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Books with title Ruth Sawyer

  • RUTH SAWYER

    Virginia Haviland

    Hardcover (Walck, Jan. 1, 1965)
    None
  • Ruth Sawyer

    Virginia Haviland

    Hardcover (Bodley Head, Sept. 1, 1965)
    None
  • Sawyer

    Karen Hufford, Robert Tharp

    language (Lulu.com, Jan. 25, 2013)
    Sawyer, a young male golden retriever (dog), grows restless, disobeys his mother, and then sneaks out early one morning to play "drop the tennis ball," from a bridge and into a creek, in rural Lexington, Virginia. He gallantly tries to keep up with his tennis balls and leaps in to chase them down stream. Much later, he gets lost and meets twelve different animals and creatures that teach him important lessons about how he should live a happy and satisfying life.
  • Ruth Sawyer: Leerie

    Ruth Sawyer

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, June 28, 2010)
    Leerie is a book by Ruth Sawyer, who is best known for her books "The Way of the Storyteller," "Roller Skates," and "The Wee Christmas Cabin of Carn-na-ween." Born in Boston in 1880, Ruth Sawyer was an American writer of children's books.. She studied folklore and storytelling at Columbia University, where she earned a B.S. in 1904. Ruth Sawyer's first published work was The Primrose Ring in 1915, of which a movie was made in 1917 (starring Loretta Young). Her best-known book is Roller Skates, which won her the Newbery Medal in 1937. Like Roller Skates, a number of Sawyer's books are autobiographical accounts of her childhood and reveal an interesting perspective on American life at the end of the 19th century. These include The Year of Jubilo and Daddles, The Story of a Plain Hound-Dog. Sawyer also wrote non-autobiographical novels for children, such as The Enchanted Schoolhouse and The Year of the Christmas Dragon , and a scholarly work, The Way of the Storyteller. She published a number of collections of folktales, such as This Way To Christma s(which featured an illustration by a young Norman Rockwell) and My Spain: A Storyteller's Year of Collecting (1967). In 1965, Ruth Sawyer was awarded the Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal for her work.