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Books published by publisher Seabury Pr

  • The Way of the Wolf: The Gospel in New Images

    Martin Bell

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, June 1, 1970)
    Stories, songs, and poems based on Christian parables.
  • Good King Wenceslas: A Legend in Music and Pictures

    Anita Karl, Mary Reed Newland

    Hardcover (Seabury Press, March 15, 1980)
    Illustrated text of the well-known carol is accompanied by a brief history of the real Wenceslas, duke of Bohemia, and how the song about him came to be written.
  • Wriggles, the Little Wishing Pig

    Pauline Watson, Paul Galdone

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, June 1, 1978)
    What's a little pig to do when his wish for a mouth like an alligator, wings like a pelican, and legs like a crane comes true?
    K
  • The Irrational Season

    Madeleine L'Engle

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, Dec. 1, 1976)
    A persistent woman journeys through the annual and liturgical seasons, reflecting on and celebrating her humanity, her Christianity, and her conflicts as woman, wife, mother, and writer
    Z
  • A Grief Observed

    C. S. Lewis

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, Jan. 15, 1984)
    The eminent Christian essayist and scholar ponders life, faith, and God as he expresses his reactions to his wife's death
  • Three Aesop Fox Fables

    Aesop, Paul Galdone

    Hardcover (Seabury, July 19, 1971)
    Colorful versions of three classic fables illustrating simple truths about life
    Q
  • The Crystal Nights: A Novel

    Michele Murray

    Hardcover (Seabury Press, March 15, 1973)
    Book by Murray, Michele
  • Zoo 2000: Twelve Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy Beasts

    Jane Yolen

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, Oct. 1, 1973)
    Stories about humans and animals living in the future focus on man's ignorance and greed
    T
  • The Leatherman

    Dick Gackenbach

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, )
    None
    I
  • Moon Stories

    William Wiesner

    Hardcover (Seabury Pr, Sept. 1, 1973)
    Two folktales explaining the origin and appearance of the moon are presented with a story about a very conceited English astronomer
    O
  • Anne and the Sand Dobbies: A Story about Death for Children and Their Parents

    John B Coburn

    Hardcover (Seabury Press, Jan. 1, 1964)
    Editorial Review - Kirkus Reviews It is always difficult to describe and evaluate fiction that is manufactured to surround information and/or to instill a given attitude. Most fail to meet any literary standard applied. And yet, many of these books find defenders and a market because a certain amount of information filters through the fictional baffle screen. Anne and the Sand Dobbies is a case in point. It is intended as a book about death to be used by both parents and children. The author is Dean of Cambridge Theological Seminary. He immediately loses the storyteller's greatest audience advantage by giving away the story climax at the start; the reader is told that baby Anne and the dog Bonnie die. In choosing to tell the story in the words of an 11-year-old boy, other advantages are lost; vocabulary, insight and overview must all be kept within the limited range of Danny. His 2-year-old sister Anne, to whom he is devoted, dies of overnight pneumonia. The Episcopal funeral service, suggested parental attitudes (by example) towards death, grief and cremation are the facts Danny's story are meant to introduce. An awkward sub-plot is used to underline all this. It involves the death of the family dog. This leads to a re-enactment of the funeral service by Danny and his siblings which he reports in a self-consciously cute manner. The sand dobbies of the title are fantasy creatures. Their presence in the story is an element of further confusion. Readers of very formal or fundamental persuasions will find this treatment of the questions raised by the facts of death too casual.
  • The Way of the Wolf: The Gospel in New Images

    Martin Bell

    Hardcover (Seabury Press, March 15, 1970)
    None