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Books with title The Witch Doll

  • The Dead Witch

    R.M. Callahan, M.R. Callahan

    Paperback (Flock Hall Publishing, LLC, Sept. 11, 2019)
    Can this cat save Kingsport—twice?Pumpkin Spice--Maine Coon cat and part-time familiar--refuses to let her witch die. But Morwen’s birth spell has gone seriously wrong, and now Spice has hours--perhaps less--to break the enchantment before it kills both mother and child.Which is the perfect time for Spice to learn a terrible secret:The Dark Yule is far from finished with her.On that dreadful night, Spice accidentally let someone escape. Someone whose very presence has awakened another creature.A creature long-hidden and forgotten, in a realm neither here nor there, but desperately clawing its way towards our world...If Spice faces down the monster, she’ll lose her witch. If she saves Morwen, the beast will break free—and they’ll lose all of Kingsport.It sounds like a no-win proposition, but that’s never been Spice’s style. She’ll get it done, even if it sends her to the underworld.Or—far more frightening—to the hellish caverns far below Kingsport...You’ll love this book because everyone loves a race against time, especially when the sprinter is a cat. Get it now. Readers love it!*"Very imaginative and a great setup for the next book. More please!" -- Eric, Goodreads.com"The second book in the series continues the harrowing adventures of Pumpkin Spice and her friends as she tries to save her human, Morwen, in a place that has magic, dreamworlds, and ghouls. Another wonderful book!" -- Nancy, Goodreads.com*Readers who don’t love it may be consumed by things unseen. You were warned.Want more Pumpkin Spice? (Not the latte...the cat). Follow R.M. Callahan’s Amazon author page for updates.
  • The Dutch Doll

    Kathy King Allen

    Paperback (Tate Publishing, )
    None
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  • The witch

    Mary Johnston

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 20, 2017)
    Mary Johnston (1870-1936) was an American novelist and women's rights advocate. Johnston wrote historical books and novels that often combined romance with history. Her first book Prisoners of Hope (1898) dealt with colonial times in Virginia as did her second novel To Have and to Hold (1900) and 1904's Sir Mortimer. The Goddess of Reason (1907) uses the theme of the French Revolution and in Lewis Rand (1908), the author portrayed political life at the dawn of the 19th century. To Have and to Hold was serialised in The Atlantic Monthly in 1899 and published in 1900 by Houghton Mifflin. The book proved enormously popular and according to the New York Times was the bestselling novel in the United States in 1900. Johnston's next work titled Audrey was the 5th bestselling book in the U. S. in 1902, as was Sir Mortimer in 1904. Beyond her native America, Johnston's novels were also very popular in Canada and in England. Her other works include The Long Roll (1911), Cease Firing (1912), Hagar (1913), The Witch (1914), The Wanderers (1917), and Foes (1918).
  • The witch in the ditch

    Craig A Richardson

    language (, Feb. 8, 2016)
    There once was a witch who lived in a ditch. But while you may know that witches are scary, this one does act more like a fairy. She's not gruesome or mean or rather vile, she'll make you quite happy and end with a smile.A little girls falls into the ditch and the kindly witch helps her out, cleans her up and even gives her a lift home on her broomstick. Written in charming rhyme with colourful pictures to amuse and entertain.
  • The Doll

    Cora Taylor

    Paperback (Douglas & McIntyre, July 15, 1992)
    When Meg is sent away to recover from an illness, her Grandmother gives her what has become known as the Invalid Doll. But there is more to the doll than meets the eye...The Invalid Doll, Jessie, came over the Canadian prairies with Meg's great-great-grandmother more than a hundred years ago, and is a special family heirloom. But what is it about the doll that makes her grandmother's cat hiss and run from the room? When Meg falls asleep holding the doll she wakes up in another time, where she is a girl called Morag, travelling across the Canadian prairie in a covered wagon. Meg's real life becomes more miserable as she senses her parents breaking up, and she uses the doll as a means of escape to Morag's happy family and a life full of adventure. But Meg's dream gradually becomes a nightmare. Will she be trapped forever in the past?
  • The Devil Witch

    B. R. Snyder

    eBook (Byron Snyder Productions, Feb. 26, 2014)
    The Devil Witch is the first chronicle from B. R. Snyder's Tales from the Kingdom of Imm series. His Imm tales are known for their Imagination and Mischievous Magic. They combine fantasy, fairytales along with the human spirit that pits good against evil which eventually leads to a happy ending. Yet things never seem to be what they always start out to be, especially in the Kingdom of Imm.
  • The Devil Witch

    Byron Snyder

    eBook (Byron Snyder Books, Feb. 18, 2011)
    The Devil Witch is the first chronicle from B. R. Snyder’s Tales from the Kingdom of Imm series. His Imm tales are known for their Imagination and Mischievous Magic. They combine fantasy, fairytales along with the human spirit that pits good against evil which eventually leads to a happy ending. Yet things never seem to be what they always start out to be, especially in the Kingdom of Imm.For Sam Taylor living along the mighty Mississippi River is fun and exciting. Yet there are times when attending school became a dreadful chore. Miss Crabtree, the town's schoolmistress, rules her students with tough and strict discipline, using her walking stick to hand out a brutal form of fairness. After an incident that pits Sam against the town bully, Miss Crabtree goes a little too far with her justice, which convinces Sam to attempt the heist of her infamous walking stick. Sam is convinced that stealing her staff would cripple her from using it against the children ever again. But when Sam’s quest goes tragically wrong, he is thrown into a wondrous and magical adventure that will forever change him. Now Sam finds himself caught in a battle that pitted evil against good and he must overcome the challenges to learn the real truth and return the magic walking stick to its rightful owner.
  • The Wise Doll

    Ruth Brown

    Hardcover (Andersen Press, Oct. 23, 1997)
    None
  • The Witch

    Mary Johnston

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin Co., Jan. 1, 1914)
    "A novel of love and the supernatural"
  • The Wise Doll

    Hiawyn Oram, Ruth Brown

    Paperback (Red Fox, Feb. 3, 2000)
    Too Nice is sent by her sisters Horrid and Very Horrid to fetch them one of witch Baba Yaga's jewelled toads. But nothing is for nothing, and Baba Yaga sets her a number of seemingly impossible tasks - if she fails, she's done for. But deep in her pocket is a wise doll.
  • The Bell Witch

    Sharon Sigmond Shebar

    Hardcover (Julian Messner, March 1, 1983)
    Traces the history of "Old Kate," the ghost or evil spirit that haunted the Bell family of Tennessee between 1817 and 1820.
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  • The Witch Switch

    Anne Harler

    Paperback (Willowisp Pr, June 1, 1987)
    Wendy closed her eyes and said the magic words. "Magic power come my way. Make me someone else today." Then it began to happen!