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    	<title>Top 100 records that match your search results </title>
    	<description> Displaying the top 100 results that match your query.</description>
    	<link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/rssapi.jsp?browse=true&amp;Ne=7236&amp;N=3+7515+7238</link>
  		 
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            <title>Behind the beautiful forevers : [life, death, and hope in a Mumbai undercity]
            by Boo, Katherine.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1510995</link>
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            <description></description>
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            <title>The one and only Ivan
            by Applegate, Katherine.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1519605</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>When Ivan, a gorilla who has lived for years in a down-and-out circus-themed mall, meets Ruby, a baby elephant that has been added to the mall, he decides that he must find her a better life.</description>
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            <title>Dead end in Norvelt
            by Gantos, Jack.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1392715</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In the historic town of Norvelt, Pennsylvania, twelve-year-old Jack Gantos spends the summer of 1962 grounded for various offenses until he is assigned to help an elderly neighbor with a most unusual chore involving the newly dead, molten wax, twisted promises, Girl Scout cookies, underage driving, lessons from history, typewriting, and countless bloody noses.</description>
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            <title>The swerve : how the world became modern
            by Greenblatt, Stephen, 1943-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1645220</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In this book the author transports readers to the dawn of the Renaissance and chronicles the life of an intrepid book lover who rescued the Roman philosophical text On the Nature of Things from certain oblivion. In this work he has crafted both a work of history and a story of discovery, in which one manuscript, plucked from a thousand years of neglect, changed the course of human thought and made possible the world as we know it. Nearly six hundred years ago, a short, genial, cannily alert man in his late thirties took a very old manuscript off a library shelf, saw with excitement what he had discovered, and ordered that it be copied. That book was the last surviving manuscript of an ancient Roman philosophical epic, On the Nature of Things, by Lucretius, a beautiful poem of the most dangerous ideas: that the universe functioned without the aid of gods, that religious fear was damaging to human life, and that matter was made up of very small particles in eternal motion, colliding and swerving in new directions.  The copying and translation of this ancient book, the greatest discovery of the greatest book-hunter of his age, fueled the Renaissance, inspiring artists such as Botticelli and thinkers such as Giordano Bruno; shaped the thought of Galileo and Freud, Darwin and Einstein; and had a revolutionary influence on writers such as Montaigne and Shakespeare and even Thomas Jefferson.</description>
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            <title>Just kids : from Brooklyn to the Chelsea Hotel: a life of art and friendship.
            by Smith, Patti.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1054725</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In this tough, tender memoir, singer-songwriter Patti Smith transports readers to what seemed like halcyon days for art and artists in New York as she shares tales of the denizens of Maxs Kansas City, the Hotel Chelsea, Scribners, Brentanos and Strand bookstores and her new life in Brooklyn with a young man named Robert Mapplthorpe--the man who changed her life with his love, friendship, and genius.</description>
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            <title>Moon over Manifest
            by Vanderpool, Clare.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1189042</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Twelve-year-old Abilene Tucker is the daughter of a drifter who, in the summer of 1936, sends her to stay with an old friend in Manifest, Kansas, where he grew up, and where she hopes to find out some things about his past.</description>
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            <title>The first tycoon : the epic life of Cornelius Vanderbilt
            by Stiles, T. J.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=986047</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A gripping, groundbreaking biography of the combative man whose genius and force of will created modern capitalism. We see Vanderbilt help to launch the transportation revolution, propel the Gold Rush, reshape Manhattan, and invent the modern corporation.</description>
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            <title>The Great War and modern memory
            by Fussell, Paul, 1924-2012
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1037092</link>
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            <description></description>
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            <title>Good masters! Sweet ladies! : voices from a medieval village
            by Schlitz, Laura Amy.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=935097</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A collection of short one-person plays featuring characters, between ten and fifteen years old, who live in or near a thirteenth-century English manor.</description>
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            <title>The Hemingses of Monticello : an American family
            by Gordon-Reed, Annette.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=804471</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Historian and legal scholar Gordon-Reed presents this epic work that tells the story of the Hemingses, an American slave family, and their close blood ties to Thomas Jefferson.</description>
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            <title>Legacy of ashes : the history of the CIA
            by Weiner, Tim.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=713036</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Here is the hidden history of the CIA: why eleven presidents and three generations of CIA officers have been unable to understand the world; why nearly every CIA director has left the agency in worse shape than he found it; and how these failures have profoundly jeopardized our national security. For sixty years, the CIA has managed to maintain a formidable reputation in spite of its terrible record, burying its blunders in top-secret archives. Its mission was to know the world--when it did not succeed, it set out to change the world instead. Now Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Weiner offers the first definitive history of the CIA, based on more than 50,000 documents, primarily from the archives of the CIA itself, and hundreds of interviews with CIA veterans, including ten Directors of Central Intelligence.--From publisher description.</description>
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            <title>Arc of justice [a saga of race, civil rights, and murder in the Jazz Age]
            by Boyle, Kevin, 1960-
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=690819</link>
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            <description></description>
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            <title>The oysters of Locmariaquer
            by Clark, Eleanor, 1913-1996.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=651950</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
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            <title>The worst hard time : the untold story of those who survived the great American dust bowl
