Browse all books

Books with author Elizabeth Miceli

  • Fury

    Elizabeth Miles

    Hardcover (Simon Pulse, Aug. 30, 2011)
    Sometimes sorry isn't enough....It’s winter break in Ascension, Maine. The snow is falling and everything looks pristine and peaceful. But not all is as it seems... Between cozy traditions and parties with her friends, Emily loves the holidays. And this year’s even better--the guy she’s been into for months is finally noticing her. But Em knows if she starts things with him, there’s no turning back. Because his girlfriend is Em’s best friend. On the other side of town, Chase is having problems of his own. The stress of his home life is starting to take its toll, and his social life is unraveling. But that’s nothing compared to what’s really haunting him. Chase has done something cruel...something the perfect guy he pretends to be would never do. And it’s only a matter of time before he’s exposed. In Ascension, mistakes can be deadly. And three girls—three beautiful, mysterious girls—are here to choose who will pay. Em and Chase have been chosen. "Achingly gorgeous. Fury seduced me."--Lauren Kate, New York Times bestselling author of Fallen "A fresh dark twist on paranormal, with surprises around every corner. FURY kept me up all night!" --Nancy Holder, NYT Bestselling Author of WICKED and CRUSADE
  • Harriett the Hurricane

    Elizabeth Mills

    Hardcover (Mascot Books, Aug. 5, 2014)
    Weather wonders are all about. Weather is awesome, there is no doubt. It's a world of science exploration. Come aboard the weather station! In summer and fall, over the ocean, Harriett the Hurricane is set into motion...
    K
  • Tales From Telladoo The Fun House

    Elizabeth Mixon

    eBook
    Read the Fun House, an award-winning fantasy and the first in a planned triology of Tales from Telladoo.Peter is a ten-year-old boy, wheelchair-bound, whose life takes an unexpected turn when a talking trickster of a meerkat takes him through a portal into a magical land. There he meets wonders and dangers - a dragon, a goblin cloud, and other odd and dangerous creatures - who guide him in his search for his truth. To succeed, you have to try.
  • Little Man: A Novel

    Elizabeth Mann

    Paperback (Mikaya Press, May 16, 2014)
    A light-hearted tale of a boy who gains self-confidence with the help of some timely mentoring. Albert is short -- very short -- and he hates it. His older brothers are tall like his father, but he takes after his petite mother. He wears too-large hand-me-down clothes from his bigger brothers. And worst of all, his very best friend moved away to Brooklyn during the school break. It was all so unfair. Albert is beginning Middle School on Little Scrub, the small Caribbean Island where he lives. As he steps on the bus, and sees the older kids, he feels smaller than ever. They take one look at him and howl with laughter, chanting "Little Man, Little Man, you so small, didn't hardly see you at all." Things go downhill from there, and would've stayed down if it wasn't for an encounter with Peachy, the leader of a troupe of stiltwalkers. The stiltwalkers do a lot more than walk: they dance and leap across the sand on spindly eight-foot high wooden stilts, their brilliantly colored costumes shimmering in the moonlight. Peachy invites Albert to join the high school students he teaches to stiltwalk. It's not an easy decision for Albert. Would they laugh at him even harder than the Middle School kids? And he is queasy about heights. The thought of wobbling around on those skinny wooden sticks makes him woozy with fear. But Albert is won over by the thought that one day he might actually be up there, tall as a palm tree, dancing around without fear or hesitation. Besides, desperate times call for desperate measures and nobody was more desperate than Albert. Slowly, as his stiltwalking improves, Albert finds his self-confidence grows. He becomes less of a target for teasing at school and he makes some new friends.
    X
  • SOUL STEALER

    Elizabeth Michaels

    language (, April 15, 2014)
    Fifteen year old Caleb Andrews is a bit of a loner; his only friend is a homeless man called Jacob. That is until he meets Katarina. Reluctantly paired up with her on a photography project, he gradually finds himself drawn closer to her as both students get sucked into the search for a serial killer with an unusual method of murdering victims. As the body count rises, Caleb's life and relationships are thrown into turmoil...and mortal danger.
  • To Kill a Mockingbird: A Teaching Guide

