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Books published by publisher W. Morrow

  • Cinchfoot,: The story of a range horse,

    Thomas C Hinkle

    Hardcover (W. Morrow & Co, Jan. 1, 1938)
    Cinchfoot and Blaze Face, under different names, are based on real characters. The remarkable friendship between them was a reality.
  • Seasons of the tallgrass prairie

    Carol Lerner

    Hardcover (Morrow, March 15, 1980)
    Describes the plant life of the American prairie, season by season, and the role of wildfire in its ecology.
  • Walter Raleigh

    Ronald Syme

    Hardcover (Morrow, March 15, 1962)
    Book. Walter raleigh
  • Haunted Houses

    Larry Kettelkamp

    Paperback (Morrow, March 15, 1969)
    Discusses ten documented cases of ghosts and poltergeists from the past and present and suggests various theories to explain them.
  • Betsy's Play School

    Carolyn Haywood, James Griffin

    Hardcover (Morrow, March 15, 1977)
    Betsy organizes a summer play school for six neighborhood children.
  • Jean and Johnny

    Beverly Cleary

    Hardcover (W. Morrow, Jan. 1, 1959)
    None
  • The Boy on Lincoln's Lap

    Jerrold Beim

    Hardcover (Morrow, March 15, 1955)
    None
  • Carolina hurricane

    Marian Rumsey

    Hardcover (Morrow, Jan. 1, 1977)
    Lost in a crab boat in the middle of a South Carolina salt marsh, twelve-year-old Morgan endures the full brunt of a hurricane.
  • On Foot to the Arctic: The Story of Samuel Hearne

    Ronald Syme

    Hardcover (W. Morrow, March 15, 1959)
    None
  • Peeper, first voice of spring

    Robert M McClung

    Hardcover (Morrow, March 15, 1977)
    The woods comes alive with the arrival of spring and the peepers, a type of tree frog, begin their evolutionary cycle.
  • Wobble, the witch cat

    Mary Calhoun

    Hardcover (Morrow, March 15, 1958)
    What could be worse than a witch cat who couldn't ride on a broomstick? Wobble had been a very nice witch cat until Maggie, his fat chuckling witch, got a new broomstick. It had a thin, slippery handle, and when Wobble found he couldn't ride it, his perosonality suddenly changed. now he was as cross as he was block. Finally Wobble, that unhappy cat, actually pulled the broomstick out to the trash barrel and thought his problems were solved. But Maggie found that her old vacuum cleaner also had flying magic, so she made her annual Halloween flight with her cat after all. What Wobble discovered and what the children saw in the sky that night combine to make a surprising climax. Roger Duvoisin is just the right illustrator for this hilarious tale, and his pictures of cross black Wobble and motherly Maggie make them come alive in a delightfully fantastic fashion. Roger Duvoisin (1904-1980) was a Swiss-born American writer and illustrator, best known for children's picture books. He won the 1948 Caldecott Medal for picture books and in 1968 he was a highly commended runner-up for the biennial, international Hans Christian Andersen Award for children's illustrators. Beloved children's author, Mary Calhoun's, first children's book, Making the Mississippi Shout, was published in 1957. Since then, she has become the award-winning author of more than fifty children's books, including A Shepherd's Gift, Flood, Cross-Country Cat, Hot-Air Henry, and all lthe other Henry the Cat books.
  • Bufo: The story of a toad

    Robert M McClung

    Hardcover (Morrow, )
    None