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Books with title Hide and Seek in Colors

  • Hide and Seek

    Wilkie Collins

    eBook (, June 1, 2020)
    Hide and Seek was Wilkie Collins' third published novel. It is the first of his novels involving the solution of a mystery, the elements of which are clearer to the reader than to the novel's characters. Suspense is created from the reader's uncertainty as to which characters will find out the truth, when and how.The novel has a convoluted plot, in common with many of Collins’ works.[2] It falls into two parts:the history of “Madonna” GriceMatthew Grice’s discovery of her.Mary Grice is courted and seduced by a man calling himself Arthur Carr. Carr is called away on business, and his letters to Mary (presumably professing his honourable intentions toward her) are intercepted by Mary’s sister Joanna, who considers Carr to be socially inferior to the Grices. Joanna drives the pregnant, unmarried Mary from the family home. Mary gives birth to a daughter and dies miserably, attended only by performers from a travelling circus.Martha Peckover, wife of one of the clowns, adopts the baby (also Mary) and takes possession of her one heirloom, a bracelet made of Mary Sr.’s & Carr’s hair. Mary Jr. becomes a circus performer and is struck deaf and dumb after a riding accident, making her one of several of Collins’ characters with severe physical disabilities. She is exploited by the circus owner, and to rescue her Mrs Peckover takes her to the home of a minister, Dr Joyce. There Valentine Blyth, a painter, sees her and himself adopts her. Mary Jr. grows up beautiful and acquires the nickname Madonna for her resemblance to figures of the Virgin Mary in Italian Renaissance painting. She is admired by Valentine's friend Zack Thorpe, a high-spirited but vacuous young man somewhat resembling Allan Armadale in the novel of that name. Zack leaves home after disagreements with his ultra-religious and disciplinarian father.In a brawl in a disreputable theatre, Zack defends a man who turns out to be Matthew (Mat) Grice, Mary Sr.’s brother, and moves in with him. Mat has spent decades wandering the Americas, but returns home after making his fortune on the California goldfields. Mat's next concern is to find out the fate of his family. He establishes from Joanna that Mary Sr. is dead but her child was born alive. Mat decides to trace the child.Zack introduces Mat to Valentine, who invites Mat to sit for him as a model. In Valentine's house, Mat meets Madonna and also catches sight of a hair bracelet, which he suspects is originally Mary's. He secretly obtains a key to Valentine's bureau and on a visit to the house opens the bureau, identifies the bracelet and satisfies himself that Madonna is Mary's child. He is surprised in the act by Madonna but escapes by blowing out her candle, after which she can neither see nor hear him.Mat then sets about finding Arthur Carr. His efforts are hindered by Joanna's death and Mrs Peckover's disclosure that neither she nor Valentine know who he was. However Mat is struck by the resemblance between Carr's hair (of which he has obtained the part unused in the bracelet) and Zack's. He surmises that Carr is Zack's straitlaced father, confronts him and obtains his confession.Madonna is thus revealed as Zack's half-sister, and he can no longer court her. He accompanies Mat to the New World, but eventually persuades him to return home to his adoptive "family" of the Blyths (with whom Madonna remains) and Zack.
  • Hide and Seek

    Katy Grant

    Hardcover (Peachtree Publishing Company, Aug. 1, 2010)
    After a summer cooped up in his family’s store selling bait, tackle, and soft drinks to tourists, fourteen-year-old Chase finally gets a chance to go on his first solo geocaching adventure.Using his GPS in the foothills of the Arizona White Mountains, he uncovers the geocache―a small metal box―hidden deep in the woods in some undergrowth. Inside, with a few plastic army men and a log book, is a troubling message asking for help in a child’s handwriting.When Chase returns later, he finds another message in the geocache box, this time asking for food. He is curious―and worried―about the mysterious individuals leaving the messages. Before he can turn to the adults around him for help, Chase is pulled into a complex, dangerous drama and a chilling confrontation with an unstable father who will stop at nothing to hold on to his children.Young readers will learn all about the high-tech adventure game of geocaching in Katy Grant’s exciting novel that features heart-pounding action and surprising plot twists.
    W
  • Hide and Seek

