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Books with title The Beatrice Letters

  • The Beatrice Letters

    Lemony Snicket, Brett Helquist

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Sept. 5, 2006)
    Top secret—only for readers deeply interested in the Baudelaire case. How I pity these readers.With all due respect,Lemony Snicket
    V
  • The Beatrice Letters

    Brett Helquist Lemony Snicket

    Unknown Binding
    None
  • The Beatrice Letters

    Lemony Snicket, Brett Helquist

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Sept. 5, 2006)
    Top secret—only for readers deeply interested in the Baudelaire case. How I pity these readers. With all due respect, Lemony Snicket
    V
  • Beatrice the Bee

    Kelly D Johnson

    Paperback (Kelly Johnson, May 25, 2020)
    This whimsically illustrated picture book tells a story through the eyes of one adventurous bumblebee. Beatrice the bumblebee misses her friends and is just trying to make it back home, all along realizing the most important thing is to be yourself. Kelly Johnson illustrates colorful, bright and happy pages that will make this a page turner for every child of any age.
  • Beatrice the Bee

    Matthew Foster, Kristen McClenahan

    eBook (, June 11, 2020)
    Fed up with life in her hive, Beatrice the Bee goes out on a journey to find a place to play all day. Along the way, she meets new animals and friends.
  • The Letters

    Jane Austen, J. R. Brimley

    language (Jazzybee Verlag, Dec. 3, 2019)
    The letters included in this series comprise about three quarters of the collection in two volumes published in 1884 by her great-nephew Lord Brabourne. The lightness, almost friskiness, of their tone cannot fail to strike the reader. Modern letters written by women are filled more or less with hints and queries; questionings as to the why and the wherefore occur; allusions to the various "fads" of the day, literary or artistic,- Ibsen, Tolstoi, Browning, Esoteric Buddhism, Wagner's Music, the Mind Cure, Social Science, Causes and Reforms. But Cowper and Crabbe were the poetical sensations in Miss Austen's time, Scott and Byron its phenomenal novelties; it took months to get most books printed, and years to persuade anybody to read them. Furthermore the letters, in all probability, are carefully chosen to reveal only the more superficial side of their writer.
  • The Letters

    Edwin Lutyens

    Paperback (Hamish Hamilton Ltd, July 15, 1988)
    Sm Octavo, 1988, PP.454,
  • The Letters

    Kazumi Yumoto, Cathy Hirano

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), May 13, 2002)
    By the award-winning author of The FriendsWhen Chiaki learns of the death of her and her mother’s former landlady, Mrs. Yanagi, she feels compelled to go to the funeral, although she hasn’t seen Mrs. Yanagi in years. As she prepares for the trip, she also begins a journey through memory, beginning right after her father’s death, when her mother took an apartment at Poplar House. Chiaki, six at the time, is overwhelmed by the recent changes, falls ill, and cannot attend school. Mrs. Yanagi ends up looking after her during the daytime. The landlady initially frightens her new charge, but as Chiaki spends more time with her, the two begin to form an odd alliance. One day Mrs. Yanagi tells Chiaki that she has been charged with a divine mission to carry letters to the dead when she goes to the grave herself. Inspired, Chiaki then begins a tentative one-way correspondence with her father, diligently entrusting her letters to the landlady. And it’s through remembering this time of her life that the grown Chiaki is able to confront her confusion about who she is now.
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  • The Letters

    Kazumi Yumoto

    Mass Market Paperback (Laurel Leaf, Nov. 11, 2003)
    When Chiaki learns that her mother’s former landlady, Mrs. Yanagi, has died, she decides to attend the funeral. The last time she saw Mrs. Yanagi was when she lived in her apartment building when she was a little girl. Chiaki takes a trip back through time and remembers what her life was like shortly after her father’s death. At first young Chiaki is scared of old Mrs. Yanagi, but as time goes on, they form a close relationship. Then Mrs. Yanagi reveals that she has a special mission in life. She will deliver letters to the dead when she herself passes away. She keeps the letters in a drawer and when it is filled, then she will die. She warns Chiaki that anyone else who looks in the drawer will carry the burden of delivering the letters instead of her. Chiaki starts writing letters to her father every day to overcome her loss. Years later, Chiaki is unprepared for the surprises that await her at Mrs. Yanagi’s funeral and the unexpected turn her life will take from that point on.
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  • The Letters

    Kazumi Yumoto, Cathy Hirano

    Hardcover (Perfection Learning, Jan. 1, 2001)
    None
  • THE LETTERS

    JANE AUSTEN

    eBook
    This edition of Jane Austen's letters was edited by Fanny Knight's son Edward Hugessen Knatchbull-Hugessen (the first Baron Brabourne, lived 1829-1893), and was published in 1884. It's neither complete (about two thirds of the letters now known to have survived are included), nor are the texts of the letters necessarily always transcribed with minute scholarly fidelity, but it's out of copyright, and includes many annotations and quaint comments on the letters. (The latest edition of
  • The Letters

    Kazumi Yumoto, Cathy Hirano

    School & Library Binding (San Val, Nov. 16, 2003)
    None