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Books with author Susan Beth Pfeffer

  • Beth's Story

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Scholastic Inc, Jan. 1, 1997)
    Painfully shy Beth March is excited to be visiting New York City with her parents. The theater, opera, symphony, museums--Beth loves every minute of her adventure. She even meets Abraham Lincoln, and has the courage to tell him that women deserve the right to vote.But once she's back home in Massachusetts, none of Beth's schoolmates believe that she really spoke to Mr. Lincoln or that she even met him. They know Beth is shy--too shy to speak to a man running for President of the United States. Even Beth's younger sister, Amy, thinks she's lying. Now Beth wishes she'd never been to New York...until she's surprised by an unexpected visitor.
  • CLAIRE AT SIXTEEN

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, March 1, 1989)
    To annoy her older sister Thea, satisfy her own ego, and raise much-needed funds for her sick younger sister, sixteen-year-old Claire, a past master at deceit and manipulation, uses a boy in love with Thea to delve into ugly secrets in the past.
  • Meg Makes a Friend

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, March 9, 1998)
    Romantic Meg March is thrilled when she's asked to sing at Lily Prescott's wedding. She practices with extra care because she loves the bride and wants the celebration to be beautiful. But as soon as Meg meets the groom's much younger sister, Julia Thorpe, the two girls clash. Meg can't believe that Julia dislikes Lily and is angry when Julia changes the wedding song seconds before the ceremony. What's worse, when the wedding couple takes off on their honeymoon, Julia comes to stay at the Marches! Meg watches as Julia charms all of her sisters--as she seems to take Meg's place in their hearts. It's time for a showdown that will make Meg and Julia enemies for life, or turn enemies into special friends.
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  • The Year Without Michael

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, Nov. 11, 2003)
    Bad things aren’t supposed to happen to good people. But somewhere between home and the softball field, 16-year-old Jody Chapman’s younger brother disappeared, and now the family is falling apart. Her parents hardly speak to each other, her younger sister is angry and bitter, and Jody’s friends, always so important to her, are slowly slipping away. It seems that all anyone can do is wait. Wait—for Michael to walk in the door. Wait—to stop missing him. Wait—to stop waiting. When a private detective can’t uncover a single clue about Michael’s disappearance, Jody’s urgent need to find him drives her to make a last desperate attempt to hold her family together.
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  • Beth Makes a Friend

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, March 9, 1998)
    Beth March would do just about anything to help someone in need. She's kind-hearted, loyal, and caring. So when she catches Sean O'Neill stealing apples from Aunt March's garden, Beth listens to the hungry boy's sad story. She's moved to hear that Sean's widowed mother and younger siblings are immigrants from poverty-stricken Ireland. But times are hard in Massachusetts too. Sean's mother has been ill and out of work, and with sisters and brothers to care for, Sean has had to scrape up food for them any way he can. Promising to help, Beth gives him whatever food and old clothes her family can spare. It's not enough. Beth's big plan: stealing from wealthy Aunt March. But Sean's own thieving forces Beth to question what being a true friend really means--and together they discover generosity in someone who seems the most cold-hearted.
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  • Beth's Story: Portraits of Little Women

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Paperback (Yearling, Aug. 14, 2001)
    Painfully shy Beth March is excited to be visiting New York City with her parents. The theater, opera, symphony, museums–Beth loves every minute of her adventure. She even meets Abraham Lincoln, and has the courage to tell him that women deserve the right to vote. But once she’s back in Massachusetts, none of Beth’s schoolmates believe that she really spoke to Mr. Lincoln or that she even met him. They know Beth is shy–too shy to speak to a man running for president of the United States. Even Beth’s younger sister, Amy, thinks Beth is lying. Now Beth wishes she’d never been to New York . . . until she’s surprised by an unexpected visitor.
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  • A Gift for Beth

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, April 13, 1999)
    When her wish for new sheet music is granted anonymously, pianist Beth March learns that the gift of giving is not limited to those with just monetary wealth.
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  • A Gift for Jo

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, April 13, 1999)
    Anger threatens to divide the March family when Jo's beautiful gift journal, in which she collects her most secret and personal thoughts, is read by her sisters.
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  • A Gift for Meg

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, June 8, 1999)
    After being presented with a beautiful bolt of Belgian lace by her Aunt March to be used for her wedding day in the future, Meg treasures it and stores it away, yet Jo's desire to have it becomes a problem that leads to a bitter feud between the sisters.
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  • A Gift for Amy

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, June 8, 1999)
    Worried that her family's financial status may hinder her goal to marry into money, Amy pursues the interest of a wealthy young boy to enhance her social position, yet when he buys her an expensive gift, Amy must make her true feelings known.
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  • The Shade of the Moon

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Hardcover (Harcourt Brace, Aug. 16, 2013)
    Title: The Shade of the Moon <>Binding: Hardcover <>Author: SusanBethPfeffer <>Publisher: HarcourtBraceandCompany
  • Nobody's Daughter

    Susan Beth Pfeffer

    Paperback (Yearling, March 1, 1996)
    Believing her life is over when the last member of her family dies and she is sent to an orphanage, eleven-year-old Emily finds hope in the town librarian, who shows her that courage and honesty matter as much as blood ties. Reprint.
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