Browse all books

Books with title The Village

  • The Vile Village

    lemony-snicket

    Hardcover (Egmont, Aug. 16, 2002)
    Some foxing to tanned page edges. Shipped from the U.K. All orders received before 3pm sent that weekday.
    V
  • The Village by the Sea

    Anita Desai

    Paperback (Puffin, July 2, 2015)
    A story of survival set in a small fishing villlage near Bombay. Lila and Hari, aged 13 and 12, struggle to keep the family, including two young sisters, going when their mother is ill and their father usually the worse for drink. When Hari goes to Bombay to find work, Lila seems to be responsible for everything. Although the book paints a picture of extreme poverty, it demonstrates the strength of the family even in the most extreme circumstances and offers a powerful picture of another culture.
    V
  • The Vile Village

    Lemony Snicket, Tim Curry

    Audio Cassette (HarperCollins, March 5, 2002)
    Dear Reader, If you have just picked up this audio, then it is not too late to put it back down. Like the previous books in A Series of Unfortunate Events, there is nothing to be found in these pages but misery, despair, and discomfort, and you still have time to choose something else to read. Within the chapters of this story, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire encounter a darkened staircase, a red herring, some friends in a dire situation, three mysterious initials, a liar with an evil scheme, a secret passageway, and parsley soda. I have sworn to write down these tales of the Baudelaire orphans so the general public will know each terrible thing that has happened to them, but if you decide to read something else instead, you will save yourself from a heapful of horror and woe. With all due respect, Lemony Snicket
    V
  • Village By The Sea

    Paula Fox

    Hardcover (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 1949)
    U
  • The Vanishing Village

    Sarah Dixon

    Hardcover (Usborne Publishing Ltd, Feb. 26, 1992)
    None
  • The Dragon Village: The Village Dragon

    Denise Smith-Ladd

    language (, July 18, 2017)
    The Dragon Village is a picture book for preschoolers. The dragons are each characterized through visual drawings and imagination. The preschoolers will be excited as they open their minds to the world of dragons. This is a book parents should enjoy reading to their with much excitement. While reading the Village Dragons, imagine yourself in a world full of dragons
  • Village By the Sea

    Anita Desai

    Paperback (Puffin, Jan. 1, 2002)
    A story of survival set in a small fishing villlage near Bombay. Lila and Hari, aged 13 and 12, struggle to keep the family, including two young sisters, going when their mother is ill and their father usually the worse for drink. When Hari goes to Bombay to find work, Lila seems to be responsible for everything. Although the book paints a picture of extreme poverty, it demonstrates the strength of the family even in the most extreme circumstances and offers a powerful picture of another culture.
    Y
  • From the Tea Village

    Rebecca D. Henderson

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 14, 2013)
    Ye Sun grew up in an ethnic Bulang village in Yunnan Province, but she now lives in the Chinese world of her boarding school. While other students decide to stay home after sixth grade, Ye Sun sticks with it and moves to middle school in the market town. Her friendships broaden, but she also faces more difficult subjects, an abusive teacher, and taunts over her faltering Mandarin. Just as she thinks the situation is at its worst, a harrowing accident turns her family — and her life — upside-down.
  • The Village Garage

    G. Brian Karas

    Hardcover (Henry Holt and Co. (BYR), June 8, 2010)
    Through the year and no matter the weather, workers at the Village Garage are always busy. With the help of their trusty trucks, they clean the streets of sticks and leaves in the spring; patch potholes in preparation for summer traffic; pick up the leaves in the fall; and spray the roads with sand and salt during winter. Young truck enthusiasts will love watching the garage workers operate their terrific trucks and keep the roads in top shape through every season!The Village Garage is a 2011 Bank Street - Best Children's Book of the Year.
    M
  • Village by the Sea

    Anita Desai

    Hardcover (Heinemann Educational Books Ltd, March 31, 1985)
    Winner of the Guardian Children's Fiction Award.
  • The Village Baker

    Vince Crandall

    Paperback (lulu.com, May 2, 2011)
    The village baker is a story about the daily life of a baker, and how his love of baking impacts the entire village. Everyone enjoys his bread, and it makes them happy as they eat it.
  • The Shaker Village

    Raymond Bial

    Hardcover (University Press of Kentucky, June 13, 2008)
    The Shaker faith is estimated to have had a total of fewer than 20,000 members across its 250-year history, yet more than 100,000 people visit the various Shaker villages and museums scattered across the eastern United States every year. We are still fascinated with the world of the Shakers, and authentic examples of Shaker architecture, furniture, and crafts are prized wherever they remain.In The Shaker Village, author and photographer Raymond Bial brings readers the history of the Shaker religion and an examination of the Shaker way of life, which was based on cooperation and self-sufficiency. Each Shaker village was built with the goal of creating a heaven on earth for its inhabitants. The Shaker people were among the first in America to apply science and new learning directly to traditional farming and homekeeping. They invented or improved significantly upon designs of many farm and household items, including some still used today: the flat broom, the slotted spoon, the circular saw, and the idea of selling gardening seeds in packets. Although each Shaker community was self-supporting, the Shakers' success at applying their core values―simplicity, utility, and tranquility―carried Shaker villages to a point of abundance: they were able to export their beautiful furniture, delicious foods, and superior wares to the outside world, where they have been appreciated ever since.The Shaker Village is generously illustrated with Bial's evocative photographs of buildings and artifacts from the Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill, Kentucky, one of the largest and best-preserved Shaker sites. The Shaker movement reached its peak in the mid-nineteenth century. Membership began to drop with the onset of the Civil War, and as the new promise of industrialization began to take hold in America, Shaker numbers steadily dwindled. Although the Shaker religion has all but departed, The Shaker Village captures a revelatory glimpse of a legacy that still resounds with modern Americans.