catlog: Book (1989-09-07) Publisher: HarperTrophy Sales Rank: 8464 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description
Reviews (16)
I read the whole thing cover to cover - it is just fascinating. The author writes in a very readable, extremely interesting style. I love having all the recipes for the meals mentioned throughout the Little House books and I *love* reading the history included in this cookbook. It adds such depth and perspective to our readings of the LIW books. [This book is as much a history text as it is a cookbook - and it does great justice to both genres!] My daughter and I have made several of the recipes from the book so far and they have all been delicious, if not exactly health conscious. :) I haven't been able to bring myself to buy Lard, but we have delighted in making some of the same foods Laura ate. My daughter is learning a HUGE amount about history through these experiences. Buying this book is the best money I've spent in years!
For these reasons, I practically grabbed the book from one of my eight-year-old students' hands when she showed her library copy of it to me. I loved the pictures, the story excerpts, the idea that someone was dedicated enough to do the research and find out as much as she could about how the Wilders and the Ingallses created these unique and hearty meals. It serves as a fantastic book to curl up with and picture yourself turning a spit or making a savory pie with blackbirds (erm..), but it doesn't inspire me to get off the couch and turn a spit, or rather, construct some kind of spit-like apparatus in my kitchen. Maybe farther down the road I'll have the room in my apartment and time in my life to devote the effort to this book that it deserves. It is a treasure to me, but you won't find its recipes on my table. I know for a fact, however, that if my mother had owned it when I was a little girl, we would have done all we could to make these authentic meals. If only Barbara M. Walker would put out a "Little House for the Little Apartment" cookbook companion.
This book will be great for young readers, or for readers interested in learning more about the time period and the foods that Laura Ingalls enjoyed. The illustrations done in graphite pencil were cute and charming. Overall, an excellent book, sure to delight young and old!
Chapters cover a wide variety of categories, from staples from the country store, to foods from the wild, to foods from the barnyard and sweets. Learn how to make cheese (from the Big Woods), butter, sourdough bread, cracklings, blackbird pie and vinegar pie. I honestly don't think any foods from the LH series have been left out. The author almost always includes a passage from the series for each recipe. Illustrations from the original series are also included. Highly, highly recommended, particularly if you're interested in foods from the frontier area or are just an avid LH fan. ... Read more | |
| 52. The Journal of Jesse Smoke : A Cherokee Boy, Trail of Tears, 1838 (My Name Is America) by Joseph Bruchac | |
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our price: $8.21 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0439121973 Catlog: Book (2001-06-01) Publisher: Scholastic Press Sales Rank: 126174 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Reviews (5)
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| 53. Remember : The Journey to School Integration by Toni Morrison | |
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our price: $12.24 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 061839740X Catlog: Book (2004-05-03) Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Sales Rank: 40280 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description | |
| 54. Kirsten: An American Girl : 1854 (The American Girls Collection/Boxed Set) by Janet Shaw | |
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(price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0937295760 Catlog: Book (1990-09-01) Publisher: Pleasant Company Publications Sales Rank: 4668 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (5)
In the book "Changes for Kirsten" she finds a baby racoon in the woods and brings it home. Her mother specifically tells her to leave the racoon in the barn and never to bring it near the house. Despite this, the minute her mother leaves the house Kirsten defies her and brings the baby racoon in. He gets loose and knocks over an oil lamp, burning down their cabin. All in all I don't find the character of Kirsten to be the sort of person I want my girls to emulate.
