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Books published by publisher Filter Pr Llc

  • Katharine Lee Bates: Author of “America the Beautiful”

    Monique Cooper-Sload

    Paperback (Filter Press, LLC, Oct. 1, 2013)
    Katharine Lee Bates visited Colorado only once, but that was enough. She took home to Massachusetts a memory that led her to write, “America the Beautiful.” The poem, inspired by a trip to the top of Pikes Peak in 1893, was wildly popular and became a cultural fixture once it was set to the music of Samuel Ward. Katharine taught literature at Wellesley College for forty years.Great Lives in Colorado History biographies bring the stories of notable Coloradans to elementary grade readers. Each book in the series is bilingual, containing full text in both English and Spanish.Ages 8 to 10 Bilingual in English and Spanish 78 pages (English 38/Spanish 40) Trim: 5" by 8" Publication Date: 2013
  • John Denver: Man for the World

    John Stansfield

    Paperback (Filter Press LLC, July 15, 2008)
    John Denver was one of the most popular performing artists of the 1970's. He released more than three hundred songs, composing about half of them himself. Denver hosted a television series and performed in movies. He was named 'Poet Laureate of Colorado' in 1977 and his song Rocky Mountain High was named as a state song for Colorado in March 2007. John Denver is remembered also for his social activism and commitment humanitarian projects. This the tenth book in the Now You Know Bio series from Filter Press.
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  • The Capitol Ghost Mystery

    Michelle M. Barone, Tara McMillen

    Paperback (Filter Press, LLC, Oct. 15, 2014)
    The portrait of Abraham Lincoln has been stolen from the Colorado State Capitol for the second time, and Silvie Blake is on the hunt for clues during her class field trip. Silvie is soon caught in a puzzling web woven around history, ghosts and her own family. As she solves one mystery after another she finds keys that unlock her past, an unexpected friendship, and a belief in herself that will change her life forever. This is a new edition of Michelle Barone’s 2008 novel, which was a 2013 selection for the Youth One Book, One Denver program.
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  • Strike! Mother Jones and the Colorado Coal Field War

    Lois Ruby

    eBook (Filter Press, LLC, Sept. 8, 2012)
    When the bloodiest labor dispute in U.S. history burst forth in 1913-14 in the coal fields of Southern Colorado, the miners knew whom to praise, and the owners knew whom to blame. Mary Harris Jones, known from New York to Colorado as Mother Jones, could incite a riot or calm a crowd with her amazing oratory gifts. She dedicated her life to helping miners organize to negotiate, even demand, better wages and working conditions.“I hope there is no war in Trinidad,” Mother Jones had said, referring to the entire Trinidad coal field expanse, “for it will cause suffering. But if the war has to be made that the boys in the mines may have their rights let it come!” In the long run, did she help or harm the progress toward workers’ rights? Were the deaths of mothers and children at Ludlow too great a price to pay?“It is extremely important that readers of all ages know what happened at Ludlow, and the role played by that spectacular rabble-rouser, Mother Jones. Lois Ruby has told this gripping story with just the right balance of fact and dramatic power. The eyes of the nation were on southern Colorado in 1914, when much that has made America what it is—the lives of immigrants, the conflict between corporate power and organized labor—lay in the balance. This story will speak to our time as provocatively as it spoke a century ago, and this book will engage and inform anyone who gives it attention.”—David Mason, Colorado Poet Laureate
  • The Glorious Quest of Chief Washakie by Ralph H. Tillman

    Ralph H. Tillman;Mary Tillman

    Paperback (Filter Pr Llc, March 15, 1680)
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  • Little Fox's Secret -- The Mystery of Bent's Fort

    Mary Peace Finley

    Library Binding (Filter Pr Llc, April 1, 1999)
    After a Cheyenne elder has a vision of Bent's Fort destroyed by eleven-year-old Little Fox, the boy is left to complete the seemingly impossible task
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  • White Grizzly

    Mary Peace Finley

    Hardcover (Filter Pr Llc, Oct. 1, 2000)
    In 1845, when he leaves the Cheyenne village where he has been living and sets out from Bent's Fort along the Sante Fe Trail in search of his white grandfather, Julio faces danger from renegade Texans, the Pawnee Indians, and a grizzly bear, before finding where he truly belongs.In 1845, when he leaves the Cheyenne village where he has been living and sets out from Bent's Fort along the Sante Fe Trail in search of his white grandfather, Julio faces danger from renegade Texans, the Pawnee Indians, and a grizzly bear, before finding where he truly belongs.
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  • Nancy Love: WASP Pilot

