Browse all books

Books published by publisher Blue Ridge Mountain Books

  • The Hermitage House Miracle

    Malcolm Ater

    language (Blue Ridge Mountain Books, May 31, 2012)
    As Jamie lay alone in bed, not knowing his mother had just been killed while driving drunk, he was filled with disturbing thoughts. The last words his mother had said to him before going out were, "I've given you the last six years of my life, and for what? To always be running from one town to another? Never having a life of my own just so you could live?" And then in a drunken slur, she had added, "If I had a lick of sense I'd have let old Ernie do what he wanted!"Why had his mother said she had given him the last six years of her life when he was twelve years old? Why did she always seem to resent him? Who was Ernie? And why couldn't he remember anything about his life before his first day of school in the first grade?The only thought that comforted him was the newspaper story dated only a few days earlier on May 24, 1992. The article reported that a new wave of computer games would soon replace the old pinball machines and "boggle the mind" with realistic video techniques that could only be dreamed about a few years earlier. The story had aroused a curious excitement in him, and he didn't know why.After being sent to live at the Hermitage House for Children, Jamie begins to have a series of strange and troubling dreams. Each dream is about a little blond-haired boy who has a little sister and a mother and a father. But the mother is not his mother who was killed in the car accident and he had never known his father. Yet his dreams are always about the same family, especially the little boy and his dog. And the father programs computers and makes games, even promising to build the boy a video game so lifelike the boy will think he's actually inside it.Sometimes, Dreams Turn into Reality...About the AuthorMalcolm Ater is the Award-Winning Author of Tyler's Mountain Magic, based on the true story of Tyler Moore, a teenage boy with cystic fibrosis who leads his team from Harpers Ferry on the most magical sports ride in West Virginia public school history. It was selected as Best Book Length Story of 2011 by the West Virginia Writers, Inc. and was winner of the 2012 Pinnacle Book Achievement Award in Sports.The Hermitage House Miracle was selected as the 2012 Pinnacle Book Achievement Award Winner for Best Contemporary Fantasy and also chosen as the 2012 Finalist for Best Children's Book by the West Virginia Writers, Inc.
  • Tyler's Mountain Magic

    Malcolm Ater

    Paperback (Blue Ridge Mountain Books, March 26, 2011)
    This book is based on the true story of Tyler Moore, a teenage boy with cystic fibrosis who leads his team on the most magical sports ride in West Virginia public school history. No one at Harpers Ferry Junior High knew why Tyler wanted to wrestle when he had cystic fibrosis. Maybe he wanted to do something with his life while he still had time. We just knew that he loved wrestling and being a part of our team. But whenever he went to the hospital, we always expected him to come back home to Blue Ridge Mountain. We also knew that Tyler had a dream. He always said that if we all stuck together, something would happen to our team that people would never forget. He was right about that. It was funny, because Tyler wasn't a very good wrestler, at least not in the beginning, but neither were most of us. But for three years we stuck together. It was Tyler who helped us overcome the curse of John Brown and the constant beatings by our hated county rival, Mecklenburg Junior High. He led us through a major cheating scandal that was reported in every newspaper in the state, and all the finger-pointing that divided our county and brought our coaches to the brink of resigning. Tyler was some kind of kid. It was that last year together that we will always remember, both the good and the bad. Certainly we went on the most magical sports ride in West Virginia public school history. But as we battled the brutal winter trying to accomplish something that had never been done before, it took something terrible to bring everyone to their senses. Along the way we learned about friendship and courage and holding on to the important things in life. More importantly, we were trying to do the impossible. We were trying to make Tyler's dream come true. You won't see any signs in our little town honoring John Brown and his infamous raid that ignited the Civil War. But you will see a sign at the entrance to Harpers Ferry honoring a teenage boy who had a dream that ended a war in our county that had been going on forever. Call it Tyler's Mountain Magic. Unfortunately, we learned that everything comes with a price. **TYLER'S MOUNTAIN MAGIC was selected as the 1st Place Award Winner for best book length novel in 2011 by the West Virginia Writers, Inc.** **TYLER'S MOUNTAIN MAGIC was also selected as the 2012 Pinnacle Book Achievement Award winner in Sports.**
  • TYLER'S MOUNTAIN MAGIC

    Malcolm Ater

    language (Blue Ridge Mountain Books,LLC, May 8, 2011)
    Based on a true story about a boy from Harpers Ferry with cystic fibrosis and the most magical sports ride in West Virginia public school history."No one at Harpers Ferry Junior High knew why Tyler wanted to wrestle when he had cystic fibrosis. Maybe he wanted to do something with his life while he still had time. We just knew that he loved wrestling and being a part of our team. But whenever he went to the hospital, we always expected him to come back home to Blue Ridge Mountain. We also knew that Tyler had a dream. He always said that if we all stuck together, something would happen to our team that people would never forget. He was right about that. It was funny, because Tyler wasn't a very good wrestler, at least not in the beginning, but neither were most of us. But for three years we stuck together. It was Tyler who helped us overcome the curse of John Brown and the constant beatings by our hated county rival, Mecklenburg Junior High. He led us through a major cheating scandal that was reported in every newspaper in the state, and all the finger-pointing that divided our county and brought our coaches to the brink of resigning. Tyler was some kind of kid. It was that last year together that we will always remember, both the good and the bad. Certainly we went on the most magical sports ride in West Virginia public school history. But as we battled the brutal winter trying to accomplish something that had never been done before, it took something terrible to bring everyone to their senses. Along the way we learned about friendship and courage and holding on to the important things in life. More importantly, we were trying to do the impossible. We were trying to make Tyler's dream come true. You won't see any signs in our little town honoring John Brown and his infamous raid that ignited the Civil War. But you will see a sign at the entrance to Harpers Ferry honoring a teenage boy who had a dream that ended a war in our county that had been going on forever. Call it Tyler's Mountain Magic. Unfortunately, we learned that everything comes with a price."**TYLER'S MOUNTAIN MAGIC was selected as the 1st Place Award Winner for best book length novel of 2011 by the West Virginia Writers, Inc.****TYLER'S MOUNTAIN MAGIC was also selected as the 2012 Pinnacle Book Achievement Award Winner in the Category of Sports**
  • Cloud

    Mirabelle Butterfield, Irena Sophia

    Paperback (Rainy Mountain Books, Sept. 23, 2013)
    Climb into Beatrice, the delightful hot-air balloon, and fly with Lucinda among the captivating clouds. Smell them, touch them, stick out your tongue and taste them. Clouds are as magical as you dreamed they'd be. Then come on adventures with Lucinda as she learns from her grandmother, her Mimi, to sing while she efficiently cleans house. She also learns to sew a glamorous scarf, stir up a stunning stew, grow a gracious garden, arrange the beautiful flowers she gathers, and paint quiet country lanes on a canvas by the window. She learns lessons of economy and plenty. Her Mimi teaches her of faith and goodness. She teaches her to be true. And Mimi teaches Lucinda that to leave this world is a transition that is not to be feared. Take your child on their dazzling journey with Mirabelle Butterfield's lyrical, poetic prose and Irena Sophia's bright and brilliant illustrations. Take your child on Lucinda and Mimi's journey, and allow your child to absorb Mimi's important lessons, too. Fly among the clouds, and then land on a cloud, in this tender and charming book about the rich relationship between a girl and her remarkable grandmother.