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Books with title The Mountain Cat

  • The Cat Who Moved a Mountain

    Lilian Jackson Braun, George Guidall

    Audio CD (Phoenix Books, April 1, 2006)
    On vacation in the Big Potato Mountains, Qwilleran stumbles into a mystery involving the murder of J. J. Hawkinfield, the developer who was pushed off a mountain years before after announcing his plans to develop the region.
  • The Mountaineer

    Robert J. Reinke

    Paperback (WestBowPress, July 5, 2018)
    John begins the trip back home for the coming school year. Suddenly, John finds himself up against the greatest challenge of his life--lost in the Rocky Mountain backcountry amidst unforgiving elements and the battlegroud of his own mind. Will John survive?
  • The Mountains

    Stewart Edward White

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 9, 2016)
    The Mountains By Stewart Edward White
  • Over the Mountain

    Katherine P Stillerman

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 9, 2018)
    It’s 1961, and Harriet Elizabeth Oechsner has almost completed her sophomore year in high school, when she’s faced with the dreaded news that her family is moving again. This time it’s because her father Erik’s liberal theology and commitment to social justice has angered his parishioners, and he’s been forced to resign from his church after only a year as pastor. The resulting move thrusts the five members of the close knit Oechsner family into a community bathed in privilege, steeped in tradition, and staunchly resistant to change. Mountain Brook, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, is a community separated only by a mountain ridge from the struggle for human rights being waged on the other side. And yet, it’s a community so distanced by privilege and color from its parent city and the needs of the poor and disenfranchised within, that it may as well be on the other side of the world.Harriet must once again assume the role of the outsider adapting to another new school, her third in three years. Her encounters with new teachers and peers lead her into situations that are at times painful, lonely, embarrassing, shocking, and often humorous.Harriet’s adjustment to her new school is fraught by teenage angst and emotion; and, as a child of the Cold War and the civil rights era, she is thrust into the realities of injustice, separation, and the threat of nuclear holocaust. However, the story maintains a hopeful tone, as the plot is interwoven with themes of inclusiveness, loyalty, friendship, and reconciliation.Readers who fell in love with Hattie Robinson in Hattie’s Place and In the Fullness of Time, will be happy to know that Over the Mountain takes up two generations later, with Hattie’s granddaughter and namesake, Harriet, as the main character.
  • The Mountain Road

    Kendall Purser

    eBook (Kendall Purser, Dec. 21, 2011)
    Yao, Fey, and Shem are travelling from their home in River Haven to the neighboring town of Glorydale. Unfortunately the only way to get there in on a toll road, or so they think until Fey's father tells them of another way. Yao and Shem decide to take the old Mountain Road and it changes them forever.Length: 96 pages (about 10,000 words) What is "A Little Fiction?"These engaging stories are kept intentionally short so that they may be read in a few hours. Each book in this series examines a traditional family value in a fictional setting so that it is fun to read, instructive, and entertaining. Excerpt:The water was icy cold, and the road bed was a full two feet above the surface of the marsh. The stream must have been fed by glacial waters further up the mountain. The rock, while dry, did not mask the temperature of the water that ran beneath it. Yao admired the marsh grasses and the brilliant colors that they displayed, but quickly made his mind up to leave as his feet began to freeze on the icy surface of the stone roadway. He had just picked up his pack to move on when he was startled by the braying of a wild animal off the side of the trail. Yao walked cautiously forward, and when he had come around a bend in the trail, found a small goat trapped in a large thicket of thorny bushes. He could see the dry places that the buck had used to get at some of the sweet marsh grasses. He must have gotten tangled in the thorns before he could retreat back to the safety of the plateau. Yao carefully laid down his pack on the stone roadway, and made his way out to the frightened goat. As he got closer the goat began to panic and bray more loudly. He spoke gently to it as he got closer, and soon found himself face to face with the goat. Gently Yao began to stroke the goat along his spine, and once the buck had calmed down he began untangling the long pointy briers from its fur. It proved to be quite the task, as the mountain goat’s fur was thick and ready for the upcoming winter. Somehow he managed to untangle the thorns, and the goat was soon hopping from stone to dry patch, back up to the stone roadway. Yao began his own careful way back to the road. When he reached the roadway, he realized that the goat had not run off, but was waiting for him. At first he thought this rather pleasant, but once he had climbed up onto the road and picked up his pack his mind quickly changed. There on the path leading out of the bog sat a large mountain lion.
  • The Cat Who Moved a Mountain

    Lilian Jackson Braun

    Paperback (G K Hall & Co, June 1, 1993)
    On vacation in the Big Potato Mountains, Qwilleran and his feline companions stumble into a mystery involving the murder of J. J. Hawkinfield, the developer who had been pushed off a mountain years before after announcing his plans to develop the region
  • Under the Mountain

    Maurice Gee

    Paperback (ReadHowYouWant, Dec. 28, 2012)
    Beneath the extinct volcanoes surrounding the city, giant creatures are waking from a spellbound sleep that has lasted thousands of years. Their goal is the destruction of the world. Rachel and Theo Matheson are twins. Apart from having red hair, there is nothing remarkable about them - or so they think. They are horrified to discover that they have a strange and awesome destiny. Only the Matheson twins can save the world from the terror of what is under the mountain
  • The Red Mountain

    Aaron Lindgreen

    eBook
    None
  • On Cat Mountain

    Francoise Richard, Anne Buguet

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, April 13, 1994)
    Working for a harsh, greedy, and wicked mistress, Sho finds consolation in the companionship of her only friend, a black cat, and when her evil mistress banishes the cat from the house, Sho braves the perils of Cat Mountain to find her only true friend.
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  • Up the Mountain

    Charlotte Agell

    Hardcover (DK CHILDREN, March 1, 2000)
    Cat, Rabbit, Chicken, and Dragon go for a rainy romp up the mountain, where at the top the sky clears up and they enjoy a splendid day, until the moon beckons them back home. By the creator of To the Island.
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  • The Mountain

    Peter Parnall

    Hardcover (Doubleday, Sept. 15, 1971)
    Richly illustrated picture book about the many life forms that live on a mountain and how they are negatively impacted when "Congress passed a law making the mountain a National Park and a road was built."
  • The Crystal Mountain

    Ruth Sanderson

    Hardcover (Little, Brown, Sept. 1, 1999)
    A fantasy tale that follows the quest of three sons to retrieve a beautiful tapestry, woven by their mother and based on a vision from her dreams, from the jealous fairies who stole it.
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