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Books in Human Horizons series

  • Me and Luke

    Audrey O'Hearn

    Paperback (Macmillan Children's Books, Feb. 9, 1990)
    Matt is a high-school dropout, unemployed and living in a squalid Toronto boarding house. He has broken up with his girlfriend who is pregnant with his baby. When it is born he experiences strong parental feelings and he kidnaps the baby and finds out that a child is a lifelong responsibility.
  • Hey, Kid! Does She Love Me?

    Harry Mazer

    Paperback (Pan Books, Nov. 7, 1986)
    None
  • The Arizona Kid

    Ron Koertge

    Paperback (Pan Childrens, Aug. 10, 1990)
    A trip out West to work at a racetrack — and a sojourn with a sophisticated gay uncle — bring unexpected discoveries in this quick-witted coming-of-age novel by the author of STONER & SPAZ and MARGAUX WITH AN X.I was in the West. The Old West. The Wild West! A whole summer in a new place: a place away from my parents, a place so hot the girls probably wore bikinis to church, a place where I'd take a giant step toward my dream: becoming a vet. A place where — who knows? — anything might happen.From the moment sixteen-year-old Billy steps off the train in Tucson, he knows this will be a summer unlike any he's seen in small-town Bradleyville, Missouri. For starters, he's staying with his cool gay uncle, who has managed to get him a job at the racetrack caring for horses. Still, Billy doesn't expect the horseracing world to be quite as rough and tumble as this — toiling side by side with a macho survivalist and falling hard for the feisty, romance-shy "exercise girl" Cara Mae. With his trademark fast-paced dialogue filled with wit and compassion, Ron Koertge tells the tale of an insecure teen who discovers that gaining stature involves more than Stetsons and boots — and that lessons on love and manhood come from the places you least expect.
  • 'IS THAT YOU, MISS BLUE?

    M.E. Kerr

    Paperback (Macmillan Education Australia, March 13, 1987)
    During her first term at boarding school, fifteen-year-old Flanders tries to cope with a variety of unusual people and situations and come to terms with her conflicting emotions about her recently separated parents.
  • THE SANDMAN'S EYES

    Patricia Windsor

    Paperback (PAN CHILDRENS, Jan. 1, 1987)
    Written by the author of "The Hero" and "Just Like the Movies" this book combines the elements of a mystery and a psychological thriller. The central character Michael is accused of a murder he did not commit and is jailed for two years. Upon his release he sets about finding the real murderer.
  • The Moonlight Man

    Paula Fox

    (Macmillan Education Australia, Jan. 8, 1988)
    None
  • It's Okay If You Don't Love Me

    Norma Klein

    Paperback (Macmillan, Jan. 9, 1987)
    None
  • Acts of Love

    Maureen Daly

    Paperback (Pan Childrens, Aug. 16, 1989)
    None
  • The Game of Life

    Norman Howe

    Paperback (Pan Childrens, March 8, 1991)
    None
  • Adam Was Here: A Story About Homelessness

    Catherine Chambers

    Hardcover (Franklin Watts Ltd, )
    None
    Z
  • THE HERO

    Patricia Windsor

    Paperback (Pan Horizons, Jan. 1, 1989)
    None
  • The Last April Dancers

    Jean Thesman

    Paperback (Macmillan Children's Books, April 14, 1989)
    None