These books (and all the ones in the American Girls series) are written at a 2-3 grade level or are great to read aloud to younger children. The "American Girls" provide children with a sense of American history, a sense of what it was like to live during that historcial period and strong female role models. My daughters and I love them ... Read more | |
| 55. Farmer Boy (Little House) by Laura Ingalls Wilder | |
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our price: $6.29 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0064400034 Catlog: Book (1953-10-14) Publisher: HarperTrophy Sales Rank: 22526 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description While Laura Ingalls grows up in a little house on the western prairie, Almanzo Wilder is living on a big farm in New York State. Here Almanzo and his brother and sisters help with the summer planting and fall harvest. In winter there is wood to be chopped and great slabs of ice to be cut from the river and stored. Time for fun comes when the jolly tin peddler visits, or best of all, when the fair comes to town. This is Laura Ingalls Wilder's beloved story of how her husband Almanzo grew up as a farmer boy far from the little house where Laura lived. Reviews (47)
He comes from a large family, his parents very loving yet very hardworking people who expect a lot of Almanzo. Nearly everything they eat, wear, and use is produced there on the farm, and it is one of the greatest pleasures of the book that the planting and weaving and washing and building and milking and all the other countless necessaries are vividly detailed and the reader can almost taste Almanzo's favorite apples and onions or smell the sweetly dusty air of the hay barn. I think every child who has read this book is eager to go out at once and grow a pumpkin just the way Almanzo does it--Almanzo has the secret for growing the biggest pumpkins in the county. And there's no greater inspiration than Almanzo to tempt kids into adventuring with some good wholesome food. The boy's mealtime accounts are absolutely mouthwatering. And working hard from sun up to sun down, that boy could eat! But Almanzo is restless, and not so much to be free to play all day, but to be allowed to work with his father's prize horses. His father is known have the finest horses, and he's not about to let just anybody mess with them. Horses must be handled just right, otherwise you could easily ruin them, and Almanzo's not ready to be trusted with them. The 'coming of age' for Almanzo is one of the most touching and powerful in all of children's literature. Please - if you've a child this age who hasn't yet read or heard Farmer Boy, don't let this book pass them by. By the end of the book you have come to know and love Almanzo so well, it's a sad good-bye indeed. Reader's won't meet him again until years later, as a young man who first meets Laura Ingalls in "By the Shores of Silver Lake".
"Farmer Boy" details a year or so in the life of 9 yr old Almanzo Wilder. A good deal of this book is spent showing that life on a farm in the 1860's, even for a well-to-do family living in a civilized part of the country, still meant never-ending, hard, physical labor. Young Almanzo and his siblings spend their lives working on one chore after another- the work changing as the seasons change. Undoubtedly, modern children will read this book and be thankful that they don't live in a time where sleeping in past 5 AM was considered odd and children were expected to be seen (at work) and not heard. In addition to describing day to day life on a farm, Mrs. Wilder also details the family relationships between the Wilders. Almanzo's parents are shown as loving, but, in contrast to Pa and Ma Ingalls, they come across as a little more stern and authoritarian with their children. For example, James Wilder, Almanzo's father, is always called "Father" never "Pa." Almanzo's relations with his three siblings are also described. (Almanzo actually had five siblings, but oldest sister, Laura, and younger brother, Perley, were left out of the book.) Almanzo looks up to his 13 yr old brother, Royal. Ten yr old sister Alice is shown as being very spunky and loveable and was obviously Almanzo's favorite sib. (Alice, who was a very pretty girl, died at a fairly young age and this book is her younger brother's tribute to her.) And finally there is Eliza Jane, age 12, who comes across as every younger brother's nightmare of a bossy older sister. It's obvious that Laura Ingalls Wilder did not care much for her sister-in-law Eliza Jane because she portrayed her pretty badly in her books. However, one of the great moments of "Farmer Boy" involves Eliza Jane showing in her own way how much she truly loved her younger brother. The wonderful descriptions of familial relationships in the "Little House" books are one of the big reasons why this series is so beloved. "Farmer Boy" exudes all the hallmarks of a great "Little House" book- the wonderfully detailed depiction of life on a farm, the loving but still realistic portrayal of family life, and it also exudes a warm-hearted sentiment for an era long gone. Yet, "Farmer Boy" shows some of the darker elements of mid-19th century life. An attempted burglary is a subject of one chapter and the book opens with a pretty scary depiction of an 1860's schoolhouse. The "Little House" books often present a fairly rosy picture of the one-room schoolhouse, yet "Farmer Boy" shows a darker side. In this book, the teenage sons of farmers are shown coming to school just to bust it up and pummel any teacher who gets in their way. Finally, as an Irish-American, I've always been amused by the unconcious bigotry towards Irish immigrants found in the "Little House" books. The few Irish characters in these books are either shown as fall-down drunks or as fools- read the story about cutting-ice in "Farmer Boy" to see an example. I don't think Laura Ingalls was anti-Irish, but just writing down 19th century attitudes about certain ethnic groups. She did the same thing for American Indians, but even more blatantly.
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| 56. The Sherwood Ring by Elizabeth Marie Pope | |
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our price: $5.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0618150749 Catlog: Book (2001-10-29) Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Sales Rank: 324583 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Reviews (23)
Barbara Grahame, the most frequent ghostly visitor, is an independent and intelligent young woman living in the American Revolution. Her interaction with the extraordinarily clever British officer, Peaceable Sherwood is very enjoyable to read...particularly as Peaceable is nemesis of Barbara's brother, Dick (a young captain fighting for American independence). At the same time, serving to frame the story, Peggy uncovers mysteries of the past, and is led to her own romance with a young man from England. A very unusual and thoughtful Revolution story with possibly the best ghosts I've ever read about.
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