Browse all books

Books with author George Harrar

  • The Trouble with Jeremy Chance

    George Harrar

    Hardcover (Milkweed Editions, Aug. 26, 2003)
    In 1919, following a disagreement with his father and his first whipping by a belt, twelve-year-old Jeremy hops a train to Boston to meet his older brother, a soldier returning from World War I. Simultaneous. 15,000 first printing.
  • Not as Crazy as I Seem by George Harrar

    George Harrar

    Paperback (Graphia Books, Aug. 16, 1600)
    None
  • Not As Crazy As I Seem

    George Harrar

    Library Binding
    None
  • Radical robots: Can you be replaced?

    George Harrar

    Hardcover (Published by Simon & Schuster in association with WGBH Boston, March 15, 1990)
    Examines the migration patterns of the monarch butterfly, describes the study and discoveries that yielded knowledge of these movements, and speculates on the origin of the insect and why it travels such long distances.
  • The Trouble with Jeremy Chance

    George Harrar

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, Aug. 26, 2003)
    Set in New England just as troops are returning from World War I, this is a classic American coming-of-age story. Curious and impulsive, 12-year-old Jeremy is always getting into trouble. This time, after an argument with his father, Jeremy decides to run away to Boston to meet his older brother's troop ship. Jeremy's adventures — and misadventures — provide plenty of opportunities for him to use his common sense and determination, from his train trip through rural New Hampshire to his wide-eyed explorations of Boston upon his arrival there. Showing the world through the eyes of a young boy, George Harrar's moving, suspenseful story casts Jeremy's personal struggles and successes against the backdrop of the events unfolding on the world stage. The Trouble with Jeremy Chance is a tale of heroism in unlikely places.
    Y
  • Jess and Josh and the Hopping Mad Poge

    George Harte

    eBook
    Take a leap into the fractured world of Jess and Josh who run away from their home in the settlement of Wellsunk in search of their dad, who is working as a plugger on the ancient fracking fields left abandoned long ago but reopened by the false ones, the weapon makers. Then while stumbling through a timescape where danger is only a trip away and new freindships bring hope, they come face to face with the Hopping Mad Poge and the adventures begin. Meet the likes of Una Mac-cool, Wally Wally, Rolly the Reiver, Salt Eye Jack, the Salvagers, Captain Slahoo and first mate Woojacky, Candy Rock and Gumsy Mutt.
  • The Wonder Kid

    George Harrar

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin, April 24, 2006)
    It's 1954, a year when polio, known as the great crippler of children, terrified parents. Jesse's mom won't let him go to the playground or hang out with friends for fear that he will catch the disease—so Jesse stays home, making up his own games with his grandfather and dog, Gort.No matter what Jesse does, he can't seem to please his father, who wanted a basketball-baseball-football kind of son. Instead, Jesse spends his days drawing pictures, watching cowboy movies, and playing war with his army of metal soldiers.Then polio strikes, paralyzing Jesse's legs. With the help of an unlikely girlfriend, Jesse turns his imagination to creating comic strips, reinterpreting his life as The Wonder Kid, with the power to make things happen by thinking them.In this strange summer of UFOs and fallout shelters and deadly hurricanes, Jesse discovers just how much he has in common with his father and what it really means to be a hero.
  • Radical Robots: Can You Be Replaced

    George Harrar

    Paperback (Aladdin, Sept. 1, 1990)
    Examines the design, construction, and applications of robots, discussing what they can and cannot do and the extent to which they can develop their own intelligence
  • Not As Crazy As I Seem

    George Harrar

    Paperback (Graphia, Oct. 25, 2004)
    Devon Brown won’t eat in the school caf (a germ swamp). He covers his hands before opening doors, eats things in groups of four (his lucky number), and hangs up his shirts (with all their buttons buttoned) by color. Some kids say Devon’s crazy, but he knows better—these are the tricks that keep bad things from happening, and he can’t imagine giving them up. Devon calls it “controlling things.” His doctor calls it obsessive-compulsive disorder. When Devon starts at a new school, his compulsions start to get him in trouble, and before long he realizes that his only choice is to confront his behaviors and the events that trigger them. In a compelling story of growing up different, George Harrar introduces us to a boy who just might change the way we think about “crazy.”
    Z
  • The Trouble with Jeremy Chance

    George Harrar

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, Jan. 4, 2007)
    Set in New England just as troops are returning from World War I, this is a classic American coming-of-age story. Curious and impulsive, 12-year-old Jeremy is always getting into trouble. This time, after an argument with his father, Jeremy decides to run away to Boston to meet his older brother's troop ship. Jeremy's adventures — and misadventures — provide plenty of opportunities for him to use his common sense and determination, from his train trip through rural New Hampshire to his wide-eyed explorations of Boston upon his arrival there.Showing the world through the eyes of a young boy, George Harrar's moving, suspenseful story casts Jeremy's personal struggles and successes against the backdrop of the events unfolding on the world stage. The Trouble with Jeremy Chance is a tale of heroism in unlikely places.
    Y
  • Ancient Egypt

    George Hart

    Hardcover (DK Children, Aug. 9, 2004)
    Full-color photos. From the splendor of the pharaoh's court to the everyday life of ordinary people, the great civilization of the Nile valley is revealed in page after page of dramatic photos of the objects they left behind: human and animal mummies, reed brushes, children's pull-toys, and more. "Stunning."--School Library Journal.
    Y
  • Signs of the apes, songs of the whales: Adventures in human-animal communication

    George Harrar

    Hardcover (Simon and Schuster Books for Young Readers, March 15, 1989)
    Describes experiments in which apes and dolphins have been taught aspects of human language and discusses the contributions of these experiments to our understanding of animal intelligence.