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Books published by publisher David R Godine, 2001

  • Looking for a City in America: Down These Mean Streets a Man Must Go : An Essay

    Andre Corboz, Dennis Keeley (photographer)

    Paperback (David R Godine, Sept. 1, 1992)
    A postmodern meditation on the contemporary urban space, with sixty-four pages of beautiful black-and-white photographs.
  • A White Heron

    Sarah Orne Jewett, Douglas Alvord

    Paperback (David R Godine, Feb. 25, 2005)
    This beloved short story a classic coming-of-age tale by the author of The Country of the Pointed Firs is gloriously illustrated with pencil drawings by Maine artist Douglas Alvord. Sylvia, a city girl more at home with animals than with people, has come to the Maine Woods to live with her grandmother. One summer afternoon in the late 1800s, her life is changed forever when she meets an attractive young ornithologist searching for birds to snare, stuff, preserve, and display. With consummate literary skill, Jewett dramatizes the storm of emotions Sylvia feels both for this young man and for the natural world, and especially for the rare white heron the ornithologist is so eager to possess. Mr. Alvord's pictures are as delicate as Sylvia's emotions and as precise as Jewett's descriptions of Sylvia's inner struggle.
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  • Just Perfect

    Jane Marinsky

    Hardcover (David R Godine, July 23, 2012)
    Mommy, Daddy and I made three, but we thought we might like four. And so. . .And so begins an intensive search for that perfect fourth family member. Maybe a dog? Naw, way too much hair. A chameleon? Naw, it disappears. A dolphin? Naw, uses too much water. The porcupine is too prickly to hug, the rooster wakes up too early, and the octopus messes with everything! But there is, in the end, a simple and totally satisfactory solution. And it is just perfect.Written and illustrated by the illustrator of The Goat-Faced Girl, this book is funny, witty, and winsome. The words are few, but the illustrations are fast paced, full of clever visual puns and diverting imagery. Adults will be seduced by the art and children by the quest. And both will be satisfied (even gratified) by the solution.
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  • Shadows & Moonshine: Stories

    Joan Aiken, Pamela Johnson

    Hardcover (David R Godine, April 1, 2002)
    The prose of Joan Aiken, her uncanny ability to tell a great story in language that is classically beautiful, her fascinating characters, riveting dialogue, and compelling action, should be better appreciated. Like her father, Conrad Aiken, she is adept at a number of forms but is a master of the short story. In this fetching collection of what she considers thirteen of her best tales, she can be scary (everyone knows her fascination with wolves and witches) and poetic (as in "Moonshine in the Mustard Pot" or "The Lilac in the Lake"). But whatever she sets her hand to, it reads like the work of a master. Set against the lovely and luminous pencil drawings of Pamela Johnson, we have a a baker's dozen of magical tales that will stay with readers long after the last page is turned and the lights turned out.
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  • With Love and Prayers: A Headmaster Speaks to the Next Generation by F. Washington Jarvis

    F. Washington Jarvis

    Paperback (David R Godine, March 15, 1895)
    None
  • The Merchant of Noises

    by Anna Rozen, Francois Avril, Carl W. Scarbrough

    Hardcover (David R Godine, Oct. 1, 2006)
    In his snazzy plaid coat and dandyish bowler hat, Mr. Bing may seem every bit the playboy, but his sharp haberdashery conceals a shrewd head for business and a fine ear for, well, noises. Not just any noises, mind you, but the sort of noises people want to hear again and again.One day in the forest, Mr. Bing stumbles upon a million-dollar idea: there are certain noises that, if one could package them attractively, people might want to own. On this modest yet startling premise, he opens a workshop to build and sell his new inventions: part sculpture, part musical instrument, Mr. Bing's wholly original devices make exotic, unexpected, and delightful noises. A few skeptics may scoff, but these remarkable inventions are a ready hit with the public. An impresario arrives with an offer to set up an exhibition in Tokyo.Yet just as Mr. Bing should be reaping the rewards of his success, things start to go awry. An angry customer arrives, defective noise in hand (clearly a counterfeit), demanding a refund. And there's the matter of the missing Trooloooooloo that keeps him awake at night. . .This light-hearted book, the first collaboration between author Anna Rozen and illustrator François Avril, is a whimsical tale of ingenuity, industry, horse-sense - and a little impromptu detective work.
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  • The Town That Got Out of Town

    Robert Priest

    Hardcover (David R Godine Pub, March 15, 1989)
    When all of Boston goes on vacation, the buildings themselves decide it is high time they had a holiday, too, so they all go up to Portland, Maine for a visit
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  • Where the Deer Were: Poems

    Kate Barnes

    Hardcover (David R Godine Pub, Jan. 1, 2001)
    Poems set in Maine examine friendship, loneliness, sexuality, family relations, and the relationship between people and nature
  • Where the Deer Were: Poems

    Kate Barnes

    Hardcover (David R Godine Pub, Jan. 1, 2001)
    Poems set in Maine examine friendship, loneliness, sexuality, family relations, and the relationship between people and nature
  • The Christmas Junk Box

    B. A. King, Tony King, Michael McCurdy

    Hardcover (David R Godine Pub, Oct. 1, 1987)
    An evocative story, Mr Bones wonders if his family, accustomed to new store bought gifts, would appreciate the old, handmade toys of his childhood
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  • The Runaway

    Robert Frost, Glenna Lang

    Paperback (David R Godine, June 1, 2003)
    In one of Robert Frost's most appealing poems for children, this quintessential New England poet brings the reader to a rolling upland meadow just as autumn turns to winter and snow begins to fall. In this interpretation, a child and mother are out for a walk and are captivated by a young Morgan colt, bewildered and skittish, reacting to his his first encounter with falling snow.With striking tableaus, bold shapes, and sumptuous colors, the artist Glenna Lang evokes the archetypal New England landscape crisscrossed with stone walls and inhabited by farm animals. Her winsome colt and sympathetic child will engage the young reader in this moving poem about caretaking and concern for young creatures.Adults may see the poignancy and ambiguity of Frost's words, but children will embrace the resolution that the artist provides. This charming book shows the unknown situations are not always as frightening as at first they might appear, and that a comforting presence is never far away.
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  • At Freddie's

    Penelope Fitzgerald

    Hardcover (David R Godine Pub, July 1, 1985)
    Freddie, the elderly proprietress of the Temple Stage School for children, attempts to outwit two successful businessmen who are interested in taking over the school