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Books with title The End of the World and Beyond

  • The Wood Beyond the World

    William Morris

    Hardcover (Wildside Press, April 20, 2005)
    "In The Wood Beyond the World, a sea voyage separates the more fantastic realms from the hero Walter's mundane home town, though the land of the Wood sends visions even there--of the land's witchy Mistress, her enslaved Maid, and a hideous, savagely energetic dwarf servitor. . . . Walter defies all advice and reason, abandons his fellows, and sets off through mountains and wastes to the Wood where he can meet the mysterious three . . . the stage is set for triangular games of love and power." -- David Langford
  • The Ice at the End of the World

    Robert Siegel

    Paperback (HarperSanFrancisco, April 22, 1994)
    As Hralekana, the wounded humpback whale, confronts the kraken and leads his pod in search of food, his human friend Mark, on board the Rainbow Whale, faces warships preparing to explode a nuclear device which is accidentally dropped in a deep ocean trench
  • The Wood Beyond The World

    William Morris

    Mass Market Paperback (Ballantine Books, June 12, 1969)
    None
  • On the Beach at the End of the World

    Garrett Burnett

    language (, Nov. 17, 2013)
    Tellon wants to be a chef, not a zebra watcher. Unfortunately, her free-spirited daydreaming gets her banished from Earth and separated from her 14 sisters. Tellon's sentence? To be a complaint taker on Allets, a newly opened Shared-Use Planet. Even the worst assignment in the worst part of the universe can't dampen Tellon's zest for making new friends, building zoos, and opening her own restaurant. But when she learns a horrible secret about Allets, Tellon must find a way to rescue everyone on the planet.
  • Mr. Cat and the End of the World

    Lowell Isaac

    Paperback (AuthorHouse, Jan. 16, 2013)
    Mr. Cat panics when he finds his world turned almost literally upside down. When he enlists the help of his old friend the Dirt Witch, she suggests and unusual solution. The results are strange and amusing, and Mr. Cat learns valuable lessons about the pros and cons of being a robot.
  • The Woods at the End of the World

    Rowan Rook

    (Independently published, June 30, 2019)
    A Post-Apocalyptic Ghost StoryThe world ended before Sun was born, but her world ended just under a year ago, when her sister, Moon, disappeared. According to Mama, the Woods shield Haven farm from the decay left behind by the End, but now she hates them for swallowing up her sister. Her curious, starry-eyed sister who dreamed too much for her own good, while Sun responsibly wrote her Archive, chronicling their lives as the last human beings on Earth.Sun dismissed her sister's bizarre behavior leading up to her disappearance as madness, but when she finds Moon's diary and strange visitors come in the night, she begins to understand far more than she wishes she could. Where her sister found dreams, she sees nightmares. Questions that Mama can't, or won't, answer escape her errant tongue.The truth she seeks waits for her within the Woods.
  • The End of the World

    Franklyn M. Branley, David Palladini

    Hardcover (Crowell, Jan. 1, 1974)
    A scientific explanation of how, millions of years from now, the life of the Earth could conceivably end.
  • Adam at the End of the World

    Jack Tyler Jones

    language (Lionfire Lit., Inc., Sept. 14, 2015)
    The apocalypse has left behind a single teenage boy. Oops.
  • Not the End of the World

    Geraldine Mccaughrean

    Library Binding (HarperTeen, June 28, 2005)
    What was it really like when the heavens opened and the world drowned? Everyone knows the story of the Flood: The man called on by God to build an ark. The animals that came on board two by two. The rain that fell for forty days and forty nights. But what about the rest of the story? What about Noah's wife and daughters-in-law? And what if there was a daughter as well? How would it feel to head into the unknown, with only each other and all those animals? What would it be like to turn away friends and neighbors struggling in the water? Could all of it really be part of God's Plan -- the hunger and pain and fear? Carnegie Medalist Geraldine McCaughrean transforms the familiar story into a provocative new tale that is told through the voices of Noah's family, and even the animals. At the heart is a daughter who questions her father when no one else will.
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  • Not the End of the World

    Geraldine Mccaughrean

    Hardcover (HarperTeen, June 28, 2005)
    What was it really like when the heavens opened and the world drowned? Everyone knows the story of the Flood: The man called on by God to build an ark. The animals that came on board two by two. The rain that fell for forty days and forty nights. But what about the rest of the story? What about Noah's wife and daughters-in-law? And what if there was a daughter as well? How would it feel to head into the unknown, with only each other and all those animals? What would it be like to turn away friends and neighbors struggling in the water? Could all of it really be part of God's Plan -- the hunger and pain and fear? Carnegie Medalist Geraldine McCaughrean transforms the familiar story into a provocative new tale that is told through the voices of Noah's family, and even the animals. At the heart is a daughter who questions her father when no one else will.
    Y
  • Rex Zero and the End of the World

    Tim Wynne-Jones

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), Feb. 20, 2007)
    Why does everyone seem so scared? That's what the new boy in town, Rex Norton-Norton, aka Rex Zero, wonders as he rides his bike through Ottawa's streets. Is it spies? Kidnappers? Or is it because of the shadowy creature some say is stalking Adams Park? One thing is certain in this summer of 1962 as the Cold War heats up: nothing is quite what it seems. What's a boy to do? If his name is Rex Zero and he has a bike he calls "Diablo," five wild and funny siblings, an alpha dog named Kincho, a basement bomb shelter built of old Punch magazines, and a mind that turns everything inside out, he's bound to come up with an amazing idea.With its mystery, adventure, laugh-out-loud scenes of family chaos, and underlying message of hope, this wonderfully original novel explores the impact of doomsday on the imagination of one smart and funny twelve-year-old boy. And more Rex Zero adventures are promised!Rex Zero and the End of the World is a 2008 Bank Street - Best Children's Book of the Year.
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  • The Well at the End of the World

    Robert D. San Souci, Rebecca Walsh

    Hardcover (Chronicle Books Llc, July 31, 2004)
    Princess Rosamond isn't your typical princess. She prefers good books to good looks and keeps both the royal accounts and the castle drawbridge in working order. When her greedy stepmother and stepsister scheme to spend the royal treasury and her father, the king, falls ill, Rosamond must set out in search of the one thing that can cure him -- the healing waters found in the magical well at the end of the world.In the spirit of The Talking Eggs, award-winning author Robert San Souci has once again created a feisty heroine whose generosity and courage save the day combined with Rebecca Walsh's vibrant paintings. This is an adventure story that readers will turn to again and again.