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Books in Great Episodes series

  • Juliet's Moon

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Harcourt Children's Books, May 1, 2008)
    War is turning Juliet Bradshaw's world upside down. Her brother, Seth, rides with William Quantrill's renegade Confederate army, but he's helpless when the Yankees arrest Juliet along with the wives and sisters of Quantrill's soldiers as spies. Imprisoned in a dilapidated old house in Kansas City, Juliet is one of a handful of survivors after the building collapses, killing most of the young girls inside. When she's reunited with her brother, Juliet finds the life she had previously known is gone. Surrounded by secrets, lies, murder, and chaos, she must determine just how far she will go to protect the people and things she holds dear.
    Y
  • Cast Two Shadows: The American Revolution in the South

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 1, 1998)
    It's 1780, and war has come to Camden, South Carolina. Caroline Whitaker's father is in prison for refusing to pledge allegiance to the king; her brother, Johnny, is away fighting for the Loyalists; and she, her mother, and her sister are confined to an upstairs chamber as British colonel Lord Francis Rawdon occupies their spacious plantation house. Caroline soon learns that Johnny is injured and needs her help to get home. Caroline receives permission from Rawdon to fetch Johnny, but she is not to make this journey alone. Her black grandmother, a slave on the plantation, accompanies her . . . on a trip that turns Caroline's already tumultuous world upside down and forces her to question all that she holds dear.
    Y
  • Quanah Parker: Warrior for Freedom, Ambassador for Peace

    Len Hilts

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, Feb. 28, 1992)
    Quanah Parker, the son of a Comanche chief and a white woman, became a great chief who valiantly led his people in an attempt to save their homeland. He was the symbol of the Comanches, a man first feared then respected by the people he fought.
    T
  • The Ever-After Bird

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Harcourt Children's Books, Nov. 1, 2007)
    Now that her father is dead, CeCe McGill is left to wonder why he risked his life for the ragged slaves who came to their door in the dead of night. When her uncle, an ornithologist, insists she accompany him to Georgia on an expedition in search of the rare scarlet ibis, CeCe is surprised to learn there's a second reason for their journey: Along the way, Uncle Alex secretly points slaves north in the direction of the Underground Railroad. Set against the backdrop of the tumultuous pre-Civil War South, The Ever-After Bird is the story of a young woman's education about the horrors of slavery and the realization about the kind of person she wants to become.
    Y
  • A Break with Charity: A Story about the Salem Witch Trials

    Ann Rinaldi

    Paperback (Gulliver Books Paperbacks, April 29, 1994)
    Susanna English desperately wants to join the circle of girls who meet every week at the parsonage, but she doesn€™t realize the leader of the group, the malicious Ann Putnam, is about to set off a torrent of false accusations that will lead to the imprisonment and execution of countless innocent people-victims of a witch-hunt panic. €œThe author€™s skillful manipulation of the conventions of the young-adult novel-particularly the rich exploration of being an outsider and going against the mainstream-makes this book a superb vehicle for examining the social dynamics of this legendary event.€-The Horn Book
    X
  • A Break with Charity: A Story about the Salem Witch Trials

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Sept. 15, 1992)
    Susanna English desperately wants to join the circle of girls who meet every week at the parsonage, but she doesn’t realize the leader of the group, the malicious Ann Putnam, is about to set off a torrent of false accusations that will lead to the imprisonment and execution of countless innocent people-victims of a witch-hunt panic. “The author’s skillful manipulation of the conventions of the young-adult novel-particularly the rich exploration of being an outsider and going against the mainstream-makes this book a superb vehicle for examining the social dynamics of this legendary event.”-The Horn Book
    X
  • The Legend of Jimmy Spoon

    Kristiana Gregory, K Gregory

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, June 1, 2002)
    Twelve-year-old Jimmy Spoon yearns for a life of adventure. So when two Shoshoni boys offer him a horse, Jimmy sneaks away from his family in Salt Lake City to follow the boys. When Jimmy arrives at the Shoshoni camp, he discovers that he is expected to stay--as a member of the tribe!Inspired by the memoirs of a white man who actually lived with Chief Washakie's tribe as a boy in the mid-1800s, "The Legend of Jimmy Spoon" is a compelling coming-of-age adventure.
    T
  • Where the Broken Heart Still Beats: The Story of Cynthia Ann Parker

    Carolyn Meyer

    Hardcover (Harcourt Childrens Books, Oct. 1, 1992)
    Having been taken as a child and raised by Comanche Indians, thirty-four-year-old Cynthia Ann Parker is forcibly returned to her white relatives
    X
  • The Fifth of March: A Story of the Boston Massacre

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Nov. 30, 1993)
    “Carefully researched and lovingly written, Rinaldi’s latest presents a girl indentured to John and Abigail Adams during the tense period surrounding the 1770 Massacre. . . . Fortuitously timed, a novel that illuminates a moment from our past that has strong parallels to recent events. Bibliography.”--Kirkus Reviews
    Y
  • The Secret of Sarah Revere

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Nov. 1, 1995)
    The spunky daughter of the famed Paul Revere tells the story of her father’s rides and the intelligence network of the Patriot community prior to the American Revolution. Ann Rinaldi’s impeccable research and keen perception of adolescent angst create a look back in time that remains powerfully relevant today.
    X
  • Where the Broken Heart Still Beats: The Story of Cynthia Ann Parker

    Assistant Professor Department of Professional Communication Carolyn Meyer

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, Oct. 1, 1992)
    At the age of nine, Cynthia Ann Parker was captured in an Indian raid and taken to live as a slave with the Comanche. Twenty-four years later, she is the wife of a chief and the mother of a young warrior destined to become the great chief Quanah Parker. But in 1861 Cynthia Ann Parker and her infant daughter are recaptured, and returned against their will to a white settlement. "A skillful examination of how individual identity is determined by cultural and social structures, and of what happens when these are drastically altered."--"Kirkus Reviews"
    X
  • An Acquaintance with Darkness

    Ann Rinaldi

    Hardcover (Gulliver Books, Oct. 15, 1997)
    When her mother dies, fourteen-year-old Emily Pigbush is forced to go live with her uncle Valentine. She is immediately suspicious of her uncle’s unusual late-night activities and fears he may be involved with body-snatching, but every time she resolves to confront him, she is thrown off balance by something good he has done. When she stumbles upon the truth, the betrayal is more than she can bear. But when forced to put her emotions aside, Emily discovers that although her uncle is breaking the law, the risk he takes ultimately benefits mankind.
    Y