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Books with author Linda Oatman High

  • The Cemetery Keepers of Gettysburg by Linda Oatman High

    Linda Oatman High

    Hardcover (Walker Childrens, Aug. 16, 1816)
    Excellent Book
  • A Stone's Throw from Paradise

    Linda Oatman High

    Hardcover (Eerdmans Pub Co, June 1, 1997)
    Twelve-year-old Lizzie searches for memories of her mother while spending a summer with her grandmother among the Amish in Pearly Gates, Pennsylvania
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  • A Heart Like Ringo Starr

    Linda Oatman High III

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, March 25, 2015)
    Her family runs Stevens Brothers Funeral Home. Which is ironic, since Faith Hope Stevens is not long for this world. Unless someone dies. Unless there is a match. Staying alive will mean a heart transplant. Faith copes with wit and nerve. She will never grow old. She will never have a boyfriend. Then one shocking day everything changes ...
  • Teeny Little Grief Machines

    Linda Oatman High

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, July 25, 2014)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. In a novel in verse, Lexi, a year after her baby half-sister's death, attempts to cope with the problems of everyday life as well as with her alcoholic father, now in jail, her anorexic, bipolar stepmother, and her autistic half-brother.
  • Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Roadtrip

    Linda Oatman High

    Hardcover
    None
  • Barn Savers

    Linda Oatman High, Ted Lewin

    Paperback (Boyds Mills Press, Feb. 1, 2012)
    The barn is old. The boards are beaten. A hundred years of wind and rain have taken their toll. When you step inside, you can smell the hay and horses. It's a beautiful place, this barn, in its rugged way. But now it's time for the barn to come down. Fortunately, the barn will not be crushed by the blade of a bulldozer. It will be dismantled slowly, piece by piece, by the barn savers. The barn savers, a father and son, take care to save everything--the joists, the rafters, the flooring, the roofing. In this way, the barn will never be gone. Somewhere parts of it may live for another hundred years. This is the hope of the barn savers. Linda Oatman High's story quietly celebrates something beautiful and something old, as a father and son bring down a barn with hard work and respect. Ted Lewin's dramatic illustrations pay homage to the old barn in all its gray and weathered glory.
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  • Otherwise

    Linda Oatman High

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, July 25, 2014)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. After all genders other than neutral are forbidden by law, ""Spark"" fears the future until she meets ""Whistler.
  • Barn Savers

    Linda Oatman High, Ted Lewin

    Hardcover (Boyds Mills Press, Sept. 1, 1999)
    The barn is old. The boards are beaten. A hundred years of wind and rain have taken their toll. When you step inside, you can smell the hay and horses. It's a beautiful place, this barn, in its rugged way. But now it's time for the barn to come down. Fortunately, the barn will not be crushed by the blade of a bulldozer. It will be dismantled slowly, piece by piece, by the barn savers. The barn savers, a father and son, take care to save everything--the joists, the rafters, the flooring, the roofing. In this way, the barn will never be gone. Somewhere parts of it may live for another hundred years. This is the hope of the barn savers. Linda Oatman High's story quietly celebrates something beautiful and something old, as a father and son bring down a barn with hard work and respect. Ted Lewin's dramatic illustrations pay homage to the old barn in all its gray and weathered glory.
    O
  • Beekeepers

    Linda Oatman High, Doug Chayka

    Hardcover (Boyds Mills Press, Sept. 1, 2002)
    When the sunshine pours like warm honey from the sky, it's time to tend Grandpa's bees. This day his granddaughter lends a hand, and she is treated to a spectacular show. The swarming bees whirl and twirl like a big buzzing cloud until they finally cluster on the limb of a tree. Then it's up to granddaughter to bring the bees down and move them into their new hive, which she does with great care. Grandpa is proud. His granddaughter proves to be "a fine keeper of bees." Linda Oatman High's lovingly told story, with sunny oil paintings by Doug Chayka, captures the special experience shared between a grandparent and child.
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  • Winter Shoes for Shadow Horse

    Linda Oatman High, Ted Lewin

    Hardcover (Caroline House, Boyds Mills Press, Highlights, Sept. 1, 2001)
    A boy hears the ringing of a hammer in the evening air. He follows the sound to the blacksmith shop where the fiery forge makes it a warm place on a winter's night. The boy watches as his father pounds steel on an anvil. Tonight he is making shoes for Shadow Horse. When the big horse arrives, led by his owner, he stomps and whinnies. Then, after a few pats on his broad back and a sugar-cube treat, Shadow Horse settles down. The father lifts the left hoof and the shoeing begins. The night will be a special one for the boy, when his father helps him shoe his first horse. Linda Oatman High's beautiful story depicts the loving bond between parent and child, while Ted Lewin's luminescent illustrations capture the heat and flickering shadows of a blacksmith shop one cold night in winter.
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  • Girl on the High-Diving Horse

    Linda Oatman High, Ted Lewin

    Paperback (Puffin, April 21, 2005)
    Set in Atlantic City in the 1930s, a young girl tells of her great summer by the sea as she experiences the eclectic sights, sounds, and events all around her, such as the human cannonballs, card-playing cats, and the high-diving horse stunt. Reprint.
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  • The President's Puppy

    Linda Oatman High, Steve Bjorkman

    Paperback (Scholastic, April 1, 2002)
    Recounts the life story of Fido, a gentle yellow dog who loved, and was loved by, Abraham Lincoln and his family.
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