Browse all books

Books with author Sally Warner

  • Sisters in Spirit

    Sally Wagner

    Paperback (Native Voices, Jan. 1, 2001)
    Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Influence on Early American Feminists. Recounts, with documentation, the influence of the Iroquois model of freedom on women's early struggle for freedom and equality in the United States. The revolutionary changes unleashed by the Iroquois-to-feminist relationship continue to shape our lives today. This book is used in many women's studies courses at colleges and universities around the country.
  • Not-So-Weird Emma

    Sally Warner

    Paperback (Puffin Books, May 10, 2007)
    emma Mcgraw is slowly making friends at her new school. but when Cynthia calls her weird, emma is shocked. they are supposed to be best friends! in response, emma decides that Cynthia’s new name should be bossy pants, and she tells everyone in the class. Now the entire third grade is trading nicknames. And while it starts out being funny, emma begins to see the downside of name-calling. but just when she decides it’s time for apologies, her teacher makes the most dreaded call of all—the one to everyone’s parents.
    O
  • Sort of Forever

    Sally Warner

    Paperback (Knopf Books for Young Readers, July 20, 1999)
    Sally Warner breaks new ground with a powerful story about the toughest test of friendship. For as long as Cady Winton can remember, she and Nana Weber have done everything together, from cutting each other's hair to daring themselves to ride the scariest roller coaster at Magic Mountain. And both had been looking forward to starting middle school together in the fall. But just when Cady and Nana were anticipating being teenagers, their plans spin away from them. At the age of twelve, Nana is diagnosed with bone cancer, and suddenly the present is so much more important than the future. With refreshing honesty, Sally Warner helps brush aside the mysticism of dying and replaces it with the courage of friendship. Comforting and profoundly moving, Sort of Forever is, by turns, a sincere, funny, painful, and uplifting view of dying, as well as a celebration of life.
    W
  • Not-So-Weird Emma

    Sally Warner

    eBook (Puffin Books, May 10, 2007)
    emma Mcgraw is slowly making friends at her new school. but when Cynthia calls her weird, emma is shocked. they are supposed to be best friends! in response, emma decides that Cynthia’s new name should be bossy pants, and she tells everyone in the class. Now the entire third grade is trading nicknames. And while it starts out being funny, emma begins to see the downside of name-calling. but just when she decides it’s time for apologies, her teacher makes the most dreaded call of all—the one to everyone’s parents.
    O
  • Twilight Child

    Sally Warner

    Hardcover (Viking Juvenile, June 1, 2006)
    Taken from eighteenth-century Finland by her father, teenager Eleni eventually finds a home in Scotland, receiving help along the way from brounies, fairies, and other creatures she has the ability to see and talk with.
    U
  • Dog Years

    Sally Warner

    Paperback (Knopf Books for Young Readers, June 17, 1997)
    Sally Warner's comic debut novel about the trials and tribulations of middle-school life comes to Knopf Paperbacks.
    R
  • Dog Years

    Sally Warner

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, March 7, 1995)
    Sally Warner's comic debut novel about the trials and tribulations of middle-school life comes to Knopf Paperbacks. From the Trade Paperback edition.
    R
  • It's Only Temporary

    Sally Warner

    language (Viking Books for Young Readers, June 12, 2008)
    A novel in words and sketches. ?It?s only temporary,? twelve-year-old Skye McPhee writes in her sketchbook after being shipped off to her gran?s in Sierre Madre, California. After all, her parents have their hands full taking care of her older brother, who?s been severely injured in a car accident. So now Skye is in a new school sketching new kids and trying to stay invisible until she can return home. But her new life starts turning out better than she hoped; she?s making cool friends, and being away from her brother is actually drawing her closer to him. And then her sketchbook disappears and everything changes. Suddenly, Skye realizes that she doesn?t want her life in Sierra Madre to be temporary after all. But does she have a choice?
  • Ellray Is Not a Chicken!

    Sally Warner

    Paperback (Schlastic, Jan. 1, 2011)
    SCHOLASTIC - 16 SHORT STORIES.
  • How to Be a Real Person

    Sally Warner

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Feb. 13, 2001)
    From the author of Sort of Forever, a powerful portrayal of a girl's determined fight to save both her mother and herself from her mother's increasing depression. Twelve-year-old Kara Biggs is a list-maker: how to get up and go to school, how to get out of doing an oral book report, how to avoid having a teacher-parent conference. And how to be a real person--especially when part of her life doesn't feel all that real anymore. Through the course of one day, Kara's life gradually reveals itself: her father has moved a few hours away for a job, and Kara is left at home with a mother who is spending more and more time in bed and less time taking care of herself or of Kara. But no one knows just how sick her mother has become, not her father, her teacher, or her best friend, and Kara is determined to keep it that way. She can take care of her mother herself, and be as real a person as she can--until her two desires collide in a painful yet hopeful finale.
    W
  • Sweet & Sour Lily

    Sally Warner

    Paperback (SCHOLASTIC INC. @, March 15, 1998)
    None
  • Leftover Lily

    Sally Warner

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, July 20, 1999)
    Six-year-old Lily Hill is a medium sort of kid. She's medium smart, medium artistic, and has the medium number of best friends, which is two. Or it was two until she pushed her friend Daisy on the playground. It was an accident! Now Daisy won't play with her and neither will her other best friend, LaVon, since bossy Daisy won't let her. Lily is the left-over friend. But there's no time to feel sorry for herself. Lily's decided that it's time for her to be the bossy one. In this humorous and thought-provoking elementary school chapter book, Lily learns that being "the boss" in a new friendship isn't all it's cracked up to be. There are better ways of making and regaining friends.From the Hardcover Library Binding edition.
    U