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Books with author Kathleen%20Ernst

  • Betrayal at Cross Creek

    Kathleen Ernst

    Hardcover (Amer Girl, March 1, 2004)
    In the deep forests of North Carolina's Cape Fear River Valley, the brewing Revolution feels very far away to Elspeth and her fellow Scottish immigrant neighbors, but when Elspeth's grandfather and cousins finally march off to fight on the British side, Elspeth is left alone to protect her grandmother. Simultaneous.
    V
  • Whistler in the Dark

    Kathleen Ernst

    Library Binding (Windmill Books, Aug. 1, 2009)
    It's 1867. Twelve-year-old Emma Henderson is mortified when Mother takes to wearing a Reform Dress--hideous bloomers! Worse, Mother has accepted a newspaper job in wild, far-off Colorado Territory. But even Emma can't imagine just how badly things will go in Twin Pines. From the moment she and Mother step off the stagecoach, it's clear that someone doesn't want them there. This book includes a detailed "Peak Into The Past" essay.
    S
  • Hearts of Stone

    Kathleen Ernst

    Hardcover (Dutton Juvenile, Oct. 19, 2006)
    When her father goes off to join the Yankee troops, fourteen-year-old Hannah fears her family will be torn apart by the Civil War. But nothing prepares her for her mother's sudden death. Hannah now finds herself responsible for keeping the young family together in a world where even her best friend, Ben, sympathizes with the Confederacy. On a long and dangerous journey from Cumberland Mountain to Nashville, Tennessee, in search of their only living relative, Hannah and her brother and sisters come to realize the true meaning of family and hope. This is a beautifully crafted novel about the tragedy of war and the power of love even in the toughest of times.
    Y
  • Trouble at Fort Lapointe

    Kathleen Ernst

    Hardcover (Amer Girl Pub, Sept. 1, 2000)
    In the early 1700s, twelve-year-old Suzette, an Ojibwa-French girl, hopes that her father will win the fur-trapping contest so that he can quit being a voyageur and stay with his family year-round, but when he is accused of stealing, Suzette must use her knowledge of both French and Ojibwa ways to find the real thief.In the early 1700s, twelve-year-old Suzette, an Ojibwa-French girl, hopes that her father will win the fur-trapping contest, but when he is accused of stealing, Suzette must use her knowledge of both French and Ojibwa ways to find the real thief.
    S
  • Ghosts of Vicksburg

    Kathleen Ernst

    Paperback (White Mane Pub, July 1, 2003)
    When Jamie Carswell joins the 14th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment fighting in Vicksburg, Mississippi, he finds his cousin Althea living there, trying to make peace with her past while struggling to keep her family safe during the Union's siege.
    X
  • Trouble at Fort La Pointe

    Kathleen Ernst

    Paperback (Skyview Books, July 15, 2009)
    Suzette Choudoir has spent each of her twelve summers at La Pointe Island on Lake Superior, where Ojibwe people camp by the French fur-trade fort. It is 1732 and if her papa wins the trappers' competition, the prize will let him stay with his Ojibwe family year-round instead of wintering in far-off Montréal with the other French voyageurs. But a troublemaker sabotages the competition, and Papa. Only someone who's both Ojibwe and French can figure out what's going on -- someone like Suzette. This book includes a richly illustrated "Peak Into The Past" essay, glosseries of French and Ojibwe words, and an author's note.
    Q
  • Highland Fling

    Kathleen Ernst

    Hardcover (Cricket Books, Feb. 22, 2006)
    A year ago, Tanya Zeshonski was living in Wisconsin, interning at the public television station, and eating Polish food on the holidays. Then her mother divorced her father, reclaimed her maiden name of MacDonald, and moved to North Carolina to submerge them all in their Scottish heritage. So now, at 15, Tanya is the oldest beginning student at the Flora MacDonald School of Highland Dance. Instead of pursuing her dream of being a filmmaker, she’s learning the Highland Fling, one of the national dances of Scotland. Learning it means a lot to her mother, though, so Tanya resigns herself to practicing for the biggest event of the summer, the Cross Creek Highland Games. At the games, Tanya must face not only the intricacies of the dance, but the complications brought on by a handsome bagpiper named Miguel, a ghostly ancestor, and the arrival of her father. Tanya’s sharp, funny voice rings true as she describes the delicate steps of the dance and the beginning of her new life.
    M
  • Retreat from Gettysburg

    Kathleen Ernst

    Hardcover (Burd Street Pr, July 1, 2000)
    In 1863, during the tense week after the Battle of Gettysburg, a Maryland boy faces difficult choices as he is forced to care for a wounded Confederate officer while trying to decide if he himself should leave his family to fight for the Union.
  • Trouble at Fort La Pointe

    Kathleen Ernst

    Library Binding (Windmill Books, Aug. 1, 2009)
    Suzette Choudoir has spent each of her twelve summers at La Pointe Island on Lake Superior, where Ojibwe people camp by the French fur-trade fort. It is 1732 and if her papa wins the trappers' competition, the prize will let him stay with his Ojibwe family year-round instead of wintering in far-off Montréal with the other French voyageurs. But a troublemaker sabotages the competition, and Papa. Only someone who's both Ojibwe and French can figure out what's going on -- someone like Suzette. This book includes a detailed "Peak Into The Past" essay, glosseries of French and Ojibwe words, and an author's note.
    Q
  • The Runaway Friend A Kirsten Mystery by Kathleen Ernst

    Kathleen Ernst

    Paperback (American Girl, 2008, )
    The Runaway Friend A Kirsten Mystery by Kathleen Ernst. Published by American Girl,2008, Binding: Paperback
  • Changes for Caroline

    Kathleen Ernst

    Hardcover (American Girl, Jan. 1, 1863)
    None
  • Whistler in the Dark

    Kathleen Ernst

    Paperback (Skyview Books, July 1, 2009)
    It's 1867. Twelve-year-old Emma Henderson is mortified when Mother takes to wearing a Reform Dress--hideous bloomers! Worse, Mother has accepted a newspaper job in wild, far-off Colorado Territory. But even Emma can't imagine just how badly things will go in Twin Pines. From the moment she and Mother step off the stagecoach, it's clear that someone doesn't want them there.This book includes a detailed "Peak Into The Past" essay.
    S