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Books with title In the Trees

  • In the Trees

    Pauline Fisk

    eBook (Faber & Faber, Jan. 3, 2011)
    All around him, the smell of trees rose from the ground, earthy and dank, just the way he'd smelt it that first day. And he'd heard a voice that day, which he'd thought was calling out a welcome. But really it had been calling out for help.'Kid Cato's come to Belize, on the Caribbean coast. He's left behind his life in London and is looking for his dad. But what he finds instead is a group of gap year volunteers. They're just the boring, do-good types he's always hated, but he's stuck with them. Stuck with the jungle too - but, by the time it's done with him, he'l never be the same. And neither will Kid's new companions. Living in the trees will change them all.'Forest are like lungs. They breathe life into us and make us one. Here we are from worlds apart. And thanks to the forest we're sharing one life. Where we come from doesn't matter, or what we once were in the past. It's what we are now that matters. It's what we make of ourselves.'
  • Rats In The Trees

    Jess Mowry

    Paperback (Anubis, Jan. 31, 2017)
    Rats In The Trees is Jess Mowry's first book, written in 1989 and published by John Daniel & Co. of Santa Barbara, California in 1990. It's a collection of interrelated stories about street kids, though most about Robby, a 13-year-old boy from Fresno, California who runs away from a foster home. Robby arrives in Oakland on a Greyhound bus, then, lost and alone, he's befriended by a "gang" of 12 and 13-year-olds who call themselves The Animals. Rats portrays the conditions for many inner city kids during the late 1980's -- around the end of Ronald Regan's "trickle-down theory" and the beginning of George H.W. Bush's "kinder, gentler nation" -- which was when crack-cocaine was starting to flood into mostly poor black neighborhoods as if designed to bring down the people and especially to destroy kids. Sadly, all the predictions made in Rats have come true; the ever-increasing dominance of guns drugs and violence, kids killing kids, and the shameful decline in the quality of public education. Rats In The Trees received a PEN Josephine Miles Award for excellence in literature in 1990, and was published in the U.K., Germany and Japan. It was also reprinted by Viking in the U.S. This Anubis Edition includes an extra story and original text not available in previous editions.
  • Rats In The Trees

    Jess Mowry

    language (Anubis, Sept. 18, 2011)
    Rats In The Trees is Jess Mowry's first book -- written in 1989 and published by John Daniel & Company in 1990 -- a collection of interrelated stories about street kids in Oakland, California, though mostly about Robby, a 13-year-old African-American boy from Fresno, California who runs away from an abusive foster home. Robby arrives in Oakland on a Greyhound bus, then, lost and alone, he's befriended by an interracial "gang" of 12 and 13-year-olds with a united passion for skateboarding, who call themselves The Animals.The stories were originally "told stories" for kids at a West Oakland youth center where Mowry worked at the time; and when he began to write them down he kept that gritty rawness. The boys skate with the gear of the times, speak their own dialect of black and skate-punk, relate to a mix of rock and rap, defend their ground and try to be kids while fighting to survive.Rats In The Trees, while not pretending to be a documentary, portrays the conditions for many inner city kids during the late 1980's -- around the end of "Reganomics" and the beginning of George Bush's "kinder, gentler America" -- which was when crack-cocaine was starting to flood into mostly poor black neighborhoods, as if designed to bring down the people, and especially to destroy kids.The times of happy black music of the late 1970s and early 80s were ending. So was the social-awareness and Brotherhood which had bonded, strengthened and sustained black people during the '60s and 70s. The break-dance era was over, and the brutal years of gangster rap, of self-hatred fostering black-on-black crime, and guns, gangs, drugs and violence were beginning as if in retaliation for that brief interlude of relative peace.Robby and The Animals were old enough to remember the days when black people seemed united in a common cause of freedom and justice; and like most black kids at the time they knew they were losing something.Sadly, all the predictions made in Rats have come true, the ever-increasing black-on-black crime, the guns, gangs, drugs and violence in the U.S., kids killing kids, and the shameful decline in the quality of public education.School shootings were also mentioned.Of course, much of the language and many of the expressions, as well as some attitudes toward certain types of people, have changed since 1989 -- or are at least masked by political-correctness these days -- but after reading this book judge for yourself if the U.S. has gotten kinder, gentler or any more enlightened since then despite all the political-correctness and Pollyanna lip-service given to equality.Rats In The Trees received a PEN Josephine Miles Award in 1990, and was published in the U.K., Germany and Japan. It was also reprinted by Viking in the U.S.The stories were originally "stand-alone" stories, and several were published on their own in the U.S. and abroad. The author has done some editing where there were repetitive descriptions of characters and settings. This Anubis Edition includes an extra story and additional material not available in print editions, as well as a foreward by the author.
  • In the Trees

    Pauline Fisk

    Paperback (Faber & Faber, )
    None
  • Rats in the Trees

    Jess Mowry

    Paperback (Penguin Books, May 1, 1993)
    Arriving in Oakland with his skateboard and dreams of living by the ocean, thirteen-year-old Robby befriends the Animals, a street gang whose culture is based on skateboards, beer, rap slang, and danger
  • The Trees

    Sean Earl

    language (, Feb. 9, 2017)
    "The feeling was similar to the encounter with the coyote, only this time the message was something darker..."
  • The Trees

    Joyce Dotson, Susan L. Harrington

    language (, Feb. 28, 2016)
    This book shares the personalities of 12 trees as seen through the eyes of the author's children and grandchildren and through the author's eyes.Suitable for young children.
  • High in the Trees

    Neecy Twinem

    eBook (StarWalk Kids Media, Aug. 22, 2014)
    "My soft pouch is for my baby. . . . I curl up and sleep all day high in the trees." This adorable fluffy-eared marsupial munches on eucalyptus leaves in the treetops as the clues build up to the final spread and the answer: "I am a koala!"
    F
  • In The Tree

    Maura Sidel, Shirley Beckes

    Paperback (Houghton Mifflin Company, March 15, 2015)
    2015 Houghton Mifflin Vocabulary Readers Grade K Week 4 Unit 16 -- In the Tree (P) by Maura Sidel / Illustrated by Shirley Beckes ***Level: C / DRA: $ / Genre: Informational Text / Strategy: Summarize / Skill: Details / Word Count: 110 ***ISBN-13: 9780547017204 ***Condition: Like New ***12 Pages
    C
  • High in the Trees

    Neecy Twinem

    Board book (Charlesbridge, July 1, 1996)
    "My soft pouch is for my baby. . . . I curl up and sleep all day high in the trees." This adorable fluffy-eared marsupial munches on eucalyptus leaves in the treetops as the clues build up to the final spread and the answer-"I am a koala!"
    F
  • In Trees

    Moira Butterfield

    Hardcover (Belitha Press Ltd, )
    None
  • The Trees

    Mr Stanley Lake

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Nov. 10, 2015)
    The Trees A tropical island, where the earth provides ample food and comfort for the island dwellers, where all are friendly with one another and where sharing the bounty from the earth is the norm. But one night a giant storm takes everything away from the villagers and they must learn, as a community, the best way to rebuild and replant. This is a story of looking past the present and finding the best road to the future. "My wife was reading to me advice written in a gardening book from 1910... “Fruit trees should be planted on the edge of your property so that the shade from that tree falls on your neighbor’s plot.” “But wait,” I said, “what about the garden of your neighbor? Won’t the tree affect the light shining on her garden?” And thus, the foundation for this book was dug and the seed planted and the ideas watered." Stanley Lake, author
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