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Books with title Remembering the Titanic

  • Remembering the Titanic: A Novel

    Diane Hoh, Julia Whelan, Audible Studios

    Audiobook (Audible Studios, Feb. 12, 2013)
    A year after the sinking of the Titanic, four teens try to cope with memories of that horrific night.... It’s April 1913, and survivors of the RMS Titanic have gathered to remember those who didn’t make it onto the lifeboats. Debutante Elizabeth Farr, who had been in first class, lost her father. Steerage passenger Katie Hanrahan nearly lost her life. Still, neither of them wants to be at the remembrance service. All they really want to do is forget. A year after that awful night, Elizabeth still feels the chill of the frigid arctic air, and Katie can’t sleep because of nightmares of being trapped belowdecks, waiting for death. They want it to go away, but Titanic will never leave them. On their voyage one year ago, Elizabeth met a struggling artist named Max, and Katie fell for a boy from her hometown whose brother perished in the disaster. As the four of them strive to make new lives in New York, they struggle to move beyond the night that changed them all forever.
  • Remembering the Titanic

    Diane Hoh

    Mass Market Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Aug. 1, 1998)
    The survivors of the Titanic shipwreck struggle to get on with their lives after the pain and sadness of that disastrous night
  • Remembering the Titanic

    Diane Hoh

    Mass Market Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Aug. 1, 1998)
    The survivors of the Titanic shipwreck struggle to get on with their lives after the pain and sadness of that disastrous night
  • Remembering the Titanic: A Novel

    Diane Hoh

    eBook (Open Road Media Teen & Tween, March 27, 2012)
    A year after the sinking of the Titanic, four teens try to cope with memories of that horrific nightIt’s April 1913, and survivors of the RMS Titanic have gathered to remember those who didn’t make it onto the lifeboats. Debutante Elizabeth Farr, who had been in first class, lost her father. Steerage passenger Katie Hanrahan nearly lost her life. Still, neither of them wants to be at the remembrance service. All they really want to do is forget. A year after that awful night, Elizabeth still feels the chill of the frigid arctic air, and Katie can’t sleep because of nightmares of being trapped belowdecks, waiting for death. They want it to go away, but Titanic will never leave them. On their voyage one year ago, Elizabeth met a struggling artist named Max, and Katie fell for a boy from her hometown whose brother perished in the disaster. As the four of them strive to make new lives in New York, they struggle to move beyond the night that changed them all forever. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Diane Hoh including rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the author’s personal collection.
  • The Remembering Box

    Eth Clifford

    Paperback (HarperCollins, Oct. 21, 1992)
    Grandma tells the best storiesJoshua spends every Friday night and every Saturday with his grandmother, celebrating the Jewish Sabbath. On Friday night, Grandma blesses the Sabbath lights, and the two share a traditional meal. On Saturday afternoon, they settle down with a box they call "the remembering box." Joshua draws an item from the box, and Grandma tells its story. And what wonderful stories they are!
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  • The Remembering Stone

    Barbara Timberlake Russell, Claire B. Cotts

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), April 2, 2004)
    A surprising journey of self-discoveryIn early fall, the blackbirds creak like rusty wheels behind our apartment . . . "One day I will return like you," my mother tells the birds. "But for now, you go. Que les vaya bien. Safe journey."Ana doesn't understand the pull of this faraway place until one night she puts her favorite thing -- a stone spit from the volcanoes of Costa Rica - underneath her pillow. She imagines herself a blackbird flying to this country her mother longs to see again, with "mountains [that] stretch over steamy cedar and ebony forests, noisy with bright birds . . . [her] grandfather and uncles gathering cacao pods from the trees." And as Ana imagines what she would see, she develops her own emotional link to this place and people, who, while far away, are part of her.This evocative picture book with its striking, bold art celebrates the importance of hope, dreams, and cultural roots -- and will have special resonance for all thos who find themselves at the crossroads of two cultures.
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  • Remembering The Titanic

    Frieda Wishinsky

    Library Binding (Turtleback, March 1, 2012)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A centennial tribute for newly independent readers traces the story of the Titanic while describing what life was like aboard the ship and profiling some of its passengers and crew, providing additional coverage of Robert Ballard's triumphant discovery of the wreck 73 years later. Original.
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  • Remembering the Titanic

    Diane Hoh

    Library Binding (Rebound by Sagebrush, Aug. 31, 1998)
    None
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  • The Remembering Box

    Eth Clifford, Donna Diamond

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Oct. 1, 1985)
    Nine-year-old Joshua's weekly visits to his beloved grandmother on the Jewish Sabbath give him an understanding of love, family, and tradition, which helps him accept her death.
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  • Remembering the Duck

    Daniele Luciano Moskal

    Paperback (Lulu.com, July 16, 2018)
    This delightful picture book story written by Daniele Luciano Moskal, deals and teaches children about the power of forgiveness, apologising, (saying sorry), repentance and unconditional love.
  • The Remembering Stone

    Barbara Timberlake Russell, Claire B. Cotts

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), April 2, 2004)
    A surprising journey of self-discoveryIn early fall, the blackbirds creak like rusty wheels behind our apartment . . . "One day I will return like you," my mother tells the birds. "But for now, you go. Que les vaya bien. Safe journey."Ana doesn't understand the pull of this faraway place until one night she puts her favorite thing -- a stone spit from the volcanoes of Costa Rica - underneath her pillow. She imagines herself a blackbird flying to this country her mother longs to see again, with "mountains [that] stretch over steamy cedar and ebony forests, noisy with bright birds . . . [her] grandfather and uncles gathering cacao pods from the trees." And as Ana imagines what she would see, she develops her own emotional link to this place and people, who, while far away, are part of her.This evocative picture book with its striking, bold art celebrates the importance of hope, dreams, and cultural roots -- and will have special resonance for all thos who find themselves at the crossroads of two cultures.
  • The Remembering Box

    Eth Clifford

    School & Library Binding (San Val, Oct. 16, 1992)
    None
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