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Books with author Gary D. Schmidt

  • The Wednesday Wars - Audio Library Edition

    Gary Schmidt, Gary D. Schmidt

    Audio CD (Scholastic Audio Books, June 1, 2007)
    From award-winning novelist, a hilarious and poignant coming-of-age story set in 1967.Seventh grader Holling Hoodhood has a tough year ahead of him. First of all, his teacher Mrs. baker, keeps giving him the evil eye. Second of all, the class bully keeps threatening to do Number 167 (and you don't even want to know what Number 167 is). Third of all, his father keeps calling him the Son Who is Going to Inherit Hoodhood and Associates. But things are changing, and while reciting his favorite curses from Shakespear's plays, Holling might just find the true meaning of his own story.
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  • FIRST BOY

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Hardcover (NY Holt (2005)., Aug. 16, 2005)
    None
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  • Wednesday Wars

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Library Binding (Clarion, Jan. 27, 2007)
    In 1967, on Wednesday afternoons, seventh-grader Holling Hoodhood and his teacher, Mrs. Baker, read the plays of William Shakespeare while his classmates go to Catechism or Hebrew School.
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  • Trouble

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Paperback (Graphia, April 12, 2010)
    “Contains Schmidt’s eloquent language and compelling characters.” —School Library Journal, starred review “Henry’s odyssey of growth and understanding is pitch-perfect.” —The Bulletin “Emotionally gripping and seductively told.” —Publishers Weekly When Henry Smith’s older brother goes into a coma after being hit by a Cambodian boy’s pickup truck, the entire Smith family is engulfed in the tragedy. It takes a mountain, which Henry vows to climb, to open the eyes of this long-established Yankee family to their own prejudices and to an awareness that they can never insulate themselves against trouble.
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  • The Blessing of the Lord: Stories from the Old and New Testaments

    Gary D. Schmidt, Dennis Nolan

    Hardcover (Eerdmans Pub Co, Aug. 1, 1997)
    Retells twenty-five Bible stories, exploring the point of view of the characters in each story.
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  • The Wednesday Wars

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 18, 2009)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. During the 1967 school year, on Wednesday afternoons when all his classmates go to either Catechism or Hebrew school, seventh-grader Holling Hoodhood stays in Mrs. Baker's classroom where they read the plays of William Shakespeare.
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  • Mara's Stories: Glimmers in the Darkness

    Gary Schmidt

    Hardcover (Henry Holt and Co. (BYR), Oct. 1, 2001)
    A testament to the power of stories, and how they may bring hope even in times of darkness."Everyone gathers around, and from her lips to their ears the stories go, and for a little while the camp disappears, and for a little while they are all free."As night falls, the women gather their children to listen to Mara tell her stories. They are stories of light and hope and freedom, stories of despair and stories of miracles, stories of expected pain and stories of unexpected joy--all told in the darkness of the concentration camp barracks. Through extensive research noted in the back of the book, Gary Schmidt has skillfully woven together stories from such sources as the Jewish religious scholar, Martin Buber, Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel; and folklorists, Steve Zeitlin and Yaffa Eliach.Combining lore of the past with tales born in the concentration camps, Mara's stories speak to us from a time that must never be forgotten.
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  • Saint Ciaran: The Tale of a Saint of Ireland

    Gary D. Schmidt, Todd Doney

    Hardcover (Eerdmans Pub Co, May 1, 2000)
    Retells legends of Saint Ciaran, or Kieran, an early Irish saint who loved nature and God before Christianity came to Ireland, journeyed to Rome, and returned to Ireland to live as a hermit, surrounded by animals.
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  • The Wednesday Wars

    Gary D Schmidt

    Hardcover (Scholastic, Aug. 16, 2008)
    New
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  • Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, May 24, 2004)
    It only takes a few hours for Turner Buckminster to start hating Phippsburg, Maine. No one in town will let him forget that he's a minister's son, even if he doesn't act like one. But then he meets Lizzie Bright Griffin, a smart and sassy girl from a poor nearby island community founded by former slaves. Despite his father's-and the town's-disapproval of their friendship, Turner spends time with Lizzie, and it opens up a whole new world to him, filled with the mystery and wonder of Maine's rocky coast. The two soon discover that the town elders, along with Turner's father, want to force the people to leave Lizzie's island so that Phippsburg can start a lucrative tourist trade there. Turner gets caught up in a spiral of disasters that alter his life-but also lead him to new levels of acceptance and maturity. This sensitively written historical novel, based on the true story of a community's destruction, highlights a unique friendship during a time of change. Author's note.
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  • Katherine Paterson

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Hardcover (Twayne Pub, Feb. 1, 1994)
    Katherine Paterson is the consummate storyteller, a crafter of tales in which characters must deal with the most elemental hopes and fears in settings - be it a Chesapeake Bay island or the mountains of China - that are alternately blissful and beatific, terrifying and desperate. In a sensitive analysis of the novels and stories of this award-winning children's author, Gary D. Schmidt finds that Paterson is, in a subtle way, a didactic writer, informed by her hopeful and ethical vision of the future.Here is a writer, Schmidt argues, who does not shy away from horrendous topics - unwanted foster children, the death of a schoolchild's best friend, rape, murder, political intrigue, religious mania, and war. He finds that Paterson's books - among them the National Book Award-winning Master Puppeteer (1976) and The Great Gilly Hopkins (1978) and the Newberry Award-winning Bridge to Terabithia (1977) and Jacob Have I Loved (1980) - are successful when the reader journeys with the author through distressing situations and then arrives, in a moment of grace, at a place of spiritual enlightenment.Paterson's characters, Schmidt argues, search for fathers, for families, for love and acceptance, for themselves, they recall the characters of Flannery O'Connor, who also find themselves caught in moments of distress and then find, like Paterson's characters, moments of grace. As Schmidt shows, that moment may come in the building of a bridge or in coming to understand the implications of a carol or poem or in resolving to live a life of burdens shared.Schmidt begins this study with a biographical essay about Paterson's life, drawn from her own essays as well as from an interview with her he conducted at her home in Barre, Vermont. In the balance of the book he addresses her copious work, beginning with her early historical fiction and proceeding on to the novels that explore her major themes - of the plight of prodigal children and the search for true family. Later chapters examine Paterson's more recent historical fiction and her retelling of folk tales.Throughout his discussion Schmidt focuses on the stories' elements of hope, for, as Paterson has said in a National Book Award acceptance speech, she wants to be "a spy for hope." Schmidt's lucid study brings readers a closer understanding of this remarkable "spy."
  • The Wednesday Wars

    Gary D. Schmidt

    Library Binding (Thorndike Press Large Print, Jan. 10, 2019)
    "Thorndike PressÂŞ Large Print Mini-Collections"
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