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Kid's Books |
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By: Mrs. O. F. Walton (1849-1939) | |
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Christie's Old Organ
Christie is all alone in the world after his mother dies. He lives in a boarding house and every night creeps up the attic stairs to hear an old barrel organ play. One night while he is listening, the organ stops and Christie hears a thump. What has happened? What should Christie do? | |
By: Sarah S. (Sarah Schoonmaker) Baker (1824-1906) | |
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Little Tora, The Swedish Schoolmistress and Other Stories
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By: Francis C. Woodworth (1812-1859) | |
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The Diving Bell Or, Pearls to be Sought for
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By: Jane Abbott (1881-) | |
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Red-Robin
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By: Frank Gee Patchin | |
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The Pony Rider Boys in the Rockies
The Pony Rider Boys in the Rockies is the first book in the 12 part series by Frank Gee Patchin. | |
The Pony Rider Boys in Montana
Yee-Haaw! The Pony Rider Boys are on the move again! In this book, the 3rd of the series, the boys have decided that they want to explore the north country. They also want to make their own arrangements for the adventure, with the approval of Professor Zepplin, of course! So they have arrived in Forsythe, Montana, to try their luck in the mountains. | |
Pony Rider Boys in the Alkali
Yee-Haww! The Pony Rider Boys are on the move again! This time the boys are in the desert of Nevada, discovering the beauty and perils in 100 degree heat. It should be another thrilling ride that Professor Zepplin has taken them on! | |
Pony Rider Boys in the Ozarks
Yee-Haw!! The Pony Rider Boys are on the move again! This time the boys are in the Ozark Mountains in Missouri. With Joe Hawk, or Eagle-eye, guiding them, Professor Zepplin and the Pony Rider Boys are sure to find many adventures in this action-packed, fourth book of this series by Frank Gee Patchin. | |
By: Amy Walton (1848-1899) | |
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The Kitchen Cat, and other Tales
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Kitchen Cat and Other Stories
These are three stories that will delight your heart and soul. The little girl Ruth in the first story is very privileged young lady with everything she could wish for except,of course, for companionship. Her mother has passed away and her father is a very busy lawyer who barely notices she is there. But then Ruth finds a scruffy, skinny and mostly ugly cat; the cat who lives in the kitchen and cellars,hence The Kitchen Cat. Her attempts to befriend this stray despite insurmountable obstsacles make this story a really heart warming tale... | |
White Lilac; or the Queen of the May
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Thistle and Rose A Story for Girls
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Our Frank and other stories
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A Pair of Clogs
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By: Christoph von Schmid (1768-1854) | |
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Basket of Flowers, The
James is the king's gardener and he deeply enjoys caring for and cultivating flowers. He teaches his daughter Mary many principles of godliness through the flowers. One day Mary is falsely accused of stealing, and the penalty is death. Through many trials and hardships, Mary learns of the goodness of God, the blessing of praying for her enemies, how to consider her trials as a joy, and true forgiveness. | |
By: Margaret Elizabeth Munson Sangster (1838-1912) | |
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Holiday Stories for Young People
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By: John Strange Winter (1856-1911) | |
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The Christmas Fairy and Other Stories
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By: Alice Turner Curtis (1863-??) | |
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A Yankee Girl at Fort Sumter
Sylvia Fulton is a ten-years-old girl from Boston who stayed in Charleston, South Carolina, before the opening of the civil war. She loves her new home, and her dear friends. However, political tensions are rising, and things start to change. Through these changes, Silvia gets to know the world better: from Estrella, her maid, she starts to understand what it is to be a slave, from her unjust teacher she learns that not all beautiful people are perfect, and from the messages she carries to Fort Sumter she learns what is the meaning of danger. However, this is a lovely book, written mostly for children. | |
Little Maid of Province Town
Plucky eight year old Anne Nelson, living in Provincetown on the tip of Cape Cod, is determined to bring the Revolutionary War to an end so that she can be reunited with her soldier father. Will she succeed in carrying an important message from Boston to Newburyport, warning the American troops to be prepared, or will she be caught by the English ships patrolling the harbor? | |
By: Annie Roe Carr | |
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Nan Sherwood at Pine Camp
A school girl story about two Illinois teens and the adventures they have with family,friends and the chance to go to a boarding school in Michigan in the early 1920's. | |
By: Eulalie Osgood Grover (1873-) | |
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Mother Goose The Original Volland Edition
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By: Louise Lamprey (1869-1951) | |
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The Childhood of Rome
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By: George E. Farrow (1866?-1920?) | |
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The Wallypug in London
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By: T. W. H. Crosland (1865-1924) | |
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The Motor Car Dumpy Book The Dumpy Books for Children #32
