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Books published by publisher New Chapter Press

  • Out of Synch

    Warren Firschein

    Paperback (Chapter Two Press, March 3, 2015)
    Thirteen-year-old Katie Phillips dreams of reaching the U.S.Synchronized Swimming National Championships. But her sports-obsessed father wants her to quit the team to focus on swimming races--real swimming, as he puts it--to earn a college scholarship like her narcissistic older brother Nick, a Florida state record holder. When Katie's duet partner is seriously injured in a freak accident during practice, her determination to overcome her family's lack of support is put to the test as her life unravels around her. She's on the verge of failing math class, and her tough-as-nails swim coach is pushing her hard to qualify for states in the 200 freestyle. Then there's the boy she can't stop thinking about. And through it all, she wonders just what her muscle-bound brother is trying to hide about his record-setting performance two years earlier.
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  • The Day They Gave Babies Away

    Dale Eunson

    Hardcover (New Chapter Press, Oct. 1, 1990)
    Based on a true story, this book tells the tale of a 12-year-old boy who, after the death of his parents, gives his five younger brothers and sisters away to carefully chosen families on Christmas Day.
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  • Out of Synch

    Warren Firschein

    eBook (Chapter Two Press, Feb. 28, 2015)
    Thirteen-year-old Katie Phillips dreams of reaching the U.S. Synchronized Swimming National Championships. But her sports-obsessed father wants her to quit the team to focus on swimming races—real swimming, as he puts it—to earn a college scholarship like her narcissistic older brother Nick, a Florida state record holder.When Katie’s duo partner is seriously injured in a freak accident during practice, her determination to overcome her family’s lack of support is put to the test as her life unravels around her. She’s on the verge of failing math class, and her tough-as-nails swim coach is pushing her hard to qualify for states in the 200 freestyle. Then there’s the boy she can’t stop thinking about. And through it all, she wonders just what her muscle-bound brother is trying to hide about his record-setting performance two years earlier . . . .
  • Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong, Revised and Updated Edition

    James W. Loewen

    Hardcover (New Press, April 1, 2008)
    The national bestseller and winner of the American Book Award, thoroughly updated for the first time since its initial publication to include textbooks written since 2000 and featuring a new chapter on what textbooks get wrong about 9/11 and Iraq.Since its initial publication in 1995, Lies My Teacher Told Me has gone on to win an American Book Award and the Oliver Cromwell Cox Award for Distinguished Anti-Racist Scholarship, and to sell one million copies in its various editions.What started out as a survey of the twelve leading American history textbooks has ended up being what the San Francisco Chronicle calls "an extremely convincing plea for truth in education" beginning with the pre-Columbian period and ranging over characters and events as diverse as Reconstruction, Helen Keller, the first Thanksgiving, and the My Lai massacre.In this revised and updated edition, James Loewen surveys six new high school history textbooks written since the first edition of Lies was published. In his inimitable style, he adds material to each chapter noting where the new books have gotten more accurate and where they are still fatally flawed. Loewen also writes at length about the way these textbooks treat the 2001 terrorist attacks and our "response" in Iraq. In fact, while researching this new edition Loewen made the front page of the New York Times in 2006 when he discovered that publishers were passing off as original virtually identical passages on important recent events in a number of history books. And in yet another example of the failure of American history textbooks, he found that "celebrity" historians whose names appear as authors in some cases have never read, let alone written, the texts attributed to them.
  • Growing Up In Great Neck, 1941-1947

    Ewing Walker

    Paperback (New Chapter Press, April 10, 2018)
    A son finds his dying father's book manuscript, written long in the past about his childhood life growing up in Great Neck, New York during World War II. The son reads the series of short stories out loud to his father on his death bed to give him comfort in his final days, subtly reminding him that he will soon be reunited with his parents and childhood friends.
  • Growing Up In Great Neck, 1941-1947