    Sarah Byrn Rickman

    eBook (Filter Press, LLC, April 21, 2020)
    Nancy Harkness Love (1914-1976) earned her pilot’s license at age 16 and worked as a test pilot and air racer in the 1930s. During World War II she convinced General William Tunner to set up a group of female pilots to ferry aircraft from factories to air bases. Her proposal was approved as the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (WAFS). Nancy commanded this unit and later all ferrying operations in the newly formed Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). She was awarded the Air Medal and was appointed lieutenant colonel in the US Air Force Reserve in 1948.“Sarah has a gift for telling compelling stories about the WASP, the women pilots of World War II. Young readers will enthusiastically absorb her love for and fascination for this area of U.S. history.”—Erin MillerAuthor of Final Flight Final Fight, chronicling the fight to have her WASP grandmother buried at Arlington Cemetery“In Nancy Love: WASP Pilot, author/historian Sarah Byrn Rickman records Love’s unique contributions on behalf of women pilots in World War II and how her efforts paved the way for today’s women pilots.”—Iris Cummings CritchellWASP ferry pilot, WWII
  • Nancy Love: WASP Pilot

    Sarah Byrn Rickman

    Paperback (Filter Press, LLC, May 15, 2019)
    Nancy Harkness Love (1914-1976) earned her pilot’s license at age 16 and worked as a test pilot and air racer in the 1930s. During World War II she convinced General William Tunner to set up a group of female pilots to ferry aircraft from factories to air bases. Her proposal was approved as the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (WAFS). Nancy commanded this unit and later all ferrying operations in the newly formed Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). She was awarded the Air Medal and was appointed lieutenant colonel in the US Air Force Reserve in 1948.“Sarah has a gift for telling compelling stories about the WASP, the women pilots of World War II. Young readers will enthusiastically absorb her love for and fascination for this area of U.S. history.”—Erin MillerAuthor of Final Flight Final Fight, chronicling the fight to have her WASP grandmother buried at Arlington Cemetery“In Nancy Love: WASP Pilot, author/historian Sarah Byrn Rickman records Love’s unique contributions on behalf of women pilots in World War II and how her efforts paved the way for today’s women pilots.”—Iris Cummings CritchellWASP ferry pilot, WWII
  • Ghost Over Boulder Creek

    Elaine Pease

    eBook (Filter Press, LLC, June 16, 2011)
    In this exciting historical novel for ages 9 through 12, the main character, ‘Run Through Fire,’ a half-white Cheyenne boy, is captured in the aftermath of the Battle of the Washita. He escapes and sets out to find his white father in the city of Boulder in the Colorado Territory. Along the way he meets General Custer, Buffalo Bill, and a brave and funny friend—a girl he calls “Orange Head.” In Boulder, he uncovers a secret the town thought was buried. “Elaine Pease has written an excellent novel full of ghostly spirits of the past, filled with mystery and Cheyenne trails.” – Gordon Yellowman, Cheyenne Tribesman “While readers will pick up this book to read the ghost story, for parents, the enticing aspect is that it is, in essence, a history lesson cleverly disguised as a wonderful adventure story. The author introduces many historical figures, from General Custer to Chief Black Kettle, along with actual events such as the Washita River Massacre that happened during the time of Billy’s travels.” – Feathered Quill Book Reviews
  • Lights On! Ike Hoover Electrifies the White House

    Cynthia Simmelink Becker, Benjamin Hummel

    Hardcover (Filter Press, LLC, Oct. 1, 2017)
    In 1891, nineteen-year-old Irwin “Ike” Hoover was sent by the Edison Electric Company to assist in the wiring of the White House for electric lights. Like many Americans at the time, President Benjamin Harrison and his wife were extremely afraid of electricity. In fact, the Harrisons were so afraid they didn’t want to turn the lights on and off. After completing the wiring job, Ike was asked to stick around to make the transition to electric lights easier. He stayed, and held jobs in White House for forty-two years.
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  • Hard Face Moon

    Nancy Oswald

    eBook (Filter Press, LLC, March 27, 2013)
    Hides Inside is thirteen winters—old enough to yearn to be a warrior. His brother, Standing Tall, has given him the first lesson, “A Cheyenne does not fight his own people.” Not even when other boys taunt him because he cannot speak.On a dim night during the season of the hard face moon, Hides Inside witnesses the unprovoked attack on the Cheyenne that came to be known as the Sand Creek Massacre. His determination to join a warrior society is hardened, but will he follow Standing Tall in the ways of peace?