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Books with title Beasts Of The Harvest Moon

  • By the Light of the Harvest Moon

    Harriet Ziefert

    Hardcover (Blue Apple Books, Sept. 23, 2009)
    As the harvest moon shines down, the wind picks up, sending orange, yellow, and crimson leaves dancing, until they settle in a pumpkin patch. One-by-one, leaf people emerge to celebrate the autumnal equinox.Mark Jones's rich pastel illustrations bring to life the mysterious and fleeting world of a gentle troupe of leaf characters, who will warm the hearts of all readers.Book Details:Format: HardcoverPublication Date: 9/23/2009Pages: 40Reading Level: Age 3 and Up
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  • Beasts of the Harvest Moon

    John T. Taylor

    eBook (God Speed Express, Nov. 12, 2003)
    This is the story of Jonathan Rex, who worked for years in labor intensive jobs. His most recent employeer, God Speed Express a major international shipping company. Has taken the last bit of hope from his young 30 something life. Fed up with his future , Jonathan has turned to his dreams for answers and as a way to escape his lot in life. Little does he realize that the mind can truly shape reality. In his dreams he remembers a guide from his childhood, that returns to take him on a quest of self discovery which leads to corporate espionage. In his quest Jonathan Rex soon realizes that everyone has a part to play in creation, and that we were never alone in the universe! The author invites all questions and comments to be directed to JTBIGJOHN@aol.com Thank You!
  • The Harvest Moon

    David Neth

    language (DN Publishing, Aug. 6, 2016)
    A legacy of magic and danger.All Danielle Bowen wants is a normal life: white picket fence, kids in the nursery, and peace and quiet with her husband Simon. But she can’t escape the fate her family has wrought for her. Born into a tradition of witchcraft, she has also inherited a deadly enemy: Toxanna, a dark witch who will stop at nothing to destroy the last of the Bowen line.But will Danielle’s powers be enough to save her family—or even herself? And when Toxanna sets her sights on Holly, Danielle’s only daughter, will anyone have the strength to rescue the newly fledged witch? The darkness is closing around the last of the Bowens. In a world of wizards and powerful demons, how can one family of witches survive?
  • Beasts Of The Harvest Moon

    John T. Taylor

    Paperback (God Speed Express, Nov. 12, 2003)
    This is the story of Jonathan Rex, who worked for years in labor intensive jobs. His most recent employeer, God Speed Express a major international shipping company. Has taken the last bit of hope from his young 30 something life. Fed up with his future , Jonathan has turned to his dreams for answers and as a way to escape his lot in life. Little does he realize that the mind can truly shape reality. In his dreams he remembers a guide from his childhood, that returns to take him on a quest of self discovery which lead to corporate espionage. In his quest Jonathan Rex soon realizes that everyone has a part to play in creation, and that we were never alone in the universe! The author invites all questions and comments to be directed to JTBIGJOHN@aol.com Thank You!
  • The Harvest Moon

    David Neth

    language (DN Publishing, Aug. 6, 2016)
    A legacy of magic and danger.All Danielle Bowen wants is a normal life: white picket fence, kids in the nursery, and peace and quiet with her husband Simon. But she can’t escape the fate her family has wrought for her. Born into a tradition of witchcraft, she has also inherited a deadly enemy: Toxanna, a dark witch who will stop at nothing to destroy the last of the Bowen line.But will Danielle’s powers be enough to save her family—or even herself? And when Toxanna sets her sights on Holly, Danielle’s only daughter, will anyone have the strength to rescue the newly fledged witch? The darkness is closing around the last of the Bowens. In a world of wizards and powerful demons, how can one family of witches survive?Bound(Exclusive to the Deluxe Edition of The Harvest Moon)Orphaned by the shocking murder of both his parents, thirteen-year-old Drew must conceal his magical powers as he navigates the foster care system. But it might be easier for a young wizard to control his cracking voice than his magic. When one of Drew’s spells attracts the attention of a local coven called the Fire Wizards, Drew sees his chance to solve the mystery of who killed his parents with the coven’s help.There’s just one catch: once you enter the coven, you’re bound for life. And the more involved Drew becomes with the Fire Wizards, the faster his façade of safety crumbles. Can he find justice for his parents without binding himself to a world of magical peril?
  • The Harvest Moon

