Author: Nadia Wheatley
Publisher: Text Publishing
ISBN: 1922148253
Size: 29.26 MB
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Winner of the New South Wales Premier's Children's Book Award, 1985. It's 1981 and Evie is sixteen. She has left school but can't find work, and her family has just moved into the run-down inner Sydney suburb of Newtown. Noel lives in the adjoining terrace house. He's fifteen, not taking school seriously and fed up with looking after his ancient bed-ridden grandmother. As a friendship grows between Evie and Noel, the past is set back in motion, and the events of the 1930s Depression era begin to play out in the high-unemployment times of the early 1980s, and the house again is the centre of the Sydney anti-eviction campaign of 1931. Based on historical fact, meticulously researched, The House that Was Eureka is a critically acclaimed novel about a history we all share. Nadia Wheatley is a long-standing fixture of Australian literature having written fiction and non-fiction for both children and adults. Seven of her books have been Children's Book Council of Australia Honour Books including Five Times Dizzy, The House that Was Eureka and My Place. She has won the New South Wales Premier's Children's Book Prize twice, for The House that Was Eureka and Five Times Dizzy and is known and respected for her contributions to Indigenous communities and the preservation of environment. Nadia is currently the Artist in Residence at The University of Sydney. textclassics.com.au 'A fine piece of work, well researched and beautifully plotted around the Depression when people were tipped out of their houses by landlords and unemployed men took to the roads with swags.' Sydney Morning Herald 'An absorbing and wholly convincing recreation of the Depression of the 1930s, with the traumatic experiences of the Cruise family, destitute and threatened with eviction, running parallel to the problems of today.' Australian Book Review 'Wheatley's book has urgency and a fierce strength...The characters from both eras are "alive and flying", freedom fighters who are aware that they are making history.' Maurice Saxby
Author: Tammie D
Publisher: AuthorHouse
ISBN: 1434330893
Size: 74.35 MB
Format: PDF, ePub, Mobi
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It was a beautiful house filled with a sense of adventure, romance, and mystery. John and Vicki love there new house and then mysterious things had started happening. Moving out wasn't an option for the happy couple, but fighting for there home became the only option they had. Vicki experience things unlikely for a woman to experience and John chases a ghost for his own sexual fanasties. The town is filled with curses and memories of that beautiful house that no one seems to care or what to remember and Vicki can't tell what is real or not from the ghost she keeps seeing in a pink dress that is lurking in there doll house.
Author: Linda McBride
Publisher: Balboa Press
ISBN: 1452598126
Size: 60.86 MB
Format: PDF, Mobi
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This is a book for children and adults about establishing a loving community that begins with the home.
Author: Phyllis Richardson
Publisher: Unbound
ISBN: 9781783523801
Size: 39.41 MB
Format: PDF, Kindle
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Take a journey through history to discover how authors' personal experiences in their homes helped to shape the imaginative dwellings that have become icons of English literature: Virginia Woolf's love of Talland House is palpable in To the Lighthouse, just as London's Bloomsbury is ever-present in Mrs. Dalloway. E.M. Forster's childhood home at Rook's Nest mirrors the idyllic charm of Howards End. And Horace Walpole's "little Gothic castle" in Twickenham inspired him to write the first English Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto. But the English country house is also viewed through a modern lens--Kazuo Ishiguro's Darlington Hall, Ian McEwan's Tallis House, Alan Hollinghurts's Two Acres. Using historic sources, authors' biographies, letters, news accounts, and the novels themselves, this book presents some of the most influential houses in Britain through the stories they inspired.
Author: Elana K. Arnold
Publisher: Walden Pond Press
ISBN: 9780062937070
Size: 52.19 MB
Format: PDF, ePub, Docs
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"In this luminous story full of mystery and magic, Elana K. Arnold weaves a shimmering tapestry about the lovely and surprising ways we're connected to each other. Heart-healing, hopeful, and wonderfully inventive, this beautiful novel by a master storyteller is not to be missed." --Katherine Applegate, Newbery Medal-winning author of The One and Only Ivan Alder has always lived in his cozy little house in Southern California. And for as long as he can remember, the old, reliable, comforting walnut tree has stood between his house and the one next door. That is, until a new family--with a particularly annoying girl his age--moves into the neighboring house and, without warning, cuts it down. Oak doesn't understand why her family had to move to Southern California. She has to attend a new school, find new friends, and live in a new house that isn't even ready--her mother had to cut down a tree on their property line in order to make room for a second floor. And now a strange boy next door won't stop staring at her, like she did something wrong moving here in the first place. As Oak and Alder start school together, they can't imagine ever becoming friends. But the two of them soon discover a series of connections between them--mysterious, possibly even magical puzzles they can't put together. At least not without each other's help. Award-winning author Elana K. Arnold returns with an unforgettable story of the strange, wondrous threads that run between all of us, whether we know they're there or not.