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Books with author Mari Griffith

  • Mind Games

    B B Griffith

    Paperback (Griffith Publishing LLC, March 15, 2017)
    Sophie West has a problem with her imaginary friend, Mo. Most girls have forgotten their imaginary friends by the age of thirteen, but Mo seems more and more real every day. The problem is, instead of playing hide and seek and tea party like they used to, now all Mo wants to play with is fire. Sophie’s Mom, Dianne, doesn’t know where to turn for help. Someone is starting fires in their exclusive Baltimore neighborhood, and she’s terrified it might be Sophie. Desperate, she calls the only person she can think of with the discretion and experience she needs. Gordon Pope is still trying to get his fledgling child psychiatry practice off the ground. When he answers Dianne’s call, he thinks he’s simply taking on another troubled young patient. What he doesn’t realize is that he’s about to find out just how dangerous Mo’s games really are.
  • Three hundred years hence

    Mary Griffith

    Hardcover (Gregg Press, Sept. 3, 1975)
    Book by Griffith, Mary
  • Three Hundred Years Hence

    Mary Griffith

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 8, 2015)
    A sleeping young man is sealed in his house by an avalanche and awakens 300 years later in the year 2135 when the house is uncovered by excavation. Through this character, Griffith looks into the future of America from her time in 1836 as America's first known female utopian writer. She foretells a new form of power replacing steam engines, prohibition of liquor, women working jobs outside of the home, self-propelled farm equipment, income taxes, buildings made of fireproof materials, public construction and ownership of roads, breakup of monopolies, and other changes that were to come to America. "Three Hundred Years Hence" was the first part of a volume entitled Camperdown; or, News from Our Neighbourhood. Although the book was issued anonymously, the author was Mary Griffith of Charlies Hope, New Jersey.
  • Rocky's Adventures

    Lori Griffith

    Paperback (Outskirts Press, Nov. 25, 2014)
    Rocky's Adventures is written from the perspective of Rocky the cat who grows from an abandoned kitten into a strong, loving, responsible cat learning many life lessons in the process. He fights his way into a warm and loving home and in return helps out on their family hobby farm. All color book with many beautiful photographs.
  • The Impossible Boy

    Mark Griffiths

    Paperback (Simon & Schuster Children's UK, )
    None
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  • Three Hundred Years Hence

    Mary Griffith

    eBook (, April 25, 2020)
    A sleeping young man is sealed in his house by an avalanche and awakens 300 years later in the year 2135 when the house is uncovered by excavation. Through this character, Griffith looks into the future of America from her time in 1836 as America's first known female utopian writer. She foretells a new form of power replacing steam engines, prohibition of liquor, women working jobs outside of the home, self-propelled farm equipment, income taxes, buildings made of fireproof materials, public construction and ownership of roads, breakup of monopolies, and other changes that were to come to America."Three Hundred Years Hence" was the first part of a volume entitled Camperdown; or, News from Our Neighbourhood. Although the book was issued anonymously, the author was Mary Griffith of Charlies Hope, New Jersey.
  • Three Hundred Years Hence

    Mary Griffith

    Paperback (Independently published, Feb. 10, 2020)
    It is seldom that men begin to muse and sit alone in the twilight until they arrive at the age of fifty, for until that period the cares of the world and the education of their young children engross all their thoughts. Edgar Hastings, our hero, at thirty years of age, was still unmarried, but he had gone through a vast deal of excitement, and the age of musing had been anticipated by twenty years. He was left an orphan at fourteen, with a large income, and the gentleman who had the management of his estates proved faithful, so that when a person of talents and character was wanted to travel with the young man, a liberal recompense was at hand to secure his services. From the age of fourteen to twenty-one he was therefore travelling over Europe; but his education, instead of receiving a check, went on much more advantageously than if he had remained at home, and he became master of all the modern languages in the very countries where they were spoken. The last twelve months of his seven years' tour was spent in England, being stationary in London only during the sitting of Parliament. His talents thus cultivated, and his mind enlarged by liberal travel, he returned to America well worthy the friendship and attention of those who admire and appreciate a character of his stamp. He had not therefore been back more than a year, before his society was courted by some of the best men in the country; but previous to his settling himself into a home, he thought it but proper to travel through his own country also. His old friend, still at his elbow, accompanied him; but at the close of the excursion, which lasted nearly two years, he was taken ill of a fever caught from an exposure near the Lakes, and died after a few days' illness.
  • Three Hundred Years Hence illustrated

