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Books with title Runaway Rabbit

  • Runaway

    Dee Phillips

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Feb. 1, 2014)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Series features historical fiction and includes a nonfiction summary. Each book concludes with a series of activities designed to further explore the subject. Each story concludes in approximately 1,000 words. Each book contains stunning full-color interiors while maintaining an easy-to-read open layout. Reading Level: 2.0 to 3.0. Runaway: The story of a slave. ""I was born a slave. I belong to the master. But tonight I will escape and I will never go back.
  • Runaway

    Wendelin Van Draanen

    Library Binding (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Sept. 12, 2006)
    "It's a cold, hard, cruel fact that my mother loved heroin more than she loved me."Holly is in her fifth foster home in two years and she's had enough. She's run away before and always been caught quickly. But she's older and wiser now--she's twelve--and this time she gets away clean.Through tough and tender and angry and funny journal entries, Holly spills out her story. We travel with her across the country--hopping trains, scamming food, sleeping in parks or homeless encampments. And we also travel with her across the gaping holes in her heart--as she finally comes to terms with her mother's addiction and death. Runaway is a remarkably uplifting portrait of a girl still young and stubborn and naive enough to hold out hope for finding a better place in the world, and within herself, to be.From the Hardcover edition.
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  • Runaway

    Michelle Areaux

    Paperback (lulu, )
    None
  • Runaway

    Wendelin Van Draanen

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Sept. 12, 2006)
    "It's a cold, hard, cruel fact that my mother loved heroin more than she loved me."Holly is in her fifth foster home in two years and she's had enough. She's run away before and always been caught quickly. But she's older and wiser now--she's twelve--and this time she gets away clean.Through tough and tender and angry and funny journal entries, Holly spills out her story. We travel with her across the country--hopping trains, scamming food, sleeping in parks or homeless encampments. And we also travel with her across the gaping holes in her heart--as she finally comes to terms with her mother's addiction and death. Runaway is a remarkably uplifting portrait of a girl still young and stubborn and naive enough to hold out hope for finding a better place in the world, and within herself, to be.
    S
  • Runaway

    Wendelin Van Draanen

    Paperback (Laurel Leaf, Aug. 16, 2008)
    When Holly's teacher, Mrs. Leone, gives her a blank journal, Holly is disgusted. Writing in a journal can't make her forget that she's a 12-year-old orphan and that her mother died of a heroin overdose, or that the foster parents she's living with abuse her, locking her in the laundry room for days and sticking her head in the toilet when she tries to defend herself. Mrs. Leone could never understand Holly and, in Holly's opinion, probably doesn't care to. No one knows what she faces each day because she tells no one. But when boredom threatens to drive her crazy one night in the laundry room, Holly starts to write. And despite her scorn at the mere idea of keeping a journal, she continues writing. When Holly can no longer take the abuse, she runs away. Unlike her previous attempts, this time she succeeds, making it out of town and heading west. She takes only the essentials...and her journal, filling long hours of fear and boredom by updating Mrs. Leone, despite the fact that her teacher will never see her or the journal again. Over the course of her journey she also learns to face her past through her writing and discovers a true knack for poetry, much to her surprise. What started as a way to fend off boredom by writing angry and sarcastic notes to Mrs. Leone slowly becomes a tool for self-discovery, an honest account of her life and, in a way, her only confidante and most prized possession. As Holly comes to terms with her life and overcomes obstacle after obstacle to improve it, she eventually learns to accept love and kindness instead of running from it.
  • Runaway

    Paul Kropp, Heather Collins

    Paperback (Emc Pub, June 1, 1982)
    Abused by her alcoholic father, Kathy moves in with her grandparents until she is convinced that her father has changed
  • Runaway

    Mackall

    Mass Market Paperback (Tyndale Kids, 2008, Jan. 1, 1800)
    Runaway by Mackall, Dandi Daley. Published by Tyndale Kids,2008, Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • Runaway

    Marie-Louise Jensen

    Paperback (Oxford University Press, USA, June 5, 2014)
    Charlotte's life has been torn apart. Disguising herself as a stable boy, she seeks refuge at a grand country estate. There, she meets Belle, a horse so beautiful and kind Charlotte almost forgets the disturbing events that forced her into hiding. But as she's stopped running from her past, it's rapidly catching up with her.
  • Run, Rabbit, Run

    Christine Morton, Eleanor Taylor

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Pub Ltd, Aug. 1, 2002)
    Rabbit must run and hide from a red, hairy, dangerous creature before he gets caught.
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  • Little Rabbit Runaway

    Harry Horse

    Hardcover (Puffin, April 26, 2005)
    None
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  • Runaway

    Francine Pascal

    Mass Market Paperback (Bantam Books, July 1, 1985)
    Jessica's had it with Sweet Valley.Jessica Wakefield is sick and tired of taking second place to her twin sister, Elizabeth. Everyone adores Elizabeth; she's kind and loving and generous. But Jessica can't seem to do anything right.Then Jessica meets handsome, sensitive Nicky Shepard, who feels the same way she does. Nicky is running away to San Francisco and wants Jessica to join him. At first she doesn't take him seriously. But when things reach the breaking point at home, Jessica starts to see that she might be better off if she left Sweet Valley--forever!
  • Runaway

    Kristina Dunker

    Hardcover (Skyscape, Dec. 18, 2012)
    Florian feels like he’s losing everything. His soccer camp, which his parents can’t pay for. His chance to flirt with his secret crush at camp. His parents’ attention. But most of all, his big sister Sarah, who has cancer. Florian is sick of everyone acting like everything is fine when they all know that Sarah isn’t getting any better. Being around my family is extremely hazardous to my health. So Florian makes a split decision: instead of celebrating his sister’s depressing eighteenth birthday at the hospital, he’s going to soccer camp. He takes off from the hospital, packs his bags, raids his parents’ secret stash of cash, and forges a permission letter for his coach. And he goes. But amidst the partying, the girls, the fun, there are some things Florian can’t leave behind him, no matter how hard he tries. When his parents don’t call him, he has to wonder if they miss him at all—or if maybe they have bigger things to worry about. . . .