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Books with title the Trouble with Hate is...

  • The Trouble With Tabby

    N.R. Dixon, Daniel Jeffery

    eBook (Onwards and Upwards Publishers, April 12, 2012)
    Tabby and Hannah are the best of friends. Together they share secrets, play games and enjoy exciting adventures. They find a new friend to share the fun when a new girl, Susie, moves to their neighbourhood. Tabby suddenly faints during a game of Tag, but Hannah and Susie promise not to tell her parents. Keeping the secret proves to be harder than expected, and the outcome involves the whole village hearing about the trouble with Tabby...
  • The Trouble With Wishes

    Susan Beth Pfeffer, Jennifer Plecas

    Hardcover (Henry Holt & Co, April 1, 1996)
    Granted any three wishes of her choice, third-grader Katie Logan racks her brain trying to decide what to wish for and is warned by her big brother to be careful before she decides that she really wants to be the lead in the class play.
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  • The Trouble with Mum

    Babette Cole

    Paperback (Egmont Childrens Books, Sept. 13, 1993)
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  • The Trouble with Twins

    Martha Freeman, Cat Bowman Smith

    Hardcover (Holiday House, Oct. 15, 2007)
    Holly's identical twin brothers, Jeremy and Dylan, are about to turn three. They are adorable; but because of them, everyone else in the household is exhausted and stressed out, even the four cats. When Holly volunteers to throw the twins a birthday party with a little help from her friends, she's just trying to be helpful.Why didn't someone tell her the event would tumble into complete chaos, with guests running amok, unbelievable messes, and a cake savaged by hungry cats? This comical chapter book looks at the upsides, downsides, and upside down nature of daily life with toddlers in the family.
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  • The Trouble with Fun

    Marilyn Sadler, Roger Bollen

    Paperback (Random House Books for Young Readers, Nov. 27, 2001)
    Meet Zenon Kar. She’s your typical elementary school kid, except she lives on a space station in 2049! These humorous stories about Zenon are all reality-based so kids can easily identify with her situations. In book #3, when an important Earth scientist visits Space Station 9, Zenon agrees to entertain his daughter, Teena. At first Zee’s job is easy. Teena seems polite and well behaved. But when the adults turn their backs, she changes completely! All Teena cares about is having fun, even if it means breaking all sorts of space station rules. Written and illustrated by the award-winning husband-and-wife team who created P. J. Funnybunny and Alistair.
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  • The Trouble with Twins

    Kathryn Siebel, Katherine Kellgren, Cassandra Campbell

    Audio CD (Listening Library (Audio), Aug. 9, 2016)
    Kate DiCamillo meets Lemony Snicket in this darkly comic novel about two sisters who learn they are each others' most important friend!Imagine two twin sisters, Arabella and Henrietta--nearly identical yet with nothing in common. They're the best of friends . . . until one day they aren't. Plain and quiet Henrietta has a secret plan to settle the score, and she does something outrageous and she can't take it back. When the deed is discovered, Henrietta is sent to live with her eccentric great-aunt! Suddenly life with pretty, popular Arabella doesn't seem so awful. And, though she's been grievously wronged, Arabella longs for her sister, too. So she hatches a plan of her own and embarks on an unexpected journey to reunite with her other half.
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  • The Trouble with Harry

    Elizabeth Koubena

    Paperback (Trafford Publishing, June 15, 2005)
    The Trouble with Harry is a true story about Harry the cat. Born to a stray cat in Greece, on the island of Aegina, Harry was sick and almost blind when he was rescued and looked after by various people on the island. When two young Canadian women visited Greece, they fell in love with Harry and decided to take him home with them. Harry loved Canada and his life there; he loved to climb on people's laps; he loved to smell flowers; he loved to roam in the back yard. Though technically blind, he probably saw shadows and shapes of things. But he coped so well with his lack of eyesight, it was hard to believe sometimes that he couldn't see. He could always find a friendly lap to climb up on; he would turn his face to the sun to feel its warmth; he loved to roam in the back yard and smell the flowers and roll around in the grass. You could say that he was one lucky cat but as Kathryn once said: "We were the lucky ones." Harry lived happily with his human friends for eight years until he died in 2003. This story is dedicated to him. He is also featured on a number of animal welfare brochures published in Athens, Greece, by the Society for the Protection of Stray Animals.
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  • The Trouble with Tuck