    Ian Rankin, Michael Page

    Audio CD (Brilliance Audio, Sept. 2, 2014)
    In a shadowy, crumbling Edinburgh housing development, a junkie lies dead of an overdose, his body surrounded by signs of Satanic worship. Inspector John Rebus could call it an accident. But won’t. Now he’s got to search the city, from the tunnels of its dark underbelly to the private sanctum of the upper crust, to find the perfect hiding place for a killer.“Ian Rankin is up there among the best crime novelists at work today.” —Michael Connelly “A superior series.” —The New York Times Book Review“Ian Rankin, you cannot go wrong.” —The Boston Globe“A novelist of great scope, depth, and power.” —Jonathan Kellerman
  • Hide and Seek

    Ian Rankin, Michael Page

    MP3 CD (Brilliance Audio, Sept. 2, 2014)
    In a shadowy, crumbling Edinburgh housing development, a junkie lies dead of an overdose, his body surrounded by signs of Satanic worship. Inspector John Rebus could call it an accident. But won’t. Now he’s got to search the city, from the tunnels of its dark underbelly to the private sanctum of the upper crust, to find the perfect hiding place for a killer.“Ian Rankin is up there among the best crime novelists at work today.” —Michael Connelly “A superior series.” —The New York Times Book Review“Ian Rankin, you cannot go wrong.” —The Boston Globe“A novelist of great scope, depth, and power.” —Jonathan Kellerman
  • Hide and Seek Colors

    Jane Horne

    Board book (Make Believe Ideas, July 1, 2007)
    Hide and Seek Colors is a colorful, photographic board book with a press-out magnifying glass attached to a ribbon that encourages children to look carefully at the pages, spot things, and remember details.
    L
  • Hide and Seek

    Roberta Seckler Brown, Sal Murdocca

    Paperback (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 1994)
    Story of friends playing hide and seek. Large type. Colorful illustrations. Phrases repeated.
    M
  • Hide and Seek

    Janet Asbridge

    eBook
    Larry the lion is “it” in this rousing game of hide and seek. Will he be able to find the naughty monkeys? Hide and Seek is a guided reading level D text with clear picture support, dialogue and a changing pattern. End of Kindergarten - early first grade reading level.
  • Hide and Seek

    Bettine Le Beau

    language (mardibooks, July 29, 2013)
    This story starts with two young adults, full of dreams and hopes, who dare to accept challenges and hardships so as to reach a better future where there will be no hate or persecution. Both possess a healthy self-image spurring them on for action with confidence in the belief that by living in accordance to moral values and practising integrity they cannot go wrong. These are Leopold and Rachel, born in Poland around the turn of the 20th Century; born at a time when the persecution of the Jews was becoming unbearable.This story looks at what happened when Bettine and her brother, their children, become separated from them in the early part of the Second World War, and presents an enthralling and nailbiting tale of intrigue and human endeavour as people pull together in the misery of Nazi occupation in France, and individuals demonstrate love and humanity in their efforts to combat the evil in some human hearts.Bettine Le Beau is a successful actress from the 1960s/70s whose book - targeted specifically at a younger audience - sets about accounting for one of the most remarkable human stories of the Twentieth Century.
  • Hide and Seek

    Madison Michelson-Morley

    language (, Oct. 29, 2019)
    Help Olivia find her friends! "Hide and Seek" explores the Common Core principles of Counting to Ten and Relative Position. Kinder-Prep Books use cute characters and interactive stories to familiarize Preschool and Kindergarten kids with age level basics. The Kinder-Prep Vision is to make academic readiness fun with books that are colorful, smart, and entertaining.
  • Hide and Seek

    Jack Ketchum

    Paperback (Gauntlet Pr, Nov. 5, 2007)
    TRADE PAPERBACK EDITION OF THE OUT-OF-PRINT SECOND NOVEL FROM JACK KETCHUM.
  • Hide and Seek

