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Books with author Susan Richards SHREVE

  • Blister

    Susan Richards Shreve

    Library Binding
    None
  • The gift of the girl who couldn't hear

    Susan Richards Shreve

    Unknown Binding (Silver Burdett Ginn, March 15, 1995)
    None
  • The Flunking of Joshua T. Bates

    Susan Richards Shreve

    Library Binding (Demco Media, June 1, 1995)
    Driving home from the beach on Labor Day, Joshua receives some shocking news from his mother: he must repeat third grade.
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  • The Gift of the Girl Who Couldn't Hear

    Susan Richards Shreve

    Library Binding (Demco Media, Sept. 1, 1993)
    Two friends, one of whom is deaf, help each other when tryouts are held for a seventh-grade production of "Annie."
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  • Joshua T. Bates Takes Charge:

    Susan Shreve

    eBook (Yearling, March 30, 2011)
    Tommy Wilhelm and his gang of bullies have never let fifth-grader Joshua forget that he was held back in the third grade. Now Tommy has started picking on a dorky new kid and Joshua must choose between sticking up for the nerd and saving his own neck.
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  • The Gift of the Girl Who Couldn't Hear

    Susan R. Shreve

    Paperback (HarperCollins, Sept. 21, 1993)
    "The frenzied anticipation and anxiety of a junior high audition for Annie provide the background for this lively and intelligent story. Eliza, a talented singer, is terrified to sign up for auditions although she has dreamed about starring in the musical since the third grade. But she's been friends with Lucy--who has been deaf since birth--even longer, and is amazed when her friend decides to try out. Eliza swallows her fear, however, and promises to attend the audition....The girls' characters are skillfully contrasted, and their tale is chronicled with a fresh, exuberant and up-beat style that moves the book along to its gratifying conclusion."--Publishers Weekly. "A rare book."--Booklist.
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  • Under the Watsons' Porch

    Susan Shreve

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, July 13, 2004)
    Twelve-year-old Ellie Tremont is b-o-r-e-d, bored, and she wishes something, anything, would happen. So when 14-year-old Tommy Bowers moves in next door, with his lanky swagger and his troubled past, Ellie knows her summer is about to get interesting. When Tommy suggests they start a camp for the kids on their street under their elderly neighbors’(the Watsons’) porch, Ellie quickly agrees to that, and everything else Tommy suggests. And when Tommy gives her a diamond necklace that he says he bought, she’s suspicious, though smitten. But by the time her parents forbid her from seeing him, she’s given him her heart. Soon, though, Tommy goes too far and even Ellie isn’t sure what to make of him.
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  • The Search for Baby Ruby

    Susan Shreve

    language (Arthur A. Levine Books, May 26, 2015)
    The search for a missing baby drives this heart-pounding page turner, from Edgar Award Winner Susan Shreve (LUCY FOREVER AND MISS ROSETREE, SHRINKS).It was just a few minutes. Stuck in a hotel room babysitting while the rest of her family celebrated downstairs in the hotel, Jess thought she'd try on her sister's wedding dress in the large bathroom while the baby slept. But when Jess opens the door again the baby is gone. Fighting guilt and terror, Jess and her kleptomaniac sister Teddy evade the swirl of police and hotel staff in their own desperate effort to get Baby Ruby back before it's too late.
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  • The Lovely Shoes

    Susan Shreve

    eBook (Arthur A. Levine Books, Sept. 1, 2011)
    Can the right pair of shoes make *anyone* feel beautiful?Franny is constantly embarrassed by two things in her life. One is her right foot, which curls in from a birth defect, so she has to wear ugly, heavy orthopedic shoes. And the other is her mother Margaret: beautiful, extravagant, flamboyant -- *mortifying*, in their small Ohio town. Franny's first school dance is a disaster, so Margaret announces her latest crazy plan: They will travel to Italy to meet Salvatore Ferragamo, who will sculpt a pair of slippers especially for Franny. The idea is outrageous. The trip is expensive. And the experience changes Franny's life forever.
  • Trout and Me

    Susan Shreve

    Paperback (Yearling, July 13, 2004)
    When a new troublemaker, Trout, arrives at school, Ben is soon diagnosed with ADD–just like Trout.Ever since first grade, Ben’s been in trouble, even though he’s really not a bad kid. He just can’t seem to stop doing things that get him sent to the principal’s office. His parents and wise older sister, Meg, swear he’ll be fine in his own time, but when a new kid shows up in Ben’s fifth-grade class, he’s not so sure. Trout sticks to him like glue, and it’s clear from the start that Trout is a much bigger troublemaker than Ben ever was. So when Ben gets diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD), just like Trout, and then has to take Ritalin, just like Trout, he’s not sure what to make of his friendship–especially when he starts to get a bad reputation. Is Trout’s badness rubbing off on him? Can Ben make people understand it’s the ADD, not Trout, causing the problems before it’s too late?From the Hardcover edition.
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  • The Search for Baby Ruby

    Susan Shreve

    Hardcover (Arthur A. Levine Books, May 26, 2015)
    It was just a few minutes. Stuck in a hotel room babysitting while the rest of her family celebrated downstairs in the hotel, Jess thought she'd try on her sister's wedding dress in the large bathroom while the baby slept. But when Jess opens the door again the baby is gone. Fighting guilt and terror, Jess and her kleptomaniac sister Teddy evade the swirl of police and hotel staff in their own desperate effort to get Baby Ruby back before it's too late.
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  • Epics of Everyday Life: Encounters in a Changing Russia

    Susan Richards

    Hardcover (Viking Adult, May 1, 1991)
    Susan Richards, a Russian scholar, has travelled to Russia and talked to ordinary Russian people about their lives and how they perceive the changes which have been made under Gorbachev's rule - if, indeed, anything has changed. She explores the Soviet people through the prism of perestroika, to see how they and their country are coming to terms with the past and how they are beginning to conceive a different future for themselves.