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The Old Man's Bag
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By: John W. (John William) Ivimey (1868-) | |
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Complete Version of ye Three Blind Mice
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By: Daphne [Editor] Dale | |
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Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad
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By: Grace Brooks Hill | |
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The Corner House Girls at School
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By: Harriet T. (Harriet Theresa) Comstock (1860-) | |
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The Shield of Silence
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By: Maud Lindsay (1874-1941) | |
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Story-teller
Are you a story teller? Almost all of us are, you know. Well, these 12 stories were written by Maud Lindsay to be told by someone who can weave the magic thread of speech into a performance that will hold the children spellbound. And we don't need to be perfect, just willing to tell a story; that is really all children ask, someone willing to tell a story. 8 of Librivox's Story tellers have volunteered to tell these enchanting tales (and sometimes sing the sweet little melodies that are included... | |
By: Mabell S. C. Smith (1864-1942) | |
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Ethel Morton's Holidays
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By: Shepherd Knapp | |
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The Christmas Dinner
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Down the Chimney
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By: Margaret Gatty (1809-1873) | |
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Aunt Judy's Tales
This is a collection of six short stories by Margaret Gatty, writing as Mrs. Alfred Gatty. All told by 'an elder girl' in a large family to the 8 little ones gathered around. "There is not a more charming sight in the domestic world, than that of an elder girl in a large family, amusing what are called the little ones. "How could mamma have ventured upon that cosy nap in the arm-chair by the fire, if she had been harassed by wondering what the children were about? Whereas, as it was, she had overheard No... | |
By: Shepherd Knapp | |
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Up the Chimney
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By: L. (Laura) Valentine (-1899) | |
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Eastern Tales by Many Story Tellers
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By: Augusta Stevenson (1869-1976) | |
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Children's Classics in Dramatic Form
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By: Inez Haynes Gillmore (1873-1970) | |
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Maida's Little Shop
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By: M. [Illustrator] Richter | |
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Child-Land Picture-Pages for the Little Ones
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By: Matilda Chaplin Ayrton (1846-1883) | |
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Child-Life in Japan and Japanese Child Stories
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By: Honor C. Appleton (1879-1951) | |
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Dumpy Proverbs Dumpy Books for Children #24
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By: John T. Trowbridge (1827-1916) | |
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The Young Surveyor; or Jack on the Prairies
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By: Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949) | |
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Blue Bird for Children
One of the strongest pieces of imaginative writing for children that the past decade has produced and one of the most delicate and beautiful of all times, is "The Blue Bird," by Maurice Maeterlinck, written as a play, and very successfully produced on the stage. Georgette Leblanc (Madame Maurice Maeterlinck), has rendered this play in story form for children, under the title "The Children's Blue Bird," and in this form it has now been carefully edited and arranged for schools. On the night of Christmas a boy and a girl, Tyltil and Mytil, are visited by Fairy Berilyuna... | |
By: Rosalie Vrylina Halsey | |
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Forgotten Books of the American Nursery A History of the Development of the American Story-Book
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By: Edouard Laboulaye (1811-1883) | |
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Laboulaye's Fairy Book
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By: Anna Bartlett Warner (1824-1915) | |
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The Gold of Chickaree
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By: Universal House of Justice | |
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A Compilation on Bahá'í Education
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By: H. L. (Henry Louis) Stephens (1824-1882) | |
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Death and Burial of Poor Cock Robin
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By: Clara de Chatelain (1807-1876) | |
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Up! Horsie! An Original Fairy Tale
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By: John Rae (1882-1963) | |
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Grasshopper Green and the Meadow Mice
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By: Gabrielle E. (Gabrielle Emilie) Jackson (1861-) | |
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Peggy Stewart at School
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By: Frances Jenkins Olcott (1872-1963) | |
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Good Stories for Holidays
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