    Theodore Taylor

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, June 15, 1989)
    Tuck is a special animal, a pet who had saved his mistress's life on more than one occasion. But now it is Tuck who needs Helen's help. He's losing his sight, and she is determined not to let his blindness end his life, or even limit it.Winner of the California Young Reader Medal and Iowa Children's Choice Award.
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  • The Trouble with Gran

    Babette Cole

    Paperback (Mammoth, March 15, 1997)
    Gran, who is secretly an extraterrestrial being, livens up a trip to the seaside taken by a group of school children and senior citizens.
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  • The Trouble with Cats

    Martha Freeman, Cat Bowman Smith

    Paperback (Yearling, Feb. 11, 2003)
    Holly has a lot to deal with lately. Her mom has remarried and she has to get used to a new town, a new house, a new school, and a new stepdad. As if this isn’t enough, she has to share her room with four pesky cats. Or rather, they have to learn to share their room with her. Max Cat always escapes. George Cat always disappears. Wilbur Cat eats socks. And Boo Cat is always somewhere you don’t want him to be. These cats are driving Holly crazy. She can’t get her homework done, all of her socks have holes in them, and the police even pay a visit to her house all because of the cats. Can Holly and the troublesome felines ever learn to get along?
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  • The Trouble With Tea

    Jeanette E. Alsheimer, Patricia J. Friedle

    Paperback (Collegialwriting, Dec. 3, 2015)
    Set against the turbulent backdrop of the Boston Tea Party, this story of two friends is full of political intrigue and romance. The Trouble with Tea opens with Patience traveling in a private carriage to her best friend Anne's home in Boston, where her adventures begin. Patience and Anne both find themselves swept up in the heated political climate of colonial Boston. Loyalists, steadfast in their allegiance to England are pitted against those who fervently plot for independence. The feisty heroine quickly discovers that her own beliefs are the opposite of her friend's. Against the finale of the explosive Tea Party comes the upheaval of independence, not only for the young colony, but for two childhood friends as well. This book interweaves historical fact with a coming of age story using such creativity and detail that the reader is transported in time.
  • The Trouble with Tessa

    Ofelia Dumas Lachtman

    Paperback (Pinata Books, May 1, 2005)
    The trouble with you is that you have a wild imagination, people tell Tessa. So what if she calls herself Athena, the goddess of wisdom and a woman of the twenty-first century? It's that wild imagination that will make her a good writer. When Tessa finds yellowing pages torn from a book in the bottom of a beat-up trunk in a musty attic filled with cobwebs and junk, she realizes what she's found: directions for magic spells. It was no coincidence that she found the sheets, Tessa decides. She has the power. When Tessa's diary with the magic spells disappears, she panics. What good is a witch without her spells? When she recovers her diary, she even makes a new friend. Again, Tessa believes her life is charmed. Tessa's developing powers hit a roadblock, however, when she casts a spell that she wishes she could take back. Suddenly, everything's changing, and Tessa fears that her secret powers are spinning out of control. When Tessa's reversal spell doesn't work, Tessa must rely on her friends and the power of her family's bond to get her out of this snare. Popular young adult author Ofelia Dumas Lachtman has once again crafted a novel about a precocious young girl and her unlimited curiosity. Tackling topics that teens face, Lachtman's novel is at once a funny story about a young girl's quest to make life interesting and about her learning to accept that sometimes family ties are the strongest magic in the world.
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