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Books with author Sharon Bell Mathis

  • Sidewalk Story

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Oct. 7, 1986)
    Council on Interracial Books for Children award winnerFrom the award-winning author of The Hundred Penny Box comes a sweet story about how one girl can make a difference. Lilly Etta didn't know the men, but she knew those yellow chairs. They were Tanya's, and they were being taken out of her building. Tanya was being put out - Tanya, her mother, her six brothers and sisters. Their things would be piled on the sidewalk and left there to be had for the taking. It didn't matter if nobody else in the city cared; Lilly Etta did. She knew what friendship was, and she wasn't going to let her friend be thrown out without a fight. “An affecting, sensitive story.”—Booklist
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  • Teacup Full of Roses

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Paperback (Puffin, April 7, 1987)
    Joe's decision to leave home is prompted by despair over his mother's blindness to his younger brother's talents and his older brother's drug addiction.
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  • Running Girl: The Diary of Ebonee Rose

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Oct. 1, 1997)
    A young girl writes in her diary about her concerns and hopes, along with thoughts of her heroes, in the two weeks before the All-City Track Meet, where she will be competing in four events.
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  • The Hundred Penny Box

    Sharon Bell Mathis, Leo Dillon, Diane Dillon

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Oct. 5, 2006)
    Michael loves his great-great-aunt Dew, even if she can't always remember his name. He especially loves to spend time with her and her beloved hundred penny box, listening to stories about each of the hundred years of her life. Michael's mother wants to throw out the battered old box that holds the pennies, but Michael understands that the box itself is as important to Aunt Dew as the memories it contains. Winner of a Newbery Honor, this beautiful story will be available in a collector's edition featuring heavy interior stock embossing and silver ink on the cover, and a thread-sewn binding for added durability. A timeless story of the relationship between a boy and his elderly relative, this new edition is one that families young and old will treasure for years to come.
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  • Teacup Full of Roses

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Hardcover (Viking Juvenile, June 6, 1972)
    Joe's decision to leave home is prompted by despair over his Mother's blindness to his younger brother's talents and his older brother's drug addiction.
  • The Hundred Penny Box

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Paperback (Puffin Books, March 15, 1783)
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  • Listen for the Fig Tree

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Feb. 1, 1990)
    A sixteen-year-old girl's first celebration of Kwanza gives her a sense of the past and strength to deal with her troubled mother and her own blindness
  • Ray Charles

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Hardcover (Crowell, Aug. 16, 1973)
    Book by Mathis, Sharon Bell
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  • Ray Charles

    Sharon Bell Mathis, George Ford

    Hardcover (Ty Crowell Co, Nov. 1, 1973)
    A biography of the Black musician who became famous despite his blindness.
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  • Ray Charles

    Sharon Mathis

    Hardcover (Lee & Low Books, May 10, 2001)
    Narrates the life of Ray Charles from his childhood, when he became blind and learned how to read and write music in Braille, to his extraordinary success as a jazz and blues musician.
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  • The hundred penny box

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1989)
    Michael's great-great-aunt Dew is a hundred years old. She keeps a box in her room filled with pennies - one for each year she has lived. Michael's mother wants to get rid of the old box. But Michael knows that if Aunt Dew loses that old box, it will be like losing a part of her life. He has to make his mother understand. A Newbery Honor Book.
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  • Listen for the Fig Tree

    Sharon Bell Mathis

    Hardcover (The Viking Press, March 15, 1974)
    A sixteen-year old black girl's first celebration of Kwanza gives her a sense of the past and strength to deal with her troubled mother and her own blindness.