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Books with title Letters to Karen

  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Mass Market Paperback (HarperCollins, Oct. 1, 1976)
    Karen Shedd was away at college and had recently become engaged. Looking forward to a long and happy union, she wrote to her father for advice. Dr. Shedd, a popular minister and father of five, began writing Karen a series of letters on keeping love in marriage. They were eventually published in a collection that soon became one of the most widely quoted and bestselling books of our time.
  • Letters to Leo

    Amy Hest, Julia Denos

    Paperback (Candlewick, Sept. 9, 2014)
    “Upbeat and chirpy, and decorated with lots of kid-style illustrations, Leo evokes sympathy with a light touch.” — School Library Journal (starred review)The joys and trials of fourth grade —and of life with her father now that her mother is gone — play out in charming letters from Annie to her dog, Leo. Genuine and funny, Amy Hest’s first-person narration revisits a winning young character as she takes on a new year — and a new dog — with humor, honesty, and resilience.
    O
  • Letters to Katesha

    Keyon Reed

    language (, March 28, 2019)
    Letters to katesha is handwritten letters by Keyon Reed expressing his feelings for his College sweetheart who he married an.
  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Paperback (Abingdon Press, Oct. 1, 1977)
    Karen Shedd was away at college and had recently become engaged. Looking forward to a long and happy union, she wrote to her father for advice. Dr. Shedd, a popular minister and father of five, began writing Karen a series of letters on keeping love in marriage. They were eventually published in a collection that soon became one of the most widely quoted and bestselling books of our time.
  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Hardcover (Barbour Publishing, Incorporated, June 1, 1992)
    Karen Shedd was away at college and had recently become engaged. Looking forward to a long and happy union, she wrote to her father for advice. Dr. Shedd, a popular minister and father of five, began writing Karen a series of letters on keeping love in marriage. They were eventually published in a collection that soon became one of the most widely quoted and bestselling books of our time.
  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Mass Market Paperback (Spire Books, Aug. 16, 1968)
    Excellent
  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Hardcover (Abingdon Press 1965, Jan. 1, 1965)
    None
  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Paperback (Avon, Jan. 1, 1968)
    None
  • Letters to Karen

    Charlie W. Shedd

    Hardcover (Lutterworth Press, Jan. 1, 1968)
    None
  • Letters to E.T.

    Steven Introduction By Spielberg, Illustrated by B/w Photos from Movie

    Hardcover (Putnam Pub Group, April 1, 1983)
    A collection of letters the many fans of all ages here on earth have written to the extraterrestrial star of the hit movie.
  • Letters to Leo

    Amy Hest, Julia Denos

    Hardcover (Candlewick, March 27, 2012)
    The joys and trials of fourth grade — and of life with her father now that her mother is gone — play out in charming letters from Annie to her dog, Leo.Annie Rossi never, ever thought her father would let her have a dog. But now that he’s finally given in, she’s found the perfect ear for the stories of her day. She just writes them in a notebook hidden under the bed and reads them to Leo in her soft night voice, like the one her mother used when reading to Annie at bedtime before she died. And Annie sure has a million stories to tell! There’s mean Edward, who brags about his “noble goldfish” and gets her in trouble for accidentally lobbing a volleyball into his nose. There’s her best friend, Jean-Marie, who ups and moves to New Jersey (and wants to borrow Leo for company!). There’s the poem Annie writes about her mom, which Miss Meadows asks her to read for the class. And there’s her professor dad, who is finally coming out of his shell, even though he is an elderly forty-year-old with a serious personality. Genuine and funny, Amy Hest’s first-person narration revisits a winning young character as she takes on a new year — and a new dog — with humor, honesty, and resiliency.
    O
  • Letters to Leo

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    Paperback (Candlewick, March 15, 1994)
    None