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Books with author George Jean Nathan

  • Arctic Son

    Jean George

    Hardcover (Hyperion Books for Children, Sept. 1, 1997)
    A baby boy is given an Inupiat name to go with his English one and grows up learning the traditional ways of the Eskimo people living in the Arctic.
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  • My Side of the Mountain, Signed by Author

    Jean George

    Hardcover
    Dutton, 1959, later printing, Inscribed by Author, Very Good++ hardback with Very Good++ DustJacket and decorated endpapers with plentiful illustrations, NOT "exlib"
  • My Side of the Mountain

    Jean George

    Paperback (Dutton Juvenile, June 23, 1975)
    None
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  • 5 Great Modern Irish Plays

    George Jean Nathan

    Hardcover (Modern Library, March 15, 1941)
    None
  • The Hole in the Tree

    Jean George

    Hardcover (Scott, Foresman and Co., March 15, 1957)
    THE HOLE IN THE TREE, besides being a fascinating ecological story, is also a delightful picture book. It was written early in the half-century-long writing career of children's greatest nature writer, Jean Craighead George. Before she went on to write classics like JULIE OF THE WOLVES and today's books like the Ecological Mysteries, HOW TO TALK TO YOUR DOG, and the One Day in the. . .series, Ms. George turned out several books that she wrote and illustrated. Among them are the animal biographies she wrote with husband John George, like VULPES THE RED FOX and DIPPER OF COPPER CREEK. There was the enduring, Newbery Honor-winning MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN, too. And there were her picture books, THE HOLE IN THE TREE and SNOW TRACKS. Apparently, SNOW TRACKS is not currently available on Amazon. It tells the cozy story of a forest full of animals who have adventures on a cold winter night, and a boy who follows their tracks. THE HOLE IN THE TREE is done in the same style. In it, a young boy and girl find a sanctuary under an old shady apple tree. So do a lot of wild things--woodpeckers, insects, raccoons--and the children, though they might think they are alone, soon have many neighbors in the hollow tree trunk. The pictures are lively and warm, penciled with great detail and close observation of natural behavior. The story, too, is detailed and thorough, helping explain the pictures with creative, understandable words. A carpenter bee, one of nature's most crafted homemakers, lays her eggs in the hole; a chickadee builds a nest; a raccoon hibernates; and the pictures offer a wonderful look into these otherwise hidden worlds. Sadly, this fine story of nature and ecology has been out of print for years.
  • The Tarantula In My Purse

    Jean C. George

    Paperback (Harper Collins, Aug. 16, 1996)
    A collection of short narrative pieces about unusual pets by renowned children's author. 134 pages. Illustrations by the author.
  • Frightful's Mountain

    Jean C. George

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 21, 2001)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. As she grows through the first years of her life in the Catskill Mountains, a peregrine falcon called Frightful interacts with various humans, including the boy who raised her, a falconer who rescues her, and poachers, as well as with many animals.
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  • My Side of the Mountain

    Jean George

    Mass Market Paperback (Scholastic Inc, Jan. 1, 1959)
    Vintage movie tie-in paperback
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  • My Side Of The Mountain

    Jean C. George

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 21, 2001)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A young boy relates his adventures during the year he spends living alone in the Catskill Mountains; including his struggle for survival, his dependence on nature, his animal friends, and his realization that he needs human companionship.
  • My Side of the Mountain

    Jean George

    Hardcover (Nelson Thornes Ltd, Oct. 15, 1978)
    None
  • Signs, Symbols and Ciphers: Decoding the Message

    Georges Jean

    Paperback (Thames and Hudson, March 15, 1999)
    Signs and symbols represent abstract ideas and concrete objects, providingn a sense of number, danger, value, distances in time and space, and even love. Over time, these marks and gestures have multiplied into an immernse and complex network of images, pictures and emblems - pictographs and logographs, maps and charts, letterforms, colours and patterns. How does a sign represent something other than itself? How do we come to understand the maning of a written symbol? What happens when a sign crosses international borders of language and culture? Can clothes constitute a sign? Can colours? Can sounds? This work takes the reader on a journey of discovery through the world of symbols.