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Books with title Promised Land Lane

  • Land of Promise

    Joan Lowery Nixon

    Hardcover (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, April 1, 1993)
    Rose Carney, a young girl from Ireland, befriends Rebecca, from Russia, and Kristen, from Sweden, during the long journey to America. They part ways at Ellis Island and Rose continues onto a new life in Chicago.From the Paperback edition.
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  • Promised Land

    Robert B. Parker

    Paperback (Berkley Books, March 15, 1987)
    None
  • PROMISED LAND

    ROBERT B. PARKER

    Paperback (Dell Publishing Co., Inc., March 15, 1987)
    None
  • Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1980)
    None
  • Land of Promise

    T L Tedrow;Thomas L Tedrow

    Paperback (Thomas Nelson Publishers, March 15, 1776)
    None
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 26, 2013)
    The Promised Land by Mary Antin - Mary Antin, June 13, 1881 – May 15, 1949, was an American author and immigration rights activist. Born to Israel and Esther Weltman Antin, a Jewish family in Polotsk, Belarus, at that time part of Russia, she immigrated to the Boston area with her mother and siblings in 1894, moving from Chelsea to Ward 8 in Boston's South End, a notorious slum, as the venue of her father's store changed. She attended Girls' Latin School, now Boston Latin Academy, after finishing primary school. She married Amadeus William Grabau, a geologist, in 1901, and moved to New York City where she attended Teachers College of Columbia University and Barnard College. Antin is best known for her 1912 autobiography The Promised Land, which describes her public school education and assimilation into American culture, as well as life for Jews in Czarist Russia. After its publication, Antin lectured on her immigrant experience to many audiences across the country, and became a major supporter for Theodore Roosevelt and his Progressive Party. During World War I, while she campaigned for the Allied cause, her husband's pro-German activities precipitated their separation and her physical breakdown. Amadeus was forced to leave his post at Columbia University to work in China, where he was one of the pioneers in Chinese geology. She was never physically strong enough to visit him there. During the war, Amadeus was interned by the Japanese and died shortly after his release in 1946. Mary died of cancer, May 15, 1949.
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin, Jules Chametzky

    (Modern Library, June 12, 2001)
    An extraordinary popular success when it was first published in 1912, The Promised Land is a classic account of the Jewish American immigrant experience. Mary Antin emigrated with her family from theEastern European town of Polotzk to Boston in 1894, when she was twelve years old. Preternaturally inquisitive, Antin was a provocative observer of the identity-altering contrasts between Old World andNew. Her narrative — of universal appeal and rich in its depictions of both worlds — captures a large-scale sociocultural landscape and paints a profound self-portrait of an iconoclast seeking to reconcile herheritage with her newfound identity as an American citizen.
  • In the Promised Land

    Doreen Rappaport, Cornelius Van Wright, Ying-Hwa Hu

    Hardcover (HarperColl, April 12, 2005)
    A magician plunges into the Mississippi River with wrists manacled together.A doctor comforts children before injecting them with an experimental vaccine he hopes will save the lives of millions.A law student, turned away from the Harvard library where women are not allowed, begins a career fighting for equal rights that leads to her appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court.These defining moments, described in vivid detail, introduce young readers to Harry Houdini, Dr. Jonas Salk, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, as well as ten other distinguished Jewish Americans. By focusing on one key scene from each of thirteen people's lives, ac-claimed author Doreen Rappaport and noted artists Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu give young readers an exciting introduction to the great history of Jewish Americans.
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  • Land of Promise

    Thomas L. Tedrow

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 1995)
    Laura and the other inhabitants of Mansfield, Missouri, face the problems of racism and a clash of cultures when Chinese immigrants try to settle in the pioneer community.
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    (Book Jungle, Feb. 2, 2009)
    Rare book
  • Promised

    Caragh M. O'Brien

    Paperback (Square Fish, Sept. 3, 2013)
    After defying the ruthless Enclave, surviving the wasteland, and upending the rigid matriarchy of Sylum, Gaia Stone now faces her biggest challenge ever. She must lead the people of Sylum back to the Enclave and persuade the Protectorat to grant them refuge from the wasteland. In Gaia's absence, the Enclave has grown more cruel, more desperate to experiment on mothers from outside the wall, and now the stakes of cooperating or rebelling have never been higher. Is Gaia ready, as a leader, to sacrifice what―or whom―she loves most? Promised is the thrilling conclusion to Caragh O'Brien's Birthmarked Trilogy.
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  • A Promised Land?

    Alan Collins

    Paperback (University of Queensland Press, )
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