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Books with author paula fox

  • The Slave Dancer

    Paula Fox

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, Jan. 1, 2010)
    One day, thirteen-year-old jessie Bollier is earning pennies playing his fife on the docks of New Orleans; the next, he is kidnapped and thrown aboard a slave ship, where his job is to provide music while shackled slaves "dance" to keep their muscles strong and their bodies profitable. As the endless voyage continues, Jessie grows increasingly sickened by the greed, brutality, and inhumanity of the slave trade, but nothing prepares him for the ultimate horror he will witness before his nightmare ends -- a horror that will change his life forever.
    Y
  • The Slave Dancer with Related Readings

    Paula Fox

    Hardcover (Glencoe, March 15, 2000)
    Book
  • The Village by the Sea

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Yearling, May 1, 1990)
    When Emma's father goes to the hospital for surgery, she is sent to stay with Aunt Bea the "terror" and kindly Uncle Crispin. Emma wonders how she will survive two weeks with the always hostile Aunt Bea.Luckily, Emma makes a friend, Bertie, and the two girls begin a project on the beach. Together they build tiny houses out of stones, shells, and all sorts of sea treasures. Here at the beach with Bertie, Emma finds comfort and friendship and takes pride in her carefully planned village.Then one day Emma and Bertie's village is destroyed...
    U
  • Desperate Characters by Paula Fox

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Flamingo, March 15, 1737)
    None
  • The Slave Dancer

    Paula Fox

    Mass Market Paperback (Laurel-Leaf Books, March 12, 1997)
    Jessie Bollier often played his fife to earn a few pennies down by the New Orleans docks. One afternoon a sailor asked him to pipe a tune, and that evening Jessie was kidnapped and dumped aboard The Moonlight, a slave ship, where a hateful duty awaited him. He was to play music so the slaves could "dance" to keep their muscles strong, their bodies profitable. Jessie was sickened by the thought of taking part in the business of trading rum and tobacco for blacks and then selling the ones who survived the frightful sea voyage from Africa. But to the men of the ship a "slave dancer" was necessary to ensure their share of the profit. They did not heed the horrors that every day grew more vivid, more inescapable to Jessie. Yet , even after four months of fear, calculated torture, and hazardous sailing with a degraded crew, Jessie was to face a final horror that would stay with him for the rest of his life.
    Y
  • Desperate Characters

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Harpercollins Pub Ltd, May 31, 2003)
    A Great American Novel -- from the author of 'Borrowed Finery'. Otto and Sophie Bentwood live childless in a renovated Brooklyn brownstone. The complete works of Goethe line their bookshelf, their stainless steel kitchen is newly installed, and their Mercedes is parked outside. After Sophie is bitten on the hand while trying to feed a half-starved neighbourhood cat, a series of small and ominous disasters begin to plague their lives, revealing the faultlines and fractures in a marriage -- and a society -- wrenching itself apart. Includes an introduction by Jonathan Franzen.
  • A Likely Place

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Aladdin, July 1, 2010)
    The author's first novel finds young Lewis considering running away when confronted with a plethora of adult advice, but his first taste of independence helps him feel useful. Simultaneous.
    X
  • The Slave Dancer

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Yearling, Dec. 2, 1990)
    Snatched from the docks of New Orleans, 13-year-old Jessie is thrown aboard a slave ship where he is sickened by the horrible practices of the slave business. But they are nothing compared to the one final horror that Jessie will witness. Can the cruelty be stopped before it’s too late?
    Y
  • The Stone-Faced Boy

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Front Street, Sept. 1, 2005)
    There he was, Gus Oliver, searching for a stray dog in a snowstorm at four o'clock in the morning. If it hadn't been for his sister, Serena, who could get Gus to do anything, he'd be at home and warm under the army blanket in the blue room...But which, Gus wondered, was worse? The lonely darkness and the howls of that unlikable dog, or the blue room itself, crowded with nightmares, where he was supposed to sleep until Great-Aunt Hattie's mysterious visit was over? And there he was, stuck in the middle of his large family, feeling locked behind a face that didn't smile and didn't frown, and hadn't for a long time before Serena and his great-aunt got him into this mess.
    P
  • One-Eyed Cat

    Paula Fox

    Hardcover (Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, Oct. 1, 1984)
    "Ned believes that, with a forbidden gun, he has shot out the eye of a wild cat, and his guilt poisons his life. An outstanding growing-up story for all ages about the painful secrets and the struggle to be good . . . This riveting story is spun with an eloquent simplicity that belies the skill of its telling . . . Adults and children alike will come effortlessly under the spell of this peerless storyteller . . ."--Booklist, starred review. Newbery Honor book; ALA Notable Children's Book; ALA Best Book for Young Adults; Booklist Editors' Choice; New York Times Book Review Oustanding Children's Book of the Year.
    S
  • A Place Apart

    Paula Fox

    Paperback (Farrar Straus Giroux, Aug. 16, 1993)
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  • A Place Apart

    Paula Fox

    Hardcover (Farrar Straus & Giroux, Oct. 1, 1980)
    Shortly after her father's death, Victoria and her mother move to a small village outside of Boston where she meets a wealthy teenage boy who teaches her a valuable but painful lesson about life.