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Books with author peggy woodford

  • Mozart

    Peggy Woodford

    Paperback (Omnibus Press, Dec. 31, 1990)
    This series of biographies of great composers presents the subjects against the social background of their times. This volume on Mozart draws on personal letters and recollections, engravings, paintings and - where they exist - photographs, to build up a complete picture of the composer's life.
  • Please Don't Go

    Peggy Woodford

    eBook (Zenobia Press, Nov. 9, 2011)
    On her very first day in Brittany, fifteen year-old Mary finds herself swept into French sea-side life. She falls for a handsome man, she meets a boy who'll change her life, and she hears a haunting song she will never forget - Ne me Quitte Pas - Please don't leave me.A beach romance for teenage girls - a story to break your heart.This ebook edition contains a new afterword by the author.
  • Backwater War

    Peggy Woodford

    eBook (Zenobia Press, Nov. 9, 2011)
    A story for teenagers about the impact of the Second World War on the people of the British Channel Islands.The Channel Islands were the only part of Britain that Hitler's army managed to win and occupy, and the islanders were cut off for the whole war. They ran out of food and clothing, their houses were taken for enemy troops, their radios were confiscated, they lost their freedom. But the Germans couldn't take away their courage, and seventeen year-old Anna and her friends plot the ultimate act of resistance against the enemy-escape...This ebook edition contains a new afterword by the author.
  • See You Tomorrow

    Peggy Woodford

    eBook (Zenobia Press, Nov. 9, 2011)
    The Parrish family manage to put up a good façade for the outside world, but inside their front door there’s plenty of tension going on caused by teenager Julia’s obsessive and difficult father. Julia wishes her family could be like their new neighbours, the talented, extrovert, easygoing Croxleys, and escapes to the Croxley house whenever she can.Then disaster strikes the Parrishes, and as the family tries to pull itself together again, Julia makes a surprising new friend in Charlie, and through him learns that even the super-successful Croxleys have their faults and troubles.This ebook edition contains a new afterword by the author.
  • Please Don't Go

    Peggy Woodford

    Paperback (Random House Children's Books (A Division of Random House Group), July 20, 1990)
    A reissue from the author of "Monster in Our Midst", this book is set in France and is about Mary who, on her first visit there, falls in love.
  • Mozart: His Life and Times

    Peggy Woodford

    Hardcover (Paganiniana Publications, Neptune City, New Jersey, U.S.A., March 15, 1981)
    Mozart: His Life and Times by Peggy Woodford was first published in 1977 by Midas Books. This is the expanded edition by Paganiniana Publications, © 1981. A considerable amount of new material has been added to the original text, including but not limited to illustrations and their captions... [from copyright page].
  • Backwater war

    Peggy Woodford

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus, Giroux, Aug. 16, 1975)
    Portrays the disruption in the life of a family when the Germans occupy the Channel Island of Guernsey during World War II.
  • Please Don't Go

    Peggy Woodford

    (Back To Front, Jan. 1, 2007)
    On her very first day in Brittany, fifteen year-old Mary finds herself swept into French sea-side life. She falls for a handsome man, she meets a boy who'll change her life, and she hears a haunting song she will never forget - Ne me Quitte Pas - Please don't leave me. A beach romance for teenage girls - a story to break your heart.
  • Misfits: An anthology of short stories

    Peggy Woodford

    Paperback (Bodley Head, Jan. 1, 1984)
    None
  • The Real Thing - Seven Stories Of Love

    Peggy Woodford

    Paperback (Puffin, Aug. 1, 1979)
    None
  • Please Don't Go

    Peggy Woodford

    Mass Market Paperback (Avon, March 1, 1975)
    None
  • Please Don't Go

    Peggy Woodford

    Library Binding (Dutton Childrens Books, March 1, 1973)
    Fifteen-year-old Mary Meredith leaves her London home to spend two summers in a French coastal village