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Books with title Wagons over the Mountains

  • The Mountains

    Stewart Edward White

    eBook
    This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
  • Over the Mountain

    Katherine Stillerman

    language (, March 8, 2018)
    It’s 1961, and Harriet Elizabeth Oechsner has almost completed her sophomore year in high school, when she’s faced with the dreaded news that her family is moving again. This time it’s because her father Erik’s liberal theology and commitment to social justice has angered his parishioners, and he’s been forced to resign from his church after only a year as pastor. The resulting move thrusts the five members of the close knit Oechsner family into a community bathed in privilege, steeped in tradition, and staunchly resistant to change. Mountain Brook, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, is a community separated only by a mountain ridge from the struggle for human rights being waged on the other side. And yet, it’s a community so distanced by privilege and color from its parent city and the needs of the poor and disenfranchised within, that it may as well be on the other side of the world.Harriet must once again assume the role of the outsider adapting to another new school, her third in three years. Her encounters with new teachers and peers lead her into situations that are at times painful, lonely, embarrassing, shocking, and often humorous.Harriet’s adjustment to her new school is fraught by teenage angst and emotion; and, as a child of the Cold War and the civil rights era, she is thrust into the realities of injustice, separation, and the threat of nuclear holocaust. However, the story maintains a hopeful tone, as the plot is interwoven with themes of inclusiveness, loyalty, friendship, and reconciliation.Readers who fell in love with Hattie Robinson in Hattie’s Place and In the Fullness of Time, will be happy to know that Over the Mountain takes up two generations later, with Hattie’s granddaughter and namesake, Harriet, as the main character.
  • Over the Mountain

    Jeffrey B. Fuerst

    Paperback (Newmark Learning, Jan. 1, 2011)
    Bear wants to go to the other side of the mountain. What will he see? A playful and vibrantly illustrated adaptation of the popular song.
  • Wagons Over the Mountains

    Edith McCall

    Hardcover (Childrens Press, Jan. 1, 1961)
    None
  • Over the Mountain

    Katherine P Stillerman

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 9, 2018)
    It’s 1961, and Harriet Elizabeth Oechsner has almost completed her sophomore year in high school, when she’s faced with the dreaded news that her family is moving again. This time it’s because her father Erik’s liberal theology and commitment to social justice has angered his parishioners, and he’s been forced to resign from his church after only a year as pastor. The resulting move thrusts the five members of the close knit Oechsner family into a community bathed in privilege, steeped in tradition, and staunchly resistant to change. Mountain Brook, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, is a community separated only by a mountain ridge from the struggle for human rights being waged on the other side. And yet, it’s a community so distanced by privilege and color from its parent city and the needs of the poor and disenfranchised within, that it may as well be on the other side of the world.Harriet must once again assume the role of the outsider adapting to another new school, her third in three years. Her encounters with new teachers and peers lead her into situations that are at times painful, lonely, embarrassing, shocking, and often humorous.Harriet’s adjustment to her new school is fraught by teenage angst and emotion; and, as a child of the Cold War and the civil rights era, she is thrust into the realities of injustice, separation, and the threat of nuclear holocaust. However, the story maintains a hopeful tone, as the plot is interwoven with themes of inclusiveness, loyalty, friendship, and reconciliation.Readers who fell in love with Hattie Robinson in Hattie’s Place and In the Fullness of Time, will be happy to know that Over the Mountain takes up two generations later, with Hattie’s granddaughter and namesake, Harriet, as the main character.
  • Over The Rocky Mountains

    R. M. Ballantyne

    eBook (www.DelmarvaPublications.com, Aug. 1, 2014)
    t was late on a winter evening when our hero, William Osten, arrived in England, in company with his two friends and former messmates, Bunco and Larry O’Hale.When a youth returns to his native land, after a long absence which commenced with his running away to sea, he may perhaps experience some anxieties on nearing the old home; but our hero was not thus troubled, because, his father having died during his absence, and his mother having always been tender-hearted and forgiving, he felt sure of a warm reception.Our hero was so anxious to see his mother, that he resolved to travel by the night-coach to his native town of B—, leaving his companions to follow by the mail in the morning. Railways, although in use throughout the country, had not at that time cut their way to the town of B—. Travellers who undertook to visit that part of the land did so with feelings somewhat akin to those of discoverers about to set out on a distant voyage. They laid in a stock of provisions for the journey, and provided great supply of wraps for all weathers. When Will Osten reached the coach-office, he found that all the inside places were taken.“You’ll have to go aloft, sir,” said the coachman, a stout and somewhat facetiously inclined individual, who, observing something of the sailor in Will’s costume and gait, suited his language to his supposed character; “there’s only one berth left vacant, on the fogs’l ’longside o’ myself.”(Illustrated)
  • Wagons over the Mountains

    Edith S. McCall

    Library Binding (Childrens Pr, Sept. 1, 1980)
    Chronicles the travels of pioneers by wagon train through the mountains and describes some of the dangers they faced
    N
  • Move the Mountains

    Emily Conolan

    Paperback (A & U Children, Jan. 1, 2020)
    When you read this book, you are the main character, and you will make the choices that direct the plot. It is 1951. During the war, you rescued and hid an Australian airman near your small Italian village. He told you that you could be anything you dreamed of—but those dreams are fast slipping away. As you make the leap for life in a new land, you'll be asked to stand up to bullies, stage a mutiny, and make your contribution to one of the greatest engineering projects the world has ever seen. How far will you go for freedom?
    R
  • Over The Mountain

    Mickey Riis

    language (, Aug. 21, 2016)
    It's time to sharpen his Pocket-Pie baking skills for the up coming Pocket-Pie Festival. Each Mini Troll family has their own unique recipe, some tart, some sweet. The GooseBerries are not ripe in their small patch near their home. Over the mountain there is the large gooseberry patch, which is the first to ripen in the Big Valley. Basket in hand and ready to pick berries......how will he get there?
  • Moon Over the Mountain

    Keith Polette, Michael Kress-Russik

    eBook (Raven Tree Press, )
    None
  • The Mountains

    Stewart Edward White

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 9, 2016)
    The Mountains By Stewart Edward White
  • The mountains

    Lorus Johnson Milne

    Hardcover (Time-Life Books, March 15, 1967)
    The mountains (Life nature library) [Jan 01, 1967] Milne, Lorus Johnson ...