    J. S. Fletcher

    eBook (, Nov. 24, 2011)
    That Sunday eyening^ according to well-established custom, Cornelius Van de linde had the old farmstead all to himself, save that his favourite sheep-dog shared the hearth with him. His only child linda, then a great girl of eighteen* had gone across the meadows to the church at Fishlake; the two old pensioners who lived under his roof, Matthew and Sarah Jennett* one of whom spent his day in admiring the pigs while the other busied herself in sitting by the kitchen fire, had taken a leisurely progress towards the little chapel in the neighbouring village; the two maid-servants were out with their respective swains. The house was still as the_Jand outside—^the land from which the wheat and barley had just been safely garnered. Over land and house the soft September twilight, still golden with the glory of the scarce-disappeared sun, fell like a benediction.Cornelius always spent his Sunday evenings ioa methodical way. He was one of those elderly men who, by recollection of early training and from the inclination which comes with advancing age to stand by the things first thought, are lovers of system and order, liking to do to-day what they did yesterday and will do to-morrow, When the house was quiet, Linda having departed to church and the old folks to chapel, it was his custom to take the old family Bible from the great oak desk in which it was religiously enshrined and to read a chapter aloud to himself, the old dog standing by with alert eyes and cocked ears. This sacred duty over, he replaced the Bible in the desk, and from a secret drawer in that ancient receptacle drew forth certain bundles of letters tied up with strips of faded ribbon. These bundles were all superscribed in Cornelius's crabbed handwriting—^some, " My . Father's Letters"; some, " My Mother's Letters " ; some, " My Good Wife's Letters." He used to untie the ribbons with his gnaried fingers, and spread the letters out with reverent care, as if he had been a devotee handling the relics of a saint, and he would read a sentence or two here, or a page or two there, and sometimes a letter right through, and now and then he would come across a dried geranium leaf orthe petal of a rose, and these he would lightly touch with the tip of his little finger as if he feared they might crumble. Then he would make the letters into bundles again, and retie the faded ribbon, and put the bundles back into the secret drawer and relock the desk, and that done would fill and light hi§ pipe, and, with the sheep-dog at his heels, would go out into the flower-garden in front of the house to look around him at his well-filled stack-yard and at the broad acres from which he had once again reaped a good harvest.ComeUus Van de linde's farmstead stood in the midst of as level a tract of land as can be foimd in England outside the Fens. In all directions the country stretched away in an unbroken levelfor mile upon mile. The towers and spires of churches, the tall poplars which rose here and there, the gables and chimneys of an occasional manor-house—^these objects were discernible at long distances, so uniformly level was the land. But though it had once been nothing but bog and morass and fen, with great stretches of mere in which more than one royal sportsman had fished to- his heart's content, there was nothing cheerless or monotonous in its aspect. Unhke much reclaimed fen-landIt was well wooded, well supplied with thick hedgerows and prolific orchards and gardens, and it produced com crops at which no farmer could grumble. But, as its own folk were fond of saying, it was as flat as a pancake.
  • The Harvest Moon

    David Neth

    (DN Publishing, Aug. 5, 2016)
    A legacy of magic and danger. All Danielle Bowen wants is a normal life: white picket fence, kids in the nursery, and peace and quiet with her husband Simon. But she can’t escape the fate her family has wrought for her. Born into a tradition of witchcraft, she has also inherited a deadly enemy: Toxanna, a dark witch who will stop at nothing to destroy the last of the Bowen line. But will Danielle’s powers be enough to save her family—or even herself? And when Toxanna sets her sights on Holly, Danielle’s only daughter, will anyone have the strength to rescue the newly fledged witch? The darkness is closing around the last of the Bowens. In a world of wizards and powerful demons, how can one family of witches survive?
  • By the Light of the Harvest Moon

    Harriet Ziefert

    Hardcover (Blue Apple Books, Sept. 23, 2009)
    As the harvest moon shines down, the wind picks up, sending orange, yellow, and crimson leaves dancing, until they settle in a pumpkin patch. One-by-one, leaf people emerge to celebrate the autumnal equinox.Mark Jones's rich pastel illustrations bring to life the mysterious and fleeting world of a gentle troupe of leaf characters, who will warm the hearts of all readers.
    J
  • The Harvest Moon

    J.S. FLETCHER

    Hardcover (Doran, March 15, 1927)
    None
  • The harvest moon

    J. S Fletcher

    Hardcover (Doran, March 15, 1927)
    None
  • The Harvest Moon

    JS Fletcher

    Hardcover (Newnes, March 15, 1930)
    Newnes 1930? hardcover edition paperback good complete solid condition red boards In stock shipped from our UK warehouse
  • The Harvest Moon

    Joseph Smith Fletcher

    Paperback (Palala Press, Feb. 16, 2018)
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.