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Books with title Living in the Mountains

  • I Live in the Mountains

    Gini Holland

    Paperback (Weekly Reader/Gareth Stevens Pub, Jan. 1, 2004)
    A very simple and brief description of what it is like to live in the mountains.
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  • Living and Non-Living in the Mountains

    Rebecca Rissman

    Hardcover (Raintree, Sept. 12, 2013)
    How can you tell if something is living or non-living? Children reading this series will explore a variety of habitats while learning how to tell the difference between living and non-living things.
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  • Faces in the Mountains

    Ron Hirschi, Thomas D. Mangelsen

    Hardcover (Dutton Juvenile, Sept. 1, 1997)
    This colorful compilation of photographs introduces young readers to the wild animals living in the mountains, including the grizzly bears, the magpies and the mountain goats.
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  • Living and Non-Living in the Mountains

    Rebecca Rissman

    Paperback (Raintree, Aug. 14, 2014)
    How can you tell if something is living or non-living? Children reading this series will explore a variety of habitats while learning how to tell the difference between living and non-living things.
    I
  • Surviving the Mountain

    Louise Spilsbury

    Paperback (Gareth Stevens Pub, Aug. 15, 2016)
    Climbing a mountain takes bravery and training even without considering the dangers that could await climbers. Lighting strikes, avalanches, sheer cliffs, and terrible cold can all be life-threatening, and readers hoping to trek high in the mountains need to know how to handle them. Through real-life survivor stories and supplemental fact boxes about each danger, readers are introduced to what it's like to travel in the mountains. Preparation and caution are emphasized, but instructions on what to do should a disaster occur are clear and understandable. Full-color photographs and multiple-choice questions engage readers further with this exciting and suspenseful topic.
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  • The Mountains

    Stewart Edward White

    Paperback (Hard Press, Nov. 3, 2006)
    This is a reproduction of the original artefact. Generally these books are created from careful scans of the original. This allows us to preserve the book accurately and present it in the way the author intended. Since the original versions are generally quite old, there may occasionally be certain imperfections within these reproductions. We're happy to make these classics available again for future generations to enjoy!
  • Moving the Mountain

    Charlotte Perkins Gilman

    Paperback (Independently published, July 1, 2019)
    Complete and unabridged paperback edition.Moving the Mountain is a feminist utopian novel written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. It was published serially in Perkins Gilman's periodical The Forerunner and then in book form, both in 1911. The book was one element in the major wave of utopian and dystopian literature that marked the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The novel was also the first volume in Gilman's utopian trilogy; it was followed by the famous Herland(1915) and its sequel, With Her in Ourland (1916). Description from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • The Mountains

    Stewart Edward White

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Dec. 27, 2015)
    White's books were popular at a time when America was losing its vanishing wilderness. He was a keen observer of the beauties of nature and human nature, yet could render them in a plain-spoken style. Based on his own experience, whether writing camping journals or Westerns, he included pithy and fun details about cabin-building, canoeing, logging, gold-hunting, and guns and fishing and hunting. He also interviewed people who had been involved in the fur trade, the California gold rush and other pioneers which provided him with details that give his novels verisimilitude. He salted in humor and sympathy for colorful characters such as canny Indian guides and "greenhorn" campers who carried too much gear. White also illustrated some of his books with his own photographs, while some of his other books, were illustrated by artists, such as the American Western painter Fernand Lungren for "The Mountains" and "Camp and Trail". Theodore Roosevelt wrote that White was "the best man with both pistol and rifle who ever shot" at Roosevelt's rifle range at Sagamore Hill.
  • Caught in the Moving Mountains

    Gloria Skurzynski, Ellen Thompson

    Library Binding (William Morrow & Co, Aug. 1, 1984)
    On a three-day hike in a national forest, Paul and Lance, his adopted brother, encounter an unexpected earthquake and a drug smuggler who was injured in the crash of his stolen plane
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  • The Mountains

    Stewart Edward White

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 12, 2014)
    Six trails lead to the main ridge. They are all good trails, so that even the casual tourist in the little Spanish-American town on the seacoast need have nothing to fear from the ascent. In some spots they contract to an arm's length of space, outside of which limit they drop sheer away; elsewhere they stand up on end, zigzag in lacets each more hair-raising than the last, or fill to demoralization with loose boulders and shale. A fall on the part of your horse would mean a more than serious accident; but Western horses do not fall. The major premise stands: even the casual tourist has no real reason for fear, however scared he may become. Our favorite route to the main ridge was by a way called the Cold Spring Trail. We used to enjoy taking visitors up it, mainly because you come on the top suddenly, without warning. Then we collected remarks. Everybody, even the most stolid, said something.
  • Life in the Mountains

    Catherine Bradley

    Paperback (Cooper Square Publishing Llc, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Kids are deeply concerned about the state of their world. These titles show how the environment was damaged and how it can be repaired.
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  • The Mountain Lion

    Jean Stafford

    Paperback (University of Texas Press, March 15, 1992)
    "Miss Stafford writes with brilliance. Scene after scene is told with unforgettable care and tenuous entanglements are treated with wise subtlety. She creates a splendid sense of time, of the unending afternoons of youth, and of the actual color of noon and of night. Refinement of evil, denial of drama only make the underlying truth more terrible. " --Saturday Review "Hard to match . . . for subtlety and understanding. . . written wittily, lucidly, and with great respect for the resources of the language. " --New Yorker Coming of age in pre-World War II California and Colorado brings tragedy to Molly and Ralph Fawcett in Jean Stafford's classic semi-autobiographical novel, first published in 1947. Torn between their mother's world of genteel respectability and their grandfather's and uncle's world of cowboy masculinity, neither Molly nor Ralph can find an acceptable adult role to aspire to. As events move to their swift and inevitable conclusion, Stafford uncovers and indicts the social forces that require boys to sacrifice the feminine in order to become men and doom intelligent girls who aren't pretty.