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Books with author Nancy Farmer

  • Girl Named Disaster

    Nancy Farmer

    Paperback (Penguin Putnam~trade, April 1, 2001)
    None
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  • A Girl Named Disaster

    Nancy Farmer

    Paperback (Thorndike Pr, Oct. 19, 2005)
    While fleeing from Mozambique to Zimbabwe to escape an unwanted marriage, Nhamo, an eleven-year-old Shona girl, struggles to escape drowning and starvation and in so doing comes close to the luminous world of the African spirits.
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  • The Lord of Opium

    Nancy Farmer

    Paperback (Simon & Schuster Export, )
    None
  • A Girl Named Disaster

    Nancy Farmer

    Hardcover (Orchard Books, Oct. 1, 1996)
    Eleven-year-old Nhamo flees her impending marriage to a wicked man and embarks on a canoe trip to find her father, in a journey that takes her into the heart of Lake Cabora Bassa in Mozambique.
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  • The Islands of the Blessed

    Nancy Farmer

    Hardcover (Thorndike Press, March 3, 2010)
    The crowning volume of Farmer's bestselling trilogy begins with a tornado. The fields of Jack's village are devastated, the winter looks bleak, and a monster invades the forest outside of town. But even the direst of prospects are part of the fun as Jack, Thorgil, and the Bard set off on a quest to right the wrong of a death caused by Father Severus. Destination: Notland, realm of the fin folk, and, unfortunately for the adventurers, Not Always There.
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  • The Sea of Trolls

    Nancy Farmer

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, May 1, 2006)
    Jack was eleven when the berserkers loomed out of the fog and nabbed him. "It seems that things are stirring across the water," the Bard had warned. "Ships are being built, swords are being forged." "Is that bad?" Jack had asked, for his Saxon village had never before seen berserkers. "Of course. People don't make ships and swords unless they intend to use them."The year is A.D. 793. In the next months, Jack and his little sister, Lucy, are enslaved by Olaf One-Brow and his fierce young shipmate, Thorgil. With a crow named Bold Heart for mysterious company, they are swept up into an adventure-quest in the spirit of "The Lord of the Rings."Award-winner Nancy Farmer has never told a richer, funnier tale, nor offered more timeless encouragement to young seekers than "Just say no to pillaging."
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  • Clever Ali by Nancy Farmer

    Nancy Farmer

    Hardcover (Orchard Books, March 15, 1814)
    None
  • A Girl Named Disaster

    Nancy Farmer

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback, March 1, 1998)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. While fleeing from Mozambique to Zimbabwe to escape an unwanted marriage, Nhamo, an eleven-year-old Shona girl, struggles to escape drowning and starvation and comes close to the luminous world of the African spirits.
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  • The Literacy Bridge - Large Print - The Ear, the Eye and the Arm

    Nancy Farmer

    Hardcover (Thorndike Press, May 17, 2005)
    A Newbery Honor Book An ALA Best Book for Young Adults Zimbabwe, 2194. When the three children of the wealthy and powerful General Matsika steal out of the house on a forbidden adventure and promptly disappear, their parents call in the best detectives in Africa: the Ear, the Eye and the Arm.
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  • A Girl Named Disaster

    Nancy Farmer

    Hardcover (Perfection Learning, March 1, 1998)
    Nhamo’s mother is dead, and her father is gone. She is a virtual slave in her small African village. Before her twelfth birthday, Nhamo learns that she must marry a cruel man with three other wives and decides desperately to run away. Alone on the river, in a stolen boat, she is swept into the uncharted heart of a great lake. There, she battles drowning, starvation, and wild animals, and comes to know Africa’s mystical, luminous spirits. Nancy Farmer’s masterful storytelling makes this a truly spellbinding novel and readers will be cheering for Nhamo from beginning to end. A gripping adventure, equally a survival story and a spiritual voyage. Nhamo is a stunning creation while she serves as a fictional ambassador from a foreign culture, she is supremely human. An unforgettable work.
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  • The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm

    Nancy Farmer

    Hardcover (Perfection Learning, Oct. 1, 1995)
    In Zimbabwe in the year 2194, General Matsika calls in Africa's most unusual detectives--the Ear, the Eye, and the Arm--to find his missing children. By the author of Do You Know Me. Reprint. K. AB.
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  • The House of the Scorpion

    Nancy Farmer

    Library Binding (Paw Prints, Aug. 11, 2008)
    From the unique combination of the timelessness of an old and seemingly forgotten world deftly mixed with the futuristic reality of a brave new world comes a chilling tale of ethics and mortality that is thought provoking and macabre, and yet strangly fascinating...Is this the way of the future? Matt is six years old when he discovers that he is different from other children, from other people. To most people Matt isn't a boy, but a beast, dirty and disgusting. But to El Patron, lord of a country called Opium, Matt is the guarantee of eternal life. El Patron loves Matt as he loves himself - for Matt is himself. They share the same DNA. As Matt struggles to understand his existence and what that existence trully means, he is threatened by a host of sinister and manipulating characters, from El Patron's power-hungry family to the brain-deadened eejits and mindless slaves that toil Opium's poppy fields. Surrounded by a dangerous army of bodyguards, Matt longs for escape. But even escape is no guarantee of freedom because Matt is marked but his difference in ways that he doesn't even suspect.
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