Browse all books

Books with title Time Windows

  • Windows

    Julia Denos, E. B. Goodale

    Hardcover (Candlewick, Oct. 17, 2017)
    Walking his dog at dusk, one boy catches glimpses of the lives around him in this lovely ode to autumn evenings, exploring your neighborhood, and coming home.Before your city goes to sleep, you might head out for a walk, your dog at your side as you go out the door and into the almost-night. Anything can happen on such a walk: you might pass a cat, or a friend, or even an early raccoon. And as you go down your street and around the corner, the windows around you light up one by one until you are walking through a maze of paper lanterns, each one granting you a brief, glowing snapshot of your neighbors as families come together and folks settle in for the night. With a setting that feels both specific and universal and a story full of homages to The Snowy Day, Julia Denos and E. B. Goodale have created a singular book — at once about the idea of home and the magic of curiosity, but also about how a sense of safety and belonging is something to which every child is entitled.
    L
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    eBook (HMH Books for Young Readers, Sept. 15, 1991)
    An ALA Best Book for Young Adults. “Reminiscent of The Indian in the Cupboard . . . [an] intricately woven ghost story.”—Publishers WeeklyWhen Miranda moves with her family to a new house in a small Massachusetts town, she discovers a mysterious antique—a dollhouse. Through the windows, she is shocked to find what seem to be living people in the tiny rooms, and gradually she realizes that scenes from the lives of the big house’s past inhabitants are being replayed there.“With numerous deftly sketched characters, including a sympathetic boy next door, an intriguing plot, and such dividends as a secret room used to hide escaping slaves, this should keep readers interested. Well wrought and entertaining.”—Kirkus Reviews “Reiss puts a new twist on time travel in this suspenseful first novel . . . pits its heroine against the forces of child abuse and untimely death in a deft, entertaining and inventive style.”—Publishers Weekly“The well-structured mystery, the fast-moving plot, and the accessible prose make this a useful addition to fantasy shelves.”—School Library Journal“For fans of Lynne Reid Banks, this book is definitely one to pick up. Time Windows by Kathryn Reiss is a very engrossing book . . . the ghost story is really fun and interesting.”—The Novel World
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, Sept. 1, 2000)
    When Miranda moves with her family to a new house in a small Massachusetts town, she discovers a mysterious antique--a dollhouse. Through the windows, she is shocked to find what seem to be living people in the tiny rooms, and gradually she realizes that scenes from the lives of the big house’s past inhabitants are being replayed there.
    Z+
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    Hardcover (Harcourt Children's Books, Sept. 15, 1991)
    When Miranda moves with her family to a new house in a small Massachusetts town, she discovers a mysterious antique--a dollhouse. Through the windows, she is shocked to find what seem to be living people in the tiny rooms, and gradually she realizes that scenes from the lives of the big house’s past inhabitants are being replayed there. “With numerous deftly sketched characters, including a sympathetic boy next door, an intriguing plot, and such dividends as a secret room used to hide escaping slaves, this should keep readers interested. Well wrought and entertaining.”--Kirkus Reviews
    S
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    Paperback (Apple, April 1, 1994)
    After she moves into her eerie new house, Miranda discovers an old dollhouse with a strange little girl who appears only when Miranda herself looks through the dollhouse windows. Reprint.
    T
  • Windows

    Julia Denos, E. B. Goodale

    Paperback (Candlewick, Feb. 9, 2021)
    Walking his dog at dusk, one boy catches glimpses of the lives around him in this lovely ode to autumn evenings, exploring your neighborhood, and coming home.Before your city goes to sleep, you might head out for a walk, your dog at your side as you go out the door and into the almost-night. Anything can happen on such a walk: you might pass a cat, or a friend, or even an early raccoon. And as you go down your street and around the corner, the windows around you light up one by one until you are walking through a maze of paper lanterns, each one granting you a brief, glowing snapshot of your neighbors as families come together and folks settle in for the night. With a setting that feels both specific and universal and a story full of homages to The Snowy Day, Julia Denos and E. B. Goodale have created a singular book — at once about the idea of home and the magic of curiosity, but also about how a sense of safety and belonging is something to which every child is entitled.
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    Paperback (Graphia, Sept. 1, 2000)
    When Miranda moves with her family to a new house in a small Massachusetts town, she discovers a mysterious antique--a dollhouse. Through the windows, she is shocked to find what seem to be living people in the tiny rooms, and gradually she realizes that scenes from the lives of the big house’s past inhabitants are being replayed there.
    Z+
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Sept. 1, 2000)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. After moving into an old house in a small Massachusetts town, Miranda finds a mysterious antique dollhouse that serves as a window into the past lives of the home's former inhabitants and that exerts an evil spell over the women who live in the house.
    T
  • Time Windows

    Kathryn Reiss

    Hardcover (Perfection Learning, Sept. 1, 2000)
    None
    Z
  • A Window of Time

    Audrey O. Leighton, Rhonda Kyrias

    Hardcover (NADJA Publishing, Sept. 1, 1995)
    Shawn likes to hear his grandfather's stories of when he was growing up, even though the old man often thinks that it is still long ago, and that Shawn is his younger brother, Jack
    L
  • Windows

    Gary Duffey

    Hardcover (Abbott Press, April 7, 2014)
    When you look through a window, what do you see? A frog sitting on a log. The sun beginning to rise. A policeman at a traffic light. Stars twinkling in the night. What else do you see? Can you see a little bit of the future? Each window gives us a different view. What you see is up to you!
  • Windows

    Gary Duffey

    Paperback (Abbott Press, July 19, 2012)
    When you look through a window, what do you see? A frog sitting on a log. The sun beginning to rise. A policeman at a traffic light. Stars twinkling in the night. What else do you see? Can you see a little bit of the future? Each window gives us a different view. What you see is up to you!