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Books with title Song of Moving Water

  • Water Song

    Kimberly James

    language (, Aug. 28, 2013)
    A stolen identity. A hidden power. One summer changes everything.Caris…It was supposed to be two months of fun in the sun. Two months to spend with my dad and finally get answers about a mother he refused to talk about.Instead, I discover my life is a lie. The sun and water betray me, exposing magic I didn’t know I possess and powers I don’t understand.The one bright light in my crumbling world is Noah Jacobs, the boy I saved from a pack of bullies. I can’t resist his ocean eyes. He can’t resist my Song. What at first felt like a gift, now feels like a curse. I don’t want to hurt him.Noah…I want to hate her. She’s seen me at my worst. I was happy in my self-imposed exile. Until she called me home. But home hurts. It holds too many memories of the family I lost, too many reminders of my failures.Resisting her Song proves futile, and soon I don’t want to. She thinks she’ll hurt me. She thinks she needs to protect me from the magic. But I’m not weak. It’s my job to protect her. If only she’ll let me. Water Song is the first installment in the Waterborn series. If you love YA paranormal romance full of emotion, self-discovery, fated mates, magic, family intrigue, and a cast of characters you’ll grow to love, then immerse yourself in the world of Water Song.
  • Song of Moving Water

    Susan Schmidt

    Paperback (Kakapo Press, Feb. 10, 2015)
    As paddler, flyfisher, bass fiddler, gardener, and Quaker naturalist— SUSAN SCHMIDT writes about river and forest ecology, bluegrass music, square dancing, chestnut trees, quilting, endangered species, local food, and environmental organizing in her new young-adult novel, Song of Moving Water. She has worked as science-policy analyst, sailboat captain, and professor of literature and environmental decision-making. Susan now edits books, with the same mindfulness as pruning apple trees, and walks beaches with her Boykin Spaniel. Her new book of poems is Salt Runs in My Blood. “Don’t blame yourself for other people’s decisions,” Aunt Ruby tells Grace. At seventeen, Grace feels guilty that her father drowned in the river when she was ten. Just when she has moved back home, the power company proposes a dam that will flood her family farm. She builds confidence to raise her voice. With a backdrop of the Appalachian Mountains in Virginia, Song of Moving Water is a young woman's coming-of-age story and a fictional environmental impact statement. When Grace returns to her father's homeplace seven years after his death, a proposed hydroelectric dam threatens the remote valley. Learning about farming and faith from her Aunt Ruby and about foraging herbs from neighbor Amos, Grace begins to value the self-sufficient community in contrast to her mother’s social whirl in Richmond. In the country, Grace goes to a square dance at the elementary school; in the city, she goes to a debutante party at the Country Club. Grace plans on college, but her childhood friend Sally Bee is already married with two babies. Grace has a crush on Sam, aquatic ecologist and Quaker pacifist who is looking for an endangered species to stop the dam. While canoeing with Sam, Grace learns how to read a river and the Tao of water. In contrast to Sam, Grace's stepbrother Jared is a vain business student who slaps her in a political argument. With comic rivals, Amos and Farley, the half-Indian/half-Black musician up the creek, Grace goes to the Galax Fiddle Festival, and Farley competes in the fiddle contest. Reclaiming her mountain heritage, Grace organizes neighbors to celebrate their river, and she sings to protest the dam that may flood her family farm. When she skinnydips in a mountain pool, Grace accepts her growing maturity and forgives her own gracelessness. Walking the woods, Amos shows Grace the flowering shrub, Hearts-a-Busting, to remind her to keep her heart open. Susan Schmidt writes Song of Moving Water with the insight of a scientist, the imagery of a poet, and the big heart of one who loves the Appalachian highlands and their people. Poised on the cusp of adulthood, Grace comes back to McDowell County to learn what no classroom can teach: family secrets, spiritual knowledge, sexual stirrings—all against the backdrop of a newborn environmental movement. “Groundtruthing,” she calls it—ways of knowing the land—from a mountain man’s gift for hunting ginseng… to a woman’s skill at putting by food… to a scrappy Quaker ecologist’s understanding of the webs of life. This closely observed novel takes you deep into the embrace of the mountains. Valerie Nieman, author of Blood Clay and Neena Gathering
  • Song of Moving Water: A Novel

    Susan Schmidt

    language (Library Partners Press, March 5, 2015)
    SONG OF MOVING WATER is a young woman's coming-of-age novel. Learning about farming and faith from her Aunt Ruby, about foraging from neighbor Amos, and about reading the river and the Tao of water from Sam, Grace learns to value a self-sufficient farming community, in contrast to her mother's social whirl in Richmond. When Grace skinny dips in a mountain pool, she opens her heart and forgives her own gracelessness. She sings to save the river through her heart's a-busting.
  • Moving Water

    Joan Skogan

    eBook (Dundurn, Sept. 16, 1998)
    Joan Skogan’s marvelously poetic new novel draws upon her own years adrift on the sea as a wanderer and wonderer to tell the story of Rose Bachmann, a woman at mid-tide in a life awash in the debris of a mysterious marriage, in myths both long known and newly invented and in the magical coastline of the NOrth Pacific.Rose finds herself at rest in the rock form of a petroglyph entitled The One Who Fell From Heaven, near Prince Rupert, B.C. and there she imagines, in a brilliant song to her past and those she has loved, voyages both real and surreal and the currents of an existence that have brought her to this place, this truth.It is a story winding its way toward the "I", a story which opens to engulf the Skeena and the St. Lawrence, the Danube and the Tigris, swallowing the very self Rose has given over to propulsion and discovery. It is a quest which roams the swelling waves of personal history and may of the world’s unfathomable waterways, at once, as the title suggests, in motion, yet serenely still.
  • Moving Water

    Joan Skogan

    Paperback (Dundurn, Sept. 16, 1998)
    Joan Skogan’s marvelously poetic new novel draws upon her own years adrift on the sea as a wanderer and wonderer to tell the story of Rose Bachmann, a woman at mid-tide in a life awash in the debris of a mysterious marriage, in myths both long known and newly invented and in the magical coastline of the NOrth Pacific. Rose finds herself at rest in the rock form of a petroglyph entitled The One Who Fell From Heaven, near Prince Rupert, B.C. and there she imagines, in a brilliant song to her past and those she has loved, voyages both real and surreal and the currents of an existence that have brought her to this place, this truth. It is a story winding its way toward the "I", a story which opens to engulf the Skeena and the St. Lawrence, the Danube and the Tigris, swallowing the very self Rose has given over to propulsion and discovery. It is a quest which roams the swelling waves of personal history and may of the world’s unfathomable waterways, at once, as the title suggests, in motion, yet serenely still.
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  • Water Song

    Suzanne Weyn

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Oct. 24, 2006)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. When Emma Pennington travels with her mother to their family estate in Belgium, they find a war-torn country with enemy troops fighting to take over the estate, and Emma learns many lessons from the war, including that life is unpredictable.
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