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Books with author Lori Phillips

  • The Great Big Terrible Mess with Book

    Louis Phillips

    Audio Cassette (Random House Audio Publishing Group, Dec. 15, 1993)
    None
  • Mr. Touchdown

    Lyda Phillips

    Hardcover (iUniverse, Inc., July 29, 2005)
    In 1965, the South remained defiantly segregated. Eddie Russell, a star football player, and his timid sister, Lakeesha, are told they will be helping to desegregate an all-white high school. Their father tells them they will be fighting for a righteous cause, but they aren’t buying it—because they have no choice in the matter. From the first day of school, the wall of hostility Eddie and Lakeesha face at Forrest High School seems unbreakable, until they meet cheerleader Nancy Martin. She sees the cruelty and crosses the line to befriend the black students—starting a cycle of violence that threatens to spin out of control. Will the minority students hold on long enough to complete their mission—and that of the adults who put them in this situation—or will they bow to the onslaught of psychological and physical abuse?
    P
  • How to Ride a Rhinoceros with Book

    Louis Phillips

    Audio Cassette (BDD Audio Publishing, Dec. 15, 1993)
    Zany adventures by award-winning children's author Louis Philips, narrated bythe stars of ABC's Full House.
  • Hide-and-seek Puzzles

    Louis Phillips

    Paperback (Price Stern Sloan, Aug. 21, 1991)
    Book by Phillips, Louis
  • Football, Records, Stars, Feats, and Facts

    Louis Phillips

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Dec. 1, 1979)
    Concise profiles of the careers of thirty-five football champions, including Terry Bradshaw, Jim Brown, Red Grange, and O.J. Simpson, are followed by statistics and records for scoring, rushing, passing, pass receiving, field goals, punting, and touchdowns
    S
  • Way Out!: Jokes from Outer Space

    Louis Phillips

    Paperback (Puffin, Sept. 1, 1991)
    A collection of jokes and riddles ranging from tales of robot romance to a trip to Mickey Mouse's favorite planet Pluto.
    Q
  • Mr. Touchdown

    Lyda Phillips

    Paperback (iUniverse, Nov. 3, 2008)
    Eddie Russell, a black football star, anticipates enjoying his junior season at Douglass High School south of Memphis, Tennessee, in 1965, but complies with his father Reverend Henry Russell's wishes when local civil rights leaders select Eddie to integrate all-white Forrest High School. Epitomizing resiliency, Eddie; his studious sister, Lakeesha; and two other African-American girls, Lethe and Rochelle; stoically attend classes, experiencing passive racism at first and confronting academic inequities of segregated education when they discover better books and facilities in the white school. Most students either ignore or taunt the black pupils; a teacher washes her hands after touching them, and Eddie's football coach benches him for most of the season. Eddie strives to perceive good in his tormentors. Although the black children's perspectives predominate, reactions of popular white cheerleader, Nancy Martin, depict her tolerance for her new classmates. She befriends the black students, invites them to her home, and attends their church despite her friends' disapproval and rejection. The racism escalates when classmates assault Lakeesha ... testing Eddie's commitment to nonviolence and forgiveness. Based on the author's experiences as a teenager, this complex story explores young adults' experiences on school desegregation's front lines. Children's Literature"Mr. Touchdown is a terrific read. Using vibrantly descriptive language, Lyda Phillips creates a living world of shop class and gym teachers, pep rallies and pompoms, and pulls us right into it. Middle-school students and even their older brothers and sisters will enjoy the breezy dialogue, fast-moving plot, and genuinely shocking twists and turns. Rooting her story of radical social change in the familiar routines of high school, the author gives us a book that never abandons its characters, and it succeeds as both social commentary and adolescent rite-of-passage. It's also a warm and big-hearted book t
    Q
  • Blair's second, or, Mother's catechism: Being a sequel to The first catechism, treating of other subjects proper to be known at an early age

    R Phillips

    Unknown Binding (W. Darton and Son, Holborn Hill [and 7 others, March 15, 1838)
    None
  • Why and because, or, The curious child answered: Teaching children of early ages to think and investigate : with two clock faces

    R Phillips

    Unknown Binding (Printed for the author, and published by Sherwood, Gilbert, & Piper, Paternoster Row, March 15, 1830)
    None
  • Make Your Own Fun Frames!

    M. Phillips

    Library Binding (San Val, Oct. 1, 2001)
    None
  • Ask Me Anything About Monsters

    Louis Phillips

    Paperback (Demco Media, Feb. 1, 1997)
    Answers questions about all sorts of monstrous creatures, both legendary and literary, including Bigfoot, Count Dracula, the Golem, and vampires
    T
  • Missing Memories

    Louise Phillips

    (Independently published, Aug. 24, 2019)
    Agatha is poor. She has enough memory for today. Just today. Agatha is an amnesiast. Agatha's friend Clara is rich. She has enough memory to hold feelings and experiences. Clara is a reminist. Amnesiasts are destined to be the servants of society. Agatha is in a trial school program to educate amnesiasts alongside reminists. The school is surprised when Agatha wins a debate contest. Her friend Clara relates the event, because Agatha cannot remember. Clara also tells about the amnesiasts being murdered at the school. This is a story of haves and have nots. The wealthy steals from the poor. Yet Agatha survives, thrives and discovers her past.Of course she gets some help from who grandma, who left her something precious..