    Mary Griffith

    Paperback (Independently published, Aug. 4, 2020)
    In Three Hundred Years Hence, Mary Griffith envisioned a feminist future in the year 2135. She set the book in Philadelphia, her hometown. In some ways her vision of the future is strange, at times not quite right, and in other ways amazing. Keep in mind, she wrote this in 1835.
  • Three hundred years hence

    Mary Griffith

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 21, 2017)
    A sleeping young man is sealed in his house by an avalanche and awakens 300 years later in the year 2135 when the house is uncovered by excavation. Through this character, Griffith looks into the future of America from her time in 1836 as America's first known female utopian writer. She foretells a new form of power replacing steam engines, prohibition of liquor, women working jobs outside of the home, self-propelled farm equipment, income taxes, buildings made of fireproof materials, public construction and ownership of roads, breakup of monopolies, and other changes that were to come to America. "Three Hundred Years Hence" was the first part of a volume entitled Camperdown; or, News from Our Neighbourhood. Although the book was issued anonymously, the author was Mary Griffith of Charlies Hope, New Jersey.
  • Three Hundred Years Hence

    Mary Griffith

    eBook (, July 27, 2016)
    A sleeping young man is sealed in his house by an avalanche and awakens 300 years later in the year 2135 when the house is uncovered by excavation. Through this character, Griffith looks into the future of America from her time in 1836 as America's first known female utopian writer. She foretells a new form of power replacing steam engines, prohibition of liquor, women working jobs outside of the home, self-propelled farm equipment, income taxes, buildings made of fireproof materials, public construction and ownership of roads, breakup of monopolies, and other changes that were to come to America."Three Hundred Years Hence" was the first part of a volume entitled Camperdown; or, News from Our Neighbourhood. Although the book was issued anonymously, the author was Mary Griffith of Charlies Hope, New Jersey.
  • Three Hundred Years Hence

    Mary Griffith

    Paperback (Independently published, July 29, 2020)
    A sleeping young man is sealed in his house by an avalanche and awakens 300 years later in the year 2135 when the house is uncovered by excavation. Through this character, Griffith looks into the future of America from her time in 1836 as America's first known female utopian writer. She foretells a new form of power replacing steam engines, prohibition of liquor, women working jobs outside of the home, self-propelled farm equipment, income taxes, buildings made of fireproof materials, public construction and ownership of roads, breakup of monopolies, and other changes that were to come to America.
  • Three Hundred Years Hence: Large Print

    Mary Griffith

    Paperback (Independently published, June 24, 2020)
    It is seldom that men begin to muse and sit alone in the twilight until they arrive at the age of fifty, for until that period the cares of the world and the education of their young children engross all their thoughts. Edgar Hastings, our hero, at thirty years of age, was still unmarried, but he had gone through a vast deal of excitement, and the age of musing had been anticipated by twenty years. He was left an orphan at fourteen, with a large income, and the gentleman who had the management of his estates proved faithful, so that when a person of talents and character was wanted to travel with the young man, a liberal recompense was at hand to secure his services. From the age of fourteen to twenty-one he was therefore travelling over Europe; but his education, instead of receiving a check, went on much more advantageously than if he had remained at home, and he became master of all the modern languages in the very countries where they were spoken. The last twelve months of his seven years' tour was spent in England, being stationary in London only during the sitting of Parliament.