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Books in Open door books series

  • Pirates on Dinosaur Island

    Mark Edwards

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, Jan. 30, 2012)
    Dr. Christopher Lemuel becomes a ship's doctor on a privateer to escape England, after shamefully killing a man in a matter of honor. He is wounded in a sea battle, captured by pirates, and reluctantly becomes a buccaneer. But matters become really strange and then turn deadly when he is marooned on an island populated by enormous beasts unknown in natural history.
  • The Possibility of Lions

    Marta Maretich

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, Sept. 15, 2011)
    Suddenly driven from their African home by a war in Biafra, the McCall family washes up in a small town in the San Joaquin Valley. The locals assume they must be glad to be back in the "civilized world." But life in America is lonely, desolate and dull, and the children and their fragile mother hope that one day they will return to the life they left behind. Their father, a hardened oil man, knows better: war has destroyed any home they may have had. As the truth begins to sink in, mother and children gravitate toward another refugee from war-torn Africa and his dream. Anatole imagines an African animal park on the dry plains surrounding their California town and offers hope that these two worlds can be brought together in one place.
  • Basketball

    Lucy Jane Bledsoe

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, April 20, 2012)
    BJ's mother is short.Mom is an abstract painter who runs an arty café. BJ, however, takes after her missing father. Just twenty-one, she’s a college basketball player who lives and breathes the game. High tops and hoops occupy her every waking moment. When she accidentally discovers her dad, a shadowy presence throughout her whole life, she suspects her best friends may actually be closer than she thinks—are they her sisters? Maybe there is more family she’s never met! BJ just wants to keep her mind on the game.
  • One Season in the Sun

    Joe Schuster

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, Aug. 24, 2012)
    These are the tales of one-season wonders. The history of baseball is filled with forgotten names—players who are good enough to reach the top of the sport but who, for any number of reasons, land at the edges of the game. Some spend a week or two in the major leagues and then disappear back into the minors. Many leave the sport for good. Still, for an afternoon, a week, or a couple of months, these men stood on the field alongside the best players in The Show. Here are gripping stories of their brief moments in the sun. Praise for Joe Schuster's The Might Have Been: "Surely destined to join the ranks of transcendent baseball novels." ?Richard RussoThe Gemma Open Door Series features storytelling by best-selling authors and important voices for new readers. A story doesn't have to be big to change ‎our world‎.‎ ‎
  • Time with Leo

    John Bliss

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, Feb. 7, 2013)
    A boy, just 15, through no effort of his own, travels back in time to the late 15th century, where he meets Leonardo da Vinci. Because the universe bends back on itself, time streams overlap, and he just happens to be in the right place at the right time. Or the wrong one. Da Vinci, in addition to being an artist, was an early futurist, who drew designs for the first airplane, helicopter, submarine, and on and on. Who better to design a time machine to get the boy home? Not a great student, our time-traveler is hooked on natural science as he gets to know Leonardo. Meanwhile, da Vinci is fascinated by the stuff in the backpack – what’s that bag of Funyuns?There's plenty of intrigue along the way. Leonardo da Vinci's patron is a Borgia who wants to keep someone from the future, with all his knowledge, deep in the past. Since time travel depends on being at the right place when the time streams intersect, the final scene reveals a breathless dash to the proper place with the Borgias in hot pursuit.Part of the Gemma Open Door Series, originally designed for new readers, these books confirm the truth that a story doesn't have to be big to change the world. Time with Leo is specifically created for young adult readers.
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  • Not just for Christmas

    Roddy Doyle

    Paperback (New Island Books, Jan. 1, 1999)
    large crease to front cover, general creasing to front and back cover
  • Peach

    Joanne Green

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, Oct. 1, 2012)
    Everyone has a prom story - the culmination of the vibrant and painful years of high school.Throw in the sexual revolution, a stuttering cousin for a date, and a parking valet dressed like Abraham Lincoln, and looking cool is an impossible dream. Edith, the fierce and vibrant narrator, tries to leave nuns snapping prom pictures and her painful past behind, and find a way to be both the free spirit her friends require and to be herself.
  • Old Money, New Money

    Peter Sheridan

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, March 1, 2009)
    The city is Dublin, the year is 1972. Redser and Pancho are two teenagers from the North Wall. Redser is top of the class, especially good at math. Pancho's knack is finding money, not adding or subtracting it. Redser's parents run the local credit union. Pancho's dad runs riot in the city pubs on pay day. The boys' worlds could not be further apart. Yet they are the best of friends. One day, on his regular paper round, Redser stumbles upon the aftermath of a crime. Two elderly sisters, 'the East Wall witches', have been burgled. But the robbers haven't taken all the money. Redser and Pancho are about to face the biggest challenge of their lives.
  • The Road Back: Living With a Physical Disability

    Harriet Sirof

    Library Binding (New Discovery, Oct. 1, 1993)
    An exploration of the physical and emotional obstacles that must be overcome by young people suddenly made disabled shares case histories that show how teens have met these critical life challenges to face the future with determination and hope.
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  • The Beauty Trap

    Elaine Landau

    Hardcover (New Discovery Books, April 1, 1994)
    A timely exploration of the inordinate power that the media and beauty and fashion industries have over young women's self-images punctures foolish myths and shows the health risks that some are driven to as they aspire to a false ideal.
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  • Psychic Sleuths: How Psychic Information Is Used to Help Solve Crimes

    Anita Larsen

    Library Binding (New Discovery, Aug. 1, 1994)
    Looks at criminal cases in which psychics seemed to provide clues that led to solutions, and explains how psychics work with police departments
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  • Driving with Daisy

    Tom Nestor

    Paperback (Gemma Open Door, July 1, 2009)
    A funny, moving and wistful story of a rural Ireland long since passed.1940's rural Ireland. Every week, young Tom is sent on an errand to the nearby town on foot. An imaginative boy, he convinces himself hes a cowboy and his journey is a foray into the Wild West. On his adventures, he meets a host of weird and wonderful characters, from Ned Wall, the farmer with half a face, to dear Miss Daisy, with her pony and elegant trap - a perfect lady. But times are changing fast, and the old ways are dying out.