    Mary Elizabeth

    language (Remedia Publications Inc., Sept. 9, 2019)
    Grade Level: 6-12The Discovering Literature Series is designed to develop a student’s appreciation for good literature and to improve reading comprehension. At the Challenging Level, we focus on a variety of reading strategies that help students construct meaning from their experience with literature as well as make connections between their reading and the rest of their lives. The strategies reflect the demands of each literature selection.In these study guides, we will focus on beginning a book, setting and mood, irony, plot structure, foreshadowing and flashback, characterization, forming hypotheses, evaluating a book, plot conflict, point of view, inferencing, rereading, theme, narration, and the genre of dystopias.Each chapter analysis is organized into three basic elements: Journal and Discussion Topics, Chapter Vocabulary, and Chapter Summary.Other features include Strategy Pages to increase students’ understanding of strategies to enhance their comprehension of literature; Testing at the end of each chapter grouping, and Writer’s Forum for students’ to write in a variety of genres relating to the text.This 201-page teaching guide includes an answer key.
  • Yahtai And The Purple Vine

    A. Elizabeth

    eBook (Emphaloz Publishing House, Aug. 25, 2019)
    A young girl tries to grow an exotic new potato in her vegetable garden, but she has to learn the art of patience as she waits for her vegetable to grow, but the results not only affects the entire community, but are more than what she had hoped to achieve.
  • What If... Zombies Were Nice: Chocolate and Oranges

    S. Elizabeth

    eBook (AuthorHouse, March 20, 2014)
    The author and illustrator, of What if...ZOMBIES Were Nice, is releasing each book as a chapter ultimately building toward a grand finale. The books are written for the youth using adolescent grunge language and humor. Short politics and actual science experiments are the nucleus within the pages of each book.Chocolate and Oranges is the first chapter of What ifZOMBIES Were Nice. In this chapter you will find that The Great Panic Po of 2020 was something no one was ever prepared for. Zombies that didn't turn into a big black puddle of goop were taken to a secret location, by the military, where the trials of modification took place. Many years passed, and the secret decision for 'reintegration' occurred. The first zombie family released, into living society was placed in Texas, where a freaky friendship developed between a zombie boy and two bored eccentric children. As the trio's bond gets stronger, they make simple discoveries about themselves and learn more about The Great Panic Po of 2020. Stink, rot, and science string them together as they manage to find a formula that might keep their friend from falling apart!
  • Cat and Dog Give a Party

    Elizabeth Miller

    Library Binding (Franklin Watts, Aug. 1, 1980)
    Cat and Dog learn to count to ten as, one by one, their animal friends come to their party and, one by one, they leave in a series of amusing misadventures
    M
  • Rolling With The Rollodons!

    Elizabeth Milton

    Library Binding (Turtleback, May 23, 2017)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. It's Rollodon season, which means a huge herd of steamrolling Trux are migrating through the crater. Can Ty and the other Dinotrux convince the uncontrollable Rollodons to put their steamrolling skills to good use?
    K
  • The Roman Colosseum: The story of the world's most famous stadium and its deadly games

    Elizabeth Mann

    Hardcover (Mikaya Press, Jan. 1, 1772)
    None
  • Little Man: A Novel

    Elizabeth Mann

    Hardcover (Mikaya Press, May 16, 2014)
    A light-hearted tale of a boy who gains self-confidence with the help of some timely mentoring. Albert is short -- very short -- and he hates it. His older brothers are tall like his father, but he takes after his petite mother. He wears too-large hand-me-down clothes from his bigger brothers. And worst of all, his very best friend moved away to Brooklyn during the school break. It was all so unfair. Albert is beginning Middle School on Little Scrub, the small Caribbean Island where he lives. As he steps on the bus, and sees the older kids, he feels smaller than ever. They take one look at him and howl with laughter, chanting "Little Man, Little Man, you so small, didn't hardly see you at all." Things go downhill from there, and would've stayed down if it wasn't for an encounter with Peachy, the leader of a troupe of stiltwalkers. The stiltwalkers do a lot more than walk: they dance and leap across the sand on spindly eight-foot high wooden stilts, their brilliantly colored costumes shimmering in the moonlight. Peachy invites Albert to join the high school students he teaches to stiltwalk. It's not an easy decision for Albert. Would they laugh at him even harder than the Middle School kids? And he is queasy about heights. The thought of wobbling around on those skinny wooden sticks makes him woozy with fear. But Albert is won over by the thought that one day he might actually be up there, tall as a palm tree, dancing around without fear or hesitation. Besides, desperate times call for desperate measures and nobody was more desperate than Albert. Slowly, as his stiltwalking improves, Albert finds his self-confidence grows. He becomes less of a target for teasing at school and he makes some new friends.
    X