Browse all books

Books with title Elizabeth

  • Elizabeth's Song

    Michael Wenberg, Cornelius Van Wright

    Library Binding (Gareth Stevens Pub Learning library, Dec. 1, 2002)
    A fictionalized account of how an eleven-year-old girl, Elizabeth "Libba" Cotten, saved to buy her first guitar and composed the popular folksong, "Freight Train."
    J
  • Eleanor, Elizabeth

    Libby Gleeson

    Paperback (Puffin / Penguin Books, March 15, 1986)
    None
  • Elizabeth's Books

    Wendy Sweat

    Paperback (Palmetto Publishing Group, Jan. 24, 2018)
    Today is a special day! Five-year-old Elizabeth is going to the store with her parents, and she can’t wait to look for a new book to add to her collection. Will she choose a book about dragons and knights, a book about dinosaurs, or maybe a book about her favorite fantastic creatures—mermaids? And what will Elizabeth do later that night when her favorite mermaid books go missing? Elizabeth thinks she’ll never get to sleep—but when she finally does, she’s in for a big surprise as the characters from her books come to life. Early readers will find Elizabeth’s love of books contagious in this story of a normal day turned into an underwater adventure all because of a young girl’s vivid imagination.
  • Elizabeth Dole

    Richard Kozar

    Paperback (Chelsea House Pub, Dec. 1, 1999)
    A biography of the woman who has been a member of the Federal Trade Commission, Secretary of Transportation, president of the American Red Cross, and possible presidential candidate
  • Elizabeth's War

    D.L. Finn, Monica Gibson

    Paperback (BookBaby, June 30, 2015)
    It's April of 1917, and World War I has reached Elizabeth's family on their wheat farm in North Dakota. Although the battles are being fought overseas, the war has affected her in ways she couldn't have imagined. Elizabeth is thrust into a new role after her brother and father leave the farm to do their part in the war. And she's only eleven years old! Having almost died as a toddler, Elizabeth has been babied most of her life. Now she must learn to help out around the farm; cooking, cleaning, and tending to the garden and livestock. No longer can she run from her responsibilities, as she did when her horse Rosie was giving birth. There were complications during the delivery, and Elizabeth panicked and froze. The foal didn't make it. Elizabeth faces her biggest challenge yet as a huge Christmas Eve snowstorm rages outside, cutting her family off from any help; and her mother is about to have a baby! Her brother and sister are laid up with chicken pox. Does Elizabeth face her fears or run from them? Can she help her family, who need her more now than ever? Or will she retreat like she did when Rosie needed her?
    R
  • Queen Elizabeth I

    Leon Ashworth

    Hardcover (Evans Brothers, Feb. 1, 2002)
    The life of Queen Elizabeth I is described in this book, which is part of the British History Makers series on famous figures who shaped historical events. Through the use of artwork, documentary evidence, and fact-filled information panels, a rounded picture is given of the turbulent time in which she lived.
    W
  • Queen Elizabeth

    Jacob Abbott

    Hardcover (Blurb, May 22, 2019)
    Queen Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, was England's greatest monarch. This riveting account of her life and her exploits during her mid-sixteenth century reign provide the reader with a comprehensive insight into events which have become engraved in world history. Starting with her family background, master storyteller Jacob Abbott takes the reader on a nonstop narration through her imprisonment, the intrigues which led to her ascension to the throne following the reign of "Bloody Mary," the formal establishment of the English Protestant ("Anglican") church, the threats to her life after the Pope released her subjects from all loyalty to her throne, the war with Scotland, and the momentous defeat of the Spanish Armada. It also discusses her personal life, lovers, suitors, and death in 1603 after forty-four tumultuous years as leader of her nation. During her time, England started on its path to establishing a world empire, and gifted the world such intellectual treasures as William Shakespeare. This edition has been completely reset and illustrated.
  • Elizabeth's Rival

    Francine Pascal

    Paperback (Bantam, July 6, 1996)
    Book by Francine Pascal
  • Queen Elizabeth I

    Harriet Castor, Peter Kent

    Paperback (Franklin Watts Ltd, )
    None
  • Elizabeth Fry

    Angela Bull

    Hardcover (David & Charles, )
    None
  • Anna Elizabeth

    Lucile Long

    Hardcover (Brethren Publishing House, March 15, 1942)
    None
  • Queen Elizabeth

    Jacob Abbott

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Jan. 6, 2015)
    Jacob Abbott was a well-known 19th century historian who wrote biographies on various leaders and famous individuals, including this one about Queen Elizabeth I of England. When Queen Elizabeth II came to the throne in 1952, many commentators heralded the beginning of her reign as the second Elizabethan age. The first one, of course, concerned the reign of Henry VIII’s second surviving daughter and middle surviving child, Queen Elizabeth I, one of England’s most famous and influential rulers. It was an age when the arts, commerce and trade flourished. It was the epoch of gallantry and great, enduring literature. It was also an age of wars and military conflicts in which men were the primary drivers and women often were pawns. Elizabeth I changed the rules of the game and indeed she herself was changed by the game. She was a female monarch of England, a kingdom that had unceremoniously broken with the Catholic Church, and the Vatican and the rest of Christendom was baying for her blood. She had had commercial and militaristic enemies galore. In the end, she helped change the entire structure of female leadership. Elizabeth was the last Tudor sovereign, the daughter of the cruel and magnificent King Henry VIII and a granddaughter of the Tudor House’s founder, the shrewd Henry VII. Elizabeth, hailed as “Good Queen Bess,” “Gloriana” and “The Virgin Queen” to this day in the public firmament, would improve upon Henry VIII’s successes and mitigate his failures, and despite her own failings would turn out to “have the heart and stomach of a king, and a king of England too”. Indeed, that was the phrase she would utter in describing herself while exhorting her troops to fight for England against the Spanish Armada). Elizabeth often has been featured in biographies that were more like hagiographies, glossing over her fits of temper, impatience and other frailties. It is fair to say, however, that she had also inherited her grandfather’s political acumen and her father’s magnificence, thus creating not just one of the most colourful courts in Europe but also one of the most effective governments in English history. It was an age of Christopher Marlowe’s and William Shakespeare’s flourishing creativity that still enhances English as well as comparative literature. Elizabeth was also patroness of Sir Francis Drake, the pirate, thereby promoting English settlement of foreign colonies. The Jamestown Settlement in Virginia would come in 1607, four years after Elizabeth’s passing, and the Plymouth colony in Massachusetts would come in 1620. Elizabeth had also fought for her life time and time again in an era that was already unsafe for female leaders and she probably had remembered the searing feeling of realizing that her mother Queen Anne (Anne Boleyn) had been executed by her father arguably on a trumped-up charge. Danger was pervasive; strategy was needed not just to thrive but just to survive.