    Wilkie Collins

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 5, 2016)
    The novel has a convoluted plot, in common with many of Collins’ works.It falls into two parts: the history of “Madonna” Grice Matthew Grice’s discovery of her. Mary Grice is courted and seduced by a man calling himself Arthur Carr. Carr is called away on business, and his letters to Mary (presumably professing his honourable intentions toward her) are intercepted by Mary’s sister Joanna, who considers Carr to be socially inferior to the Grices. Joanna drives the pregnant, unmarried Mary from the family home. Mary gives birth to a daughter and dies miserably, attended only by performers from a travelling circus. Martha Peckover, wife of one of the clowns, adopts the baby (also Mary) and takes possession of her one heirloom, a bracelet made of Mary Sr.’s & Carr’s hair. Mary Jr. becomes a circus performer and is struck deaf and dumb after a riding accident, making her one of several of Collins’ characters with severe physical disabilities. She is exploited by the circus owner, and to rescue her Mrs Peckover takes her to the home of a minister, Dr Joyce. There Valentine Blyth, a painter, sees her and himself adopts her. Mary Jr. grows up beautiful and acquires the nickname Madonna for her resemblance to figures of the Virgin Mary in Italian Renaissance painting. She is admired by Valentine's friend Zack Thorpe, a high-spirited but vacuous young man somewhat resembling Allan Armadale in the novel of that name. Zack leaves home after disagreements with his ultra-religious and disciplinarian father. In a brawl in a disreputable theatre, Zack defends a man who turns out to be Matthew (Mat) Grice, Mary Sr.’s brother, and moves in with him. Mat has spent decades wandering the Americas, but returns home after making his fortune on the California goldfields. Mat's next concern is to find out the fate of his family. He establishes from Joanna that Mary Sr. is dead but her child was born alive. Mat decides to trace the child. Zack introduces Mat to Valentine, who invites Mat to sit for him as a model. In Valentine's house, Mat meets Madonna and also catches sight of a hair bracelet, which he suspects is originally Mary's. He secretly obtains a key to Valentine's bureau and on a visit to the house opens the bureau, identifies the bracelet and satisfies himself that Madonna is Mary's child. He is surprised in the act by Madonna but escapes by blowing out her candle, after which she can neither see nor hear him. Mat then sets about finding Arthur Carr. His efforts are hindered by Joanna's death and Mrs Peckover's disclosure that neither she nor Valentine know who he was. However Mat is struck by the resemblance between Carr's hair (of which he has obtained the part unused in the bracelet) and Zack's. He surmises that Carr is Zack's straitlaced father, confronts him and obtains his confession. Madonna is thus revealed as Zack's half-sister, and he can no longer court her. He accompanies Mat to the New World, but eventually persuades him to return home to his adoptive "family" of the Blyths (with whom Madonna remains) and Zack.
  • Hide and Seek

    Wilkie Collins

    Paperback (Dover Publications, Nov. 24, 2011)
    Dickens, Swinburne, and Macaulay all lavished praise on Hide and Seek, the third of Wilkie Collins’ novels (1854) and his first attempt at a mystery. In a letter to his sister-in-law, Dickens remarked: “I think it far and away the cleverest novel I have ever seen written by a new hand …. In short, I call it a very remarkable book.” In this early effort, we find Collins — considered English fiction’s first detective novelist — experimenting with the detective story and honing the skills of narrative and plot construction brought to such a high level in his later masterpieces, The Woman in White and The Moonstone.Besides its mystery-story elements, Hide and Seek succeeds as a warm, entertaining tale that blends domestic comedy, pathos, humor, and a smattering of social protest. It also enabled Collins to introduce a gallery of memorable characters: Mary Grice (nicknamed Madonna), the gentle deaf-mute whose mysterious origins and tragic early life form the basis of the novel; the engaging and voluble Zach Thorpe, of whom Mary is enamored; her guardian Valentine Blyth — a failure as an artist but a success as a human being — and Matthew Marksman, the strange and wild woodsman who finally unravels the shocking story of Mary’s true origins.Hide and Seek is a distinct departure from the lurid melodrama of Collins’ second novel, Basil, and a milestone in the author’s progress toward maturity as a novelist. In its pages readers will find the ingenious plot construction and storytelling skill that Collins felt to be the true calling of the novelist.Admirers of Wilkie Collins — and Victorian fiction in general — will savor the novel’s vivid descriptions of exciting events, its sustained power of imaginative suggestion, and the author’s shrewd and compassionate depiction of Victorian manners and morals.