    Ewing Walker, Randy Walker

    language (New Chapter Press, April 5, 2018)
    A son finds his dying father's book manuscript, written long in the past about his childhood life growing up in Great Neck, New York during World War II. The son reads the series of short stories out loud to his father on his death bed to give him comfort in his final days, subtly reminding him that he will soon be reunited with his parents and childhood friends.
  • This Is College: A Novella Based On True-Life Debauchery

    Jake Shore, Drew Moffitt

    language (New Chapter Press, Aug. 2, 2014)
    "A hilarious tale of college debauchery with a positive moral undercurrent. Dan Turner makes mistakes in college so readers don't have to. A fast paced, present tense whirlwind through New York City and Higher Education."
  • Cole Family Christmas

    Jennifer Liu Bryan, Hazel Cole Kendle

    Hardcover (Next Chapter Press, Sept. 15, 2008)
    The wish book. This amazing year, the nine children in the Cole family have been allowed to sit down with the Sears, Roebuck and Company catalogue to choose the gift they would most like to receive for Christmas. This is a rare event, for the Coles are not wealthy. Indeed, "Cole Family Christmas" is the true, tender, and wholly unforgettable tale of a coal miner's family. The story takes place in the small company town of Benham, Kentucky, in a time (1920) and place when coal was king and families made their precarious living mining the dirty and sometimes deadly coal.When one of Mama's few possessions, a treasured purple glass bowl with fluted edges, is accidentally broken by exuberant children rushing in from the outdoors, and an unlikely blizzard prevents Papa from coming home after working extra hours at the coal mine on Christmas Eve, the stage is set for a Christmas morning in which gifts are given and received that no one could have predicted.
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  • The Adventures of Berkeley the Bear

    Erin L Sponaugle

    Paperback (Next Chapter Press, Aug. 8, 2017)
    Berkeley is a black bear living in the Monongahela Forest with his Sugar Maple Friends. He is content to represent his beloved state of West Virginia from his forest home, until the day his favorite park rangers ask him to be the state travel bear. Berkeley learns to have confidence in his abilities as he tries new things traveling the Mountain State, introducing children to the most beautiful and historic places in West Virginia. His Sugar Maple Friends - each representing a state symbol and county in West Virginia - are there to support Berkeley each step of the way. Erin Sponaugle, the 2014 West Virginia Teacher of the Year, uses an endearing storyline and full page illustrations to instill the values of state pride, friendship, and self confidence in young readers.
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  • The Day They Gave Babies Away by Dale Eunson

    Dale Eunson

    Hardcover (New Chapter Press, Jan. 1, 1700)
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  • The Studs Terkel Reader: My American Century

    Studs Terkel, Robert Coles, Calvin Trillin

    Paperback (New Press, May 1, 2007)
    "A summing up of the best of Terkel."—Herbert Mitgang, DoubletakeThe Studs Terkel Reader, originally published under the title My American Century, collects the best interviews from eight of Terkel's classic oral histories together with his magnificent introductions to each work. Featuring selections from American Dreams, Coming of Age, Division Street, "The Good War", The Great Divide, Hard Times, Race, and Working, this "greatest hits" volume is a treasury of Terkel's most memorable subjects that will delight his many lifelong fans and provide a perfect introduction for those who have not yet experienced the joy of reading Studs Terkel. It includes an introduction by Pulitzer Prize-winner Robert Coles surveying Terkel's overall body of work and a new foreword by Calvin Trillin.
  • Phoebe's Not Afraid

    Jason Glaser, Isabella Johnson

    Hardcover (New Challenger Press, Feb. 28, 2019)
    Jason Glaser combines the simple fears of young children, such as going down the drain of the bathtub, with the nonsensical nature of elephant jokes to tell a story of a child determined not to let her fears get the worst of her. With her whimsical solutions to a child's unanticipated problems, Phoebe has all she needs to make it through the day without giving in to her worries about what could go wrong instead.
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