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Other editions of book Looking at the Moon

  • Looking At The Moon

    Kit Pearson

    eBook (Puffin Canada, Sept. 4, 2007)
    Norah, an English "war guest" living with the wealthy Ogilvie family in Toronto, can hardly wait for August. She'll spend it at the Ogilvie's lavish cottage in Muskoka—a whole month of freedom, swimming, adventures with her "cousins"... But this isn't an ordinary summer. It's 1943, and the war is still going on. Sometimes Norah can't even remember what her parents look like—she hasn't seen them in three years. And she has turned thirteen, which means life seems to be getting more complicated. Then a distant Ogilvie cousin, Andrew, arrives. He is nineteen, handsome, intelligent, and Norah thinks she may be falling in love for the first time. But Andrew has his own problems: he doesn't want to fight in the war, and yet he knows it's what his family and friends expect of him. What the two of them learn from each other makes for a gentle, moving story, the second book in a trilogy that began with the award-winning The Sky Is Falling.
  • Looking at the Moon

    Kit Pearson

    Hardcover (Viking Juvenile, June 1, 1992)
    While spending the summer of 1943 in a cottage in Muskoka, Canada, with her brother Gavin, Norah, a British war refugee, falls for her adoptive cousin, Andrew, a pacifist whose ideals threaten their relationship, in the sequel to The Sky Is Falling.
  • Looking At the Moon

    Kit Pearson

    Paperback (Puffin, Oct. 17, 1995)
    Norah, an English "war guest" living with the wealthy Ogilvie family in Toronto, can hardly wait for August. She'll spend it at the Ogilvie's lavish cottage in Muskoka—a whole month of freedom, swimming, adventures with her "cousins"... But this isn't an ordinary summer. It's 1943, and the war is still going on. Sometimes Norah can't even remember what her parents look like—she hasn't seen them in three years. And she has turned thirteen, which means life seems to be getting more complicated. Then a distant Ogilvie cousin, Andrew, arrives. He is nineteen, handsome, intelligent, and Norah thinks she may be falling in love for the first time. But Andrew has his own problems: he doesn't want to fight in the war, and yet he knows it's what his family and friends expect of him. What the two of them learn from each other makes for a gentle, moving story, the second book in a trilogy that began with the award-winning The Sky Is Falling.
    Z+
  • Looking At the Moon

    Kit Pearson

    Mass Market Paperback (Puffin Canada, Sept. 4, 2007)
    Norah, an English "war guest" living with the wealthy Ogilvie family in Toronto, can hardly wait for August. She'll spend it at the Ogilvie's lavish cottage in Muskoka—a whole month of freedom, swimming, adventures with her "cousins"... But this isn't an ordinary summer. It's 1943, and the war is still going on. Sometimes Norah can't even remember what her parents look like—she hasn't seen them in three years. And she has turned thirteen, which means life seems to be getting more complicated. Then a distant Ogilvie cousin, Andrew, arrives. He is nineteen, handsome, intelligent, and Norah thinks she may be falling in love for the first time. But Andrew has his own problems: he doesn't want to fight in the war, and yet he knows it's what his family and friends expect of him. What the two of them learn from each other makes for a gentle, moving story, the second book in a trilogy that began with the award-winning The Sky Is Falling.
    Z
  • Looking at the Moon

    Kit Pearson

    Paperback (Hodder Children's Books, March 19, 1997)
    None
  • Looking At the Moon

    Kit Pearson

    Mass Market Paperback (Puffin, Feb. 2, 1993)
    Norah, an English "war guest" living with the wealthy Ogilvie family in Toronto, can hardly wait for August. She'll spend it at the Ogilvie's lavish cottage in Muskoka—a whole month of freedom, swimming, adventures with her "cousins"... But this isn't an ordinary summer. It's 1943, and the war is still going on. Sometimes Norah can't even remember what her parents look like—she hasn't seen them in three years. And she has turned thirteen, which means life seems to be getting more complicated. Then a distant Ogilvie cousin, Andrew, arrives. He is nineteen, handsome, intelligent, and Norah thinks she may be falling in love for the first time. But Andrew has his own problems: he doesn't want to fight in the war, and yet he knows it's what his family and friends expect of him. What the two of them learn from each other makes for a gentle, moving story, the second book in a trilogy that began with the award-winning The Sky Is Falling.
    Z
  • Looking at the Moon

    Kit Pearson

    Library Binding (Demco Media, Jan. 1, 1996)
    Norah, an English girl staying in Canada during World War II, spends August at the country home of the family with which she lives, where she confronts the physical and emotional changes of being a teenager, and meets Andrew, an older cousin who isn't sure whether he wants to fight in the war.Norah, an English girl staying in Canada during World War II, at the country home of the family with which she lives, confronts the physical and emotional changes of being a teenager, and meets Andrew, an older cousin who isn't sure whether he wants to fight in the war
  • Looking at the Moon

    By (author) Kit Pearson

    Paperback (PENGUIN GLOBAL, Jan. 1, 2008)
    Looking at the Moon