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Books with author Cynthia Stowe

  • Poppy The Story of a South African Girl

    Cynthia Stockley

    eBook
    This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
  • Blue Aloes Stories of South Africa

    Cynthia Stockley

    eBook
    None
  • Wild Honey Stories of South Africa

    Cynthia Stockley

    eBook (, Sept. 7, 2011)
    This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
  • The Claw

    Cynthia Stockley

    eBook
    This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
  • Carly and Star

    Cynthia J Stone

    eBook (Treaty Oak Publishers, June 7, 2020)
    All Carly wants for her 10th birthday is the newborn horse her Uncle Joe promised her. When she gets the call to come to the farm, she imagines herself astride an awesome black stallion, one that will win first place in next fall's pet parade.After her birthday present turns out to be NOT what she expected, Carly gives up the idea of winning. She names the foal 'Star' and hopes for the best, despite discovering they share a trait: impossibly curly hair. Little does Carly know that Star has far greater gifts that will help her deal with a bigger problem: BULLIES.What Carly learns from Star sets her on a course where she'll need all the courage -- and kindness -- she can muster.
  • Carly and Star

    Cynthia J Stone

    Paperback (Treaty Oak Publishers, Jan. 15, 2019)
    All Carly wants for her 10th birthday is the newborn horse her Uncle Joe promised her. When she gets the call to come to the farm, she imagines herself astride an awesome black stallion, one that will win first place in next fall's pet parade.After her birthday present turns out to be NOT what she expected, Carly gives up the idea of winning. She names the foal 'Star' and hopes for the best, despite discovering they share a trait: impossibly curly hair. Little does Carly know that Star has far greater gifts that will help her deal with a bigger problem: BULLIES.What Carly learns from Star sets her on a course where she'll need all the courage -- and kindness -- she can muster.
  • home sweet home, good-bye

    cynthia stowe

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1990)
    None
    R
  • Home Sweet Home, Good-Bye

    Cynthia Stowe

    Library Binding (Scholastic, Feb. 1, 1990)
    Reluctantly getting ready to move to a new house with his mother, eleven-year-old Charlie gets caught in a funny chain of events, culminating in the reuniting of his long-divorced parents
    R
  • Dear Mom, in Ohio for a Year

    Cynthia Stowe

    Library Binding (Scholastic, Sept. 1, 1992)
    Angry at her mother for leaving her in Vermont with her aunt and uncle while her mother goes off to school, Cassie writes letters to her errant parent, pouring out her frustrations and discoveries
    Q
  • The Second Escape of Arthur Cooper

    Cynthia M. Stowe

    Hardcover (Marshall Cavendish Corp/Ccb, Oct. 1, 2000)
    In 1822, on Nantucket Island, runaway slave Arthur Cooper and his family are protected from slave catchers by the Folgers, a family of Quakers, in a fictional account of an historical event as told through the eyes of Phebe Folger.
    Y
  • Wild Honey: Stories of South Africa

    Cynthia Stockley

    eBook (Library of Alexandria, July 29, 2009)
    It was a six-mule mail-coach that bumped and banged along the rough highroad to Buluwayo, and Vivienne Carlton anathematised the fate that condemned her to travel by it. Cordially she detested the cheerful garrulity of certain of her fellow-passengers, quoting to herself Louis Vance’s satirical mot: “A pessimist is a person who has to live with optimists.” Gladly would she have slain the optimists with whom she was so tightly packed in the hooded body of the cart—for the term “coach” was merely a polite fiction: the affair was neither more nor less than a two-seated Cape cart, with the hood thrown back so that the mules might find the pulling easier and the passengers be more effectively grilled. Two passengers shared the front seat with the driver. Miss Carlton was wedged in the back seat between a perspiring Cape Colonial and a tall lithe man with a deeply tanned complexion and careless light grey eyes, who was as taciturn as herself. No one looking at her sitting there so composedly, closely veiled and gloved, violet eyes quietly fixed on the horizon, her tall khaki-clad figure preserving in spite of its contiguity with strangers an air of dainty aloofness, would have guessed her frame of mind. Her companions had her marked down as an English girl whose beauty and breeding warranted her to put on as much “side” as she liked, and in this they were not very far from the truth. They were also certain that she was the daughter of a lord, and wondered how she came to be travelling alone. The Colonial and the man who came from Kimberley admired her madly without daring to address a word to her; the showy blonde who was going up to be a barmaid in Salisbury, would have given the necklace of diamonds she wore for its safety under her cotton blouse, to possess that aloof manner and gift of remaining silent without being offensive. Only the third man with his careless glance that took in every point of the changing scene of bush, and tree, and kop, had any notion of what was going on behind the composed lovely face of the girl next to him. And the reason he knew was that though he looked like a pirate or a Klondike miner, or anything that was reckless and disreputable he was really of the same world as herself, and could very well guess how the discomfort and hateful intimacy of coach-travelling outraged her. But even he was far from guessing at the hopeless fury, and bitter disdain of her surroundings and the world in general that was rankling in the heart so close to him that he could almost feel its beating.
  • Home Sweet Home, Good-Bye

    Cynthia Stove

    Paperback (Apple, Nov. 1, 1993)
    As eleven-year-old Charlie prepares to move out of the only home he has ever known, he learns that making some of his own moves can help the situation. Reprint.
    R