            by Egan, Timothy.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=606394</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The dust storms that terrorized Americas High Plains in the darkest years of the Depression were like nothing ever seen before or since, and the stories of the people that held on have never been fully told. Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalist and author Timothy Egan follows a half-dozen families and their communities through the rise and fall of the region, going from sod homes to new framed houses to huddling in basements with the windows sealed by damp sheets in a futile effort to keep the dust out. He follows their desperate attempts to carry on through blinding black blizzards, crop failure, and the deaths of loved ones. Drawing on the voices of those who stayed and survived - those who, now in their eighties and nineties, will soon carry their memories to the grave - Egan tells a story of endurance and heroism against the backdrop of the Great Depression.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>The year of magical thinking
            by Didion, Joan.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=594888</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Joan Didion explores an intensely personal yet universal experience: a portrait of a marriage - and a life, in good times and bad - that will speak to anyone who has ever loved a husband or wife or child. Several days before Christmas 2003, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion saw their only daughter, Quintana, fall ill with what seemed at first flu, then pneumonia, then complete septic shock. She was put into an induced coma and placed on life support. Days later - the night before New Years Eve - the Dunnes were just sitting down to dinner after visiting the hospital when John Gregory Dunne suffered a massive and fatal coronary. In a second, this close, symbiotic partnership of forty years was over. Four weeks later, their daughter pulled through. Two months after that, arriving at LAX, she collapsed and underwent six hours of brain surgery at UCLA Medical Center to relieve a massive hematoma. This book is Didions attempt to make sense of the weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I ever had about death, about illness ... about marriage and children and memory ... about the shallowness of sanity, about life itself.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>Rifles for Watie
            by Keith, Harold, 1903-1998.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=544991</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Kansas sixteen-year-old Jeff Bussey is thrilled to join the Union army so he can fight against the Confederates, but he faces a difficult decision when he is sent to infiltrate enemy forces as a spy.</description>
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            <title>Miracles on Maple Hill
            by Sorensen, Virginia, 1912-1991
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=516382</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>After her father returns from the war moody and tired, Marlys family decides to move from the city to Maple Hill Farm in the Pennsylvania countryside where they share many adventures which help restore their spirits and their bond with each other.</description>
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            <title>The sea around us
            by Carson, Rachel, 1907-1964.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=533242</link>
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            <description></description>
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            <title>Waiting for snow in Havana : confessions of a Cuban boy
            by Eire, Carlos M. N.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=443522</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In 1962, at the age of eleven, Carlos Eire was one of 14,000 children airlifted out of Cuba, his parents left behind. His life until then is the subject of Waiting for Snow in Havana, a wry, heartbreaking, intoxicatingly beautiful memoir of growing up in a privileged Havana household - and of being exiled from his own childhood by the Cuban revolution. That childhood, until his world changes, is as joyous and troubled as any other - but with exotic differences. Lizards roam the house and grounds. Fights arent waged with snowballs but with breadfruit. The rich are outlandishly rich, like the eight-year-old son of a sugar baron who has a real miniature race car, or the neighbor with a private animal garden, complete with tiger. All this is bathed in sunlight and shades of turquoise and tangerine: the island of Cuba, says one of the stern monks at Carloss school, might have been the original Paradise - and it is tempting to believe. His father is a municipal judge and an obsessive collector of art and antiques, convinced that in a past life he was Louis XVI and that his wife was Marie Antoinette. His mother looks to the future; conceived on a transatlantic liner bound for Cuba from Spain, she wants her children to be modern, which means embracing all things American. His older brother electrocutes lizards. Surrounded by eccentrics, in a home crammed with portraits of Jesus that speak to him in dreams and nightmares, Carlos searches for secret proofs of the existence of God. Then, in January 1959, President Batista is suddenly gone, a cigar-smoking guerrilla named Castro has taken his place, and Christmas is canceled. The echo of firing squads is everywhere. At the Aquarium of the Revolution, sharks multiply in a swimming pool. And one by one, the authors schoolmates begin to disappear - spirited away to the United States. Carlos will end up there himself, alone, never to see his father again.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>From the mixed-up files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
            by Konigsburg, E. L.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=483463</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Having run away with her younger brother to live in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, twelve-year-old Claudia strives to keep things in order in their new home and to become a changed person and a heroine to herself.</description>
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            <title>Master of the senate
            by Caro, Robert A.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=402553</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>At the heart of this work is its unprecedented revelation of how legislative power works. Interweaving his narrative with a brilliantly astute and concise history of the Senate, Caro shows readers how political initiatives triumph or fail and how political genius functions.</description>
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            <title>The noonday demon : an atlas of depression
            by Solomon, Andrew, 1963-
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=359237</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The Noonday Demon examines depression in personal, cultural, and scientific terms. Drawing on his own struggles with the illness and interviews with fellow sufferers, doctors and scientists, policymakers and politicians, drug designers and philosophers, Solomon reveals the subtle complexities and sheer agony of the disease. He confronts the challenge of defining the illness and describes the vast range of available medications, the efficacy of alternative treatments, and the impact the malady has had on various demographic populations around the world and throughout history. He also explores the thorny patch of moral and ethical questions posed by emerging biological explanations for mental illness. The depth of human experience Solomon chronicles, the range of his intelligence, and his boundless curiosity and compassion will change the readers view of the world.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>Arctic dreams : imagination and desire in a northern landscape
            by Lopez, Barry Holstun, 1945-
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=1047324</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>This book is an account of the history, ecology, and mystique of the arctic region. The author offers a thorough examination of this obscure world, its terrain, its wildlife, its history of Eskimo natives and intrepid explorers who have arrived on their icy shores. But what turns this marvelous work of natural history into a breathtaking study of profound originality is his unique meditation on how the landscape can shape our imagination, desires, and dreams. Its prose as hauntingly pure as the land it describes, and is nothing less than an indelible classic of modern literature.</description>
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            <title>The witch of Blackbird Pond
            by Speare, Elizabeth George.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=371347</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In 1687 in Connecticut, Kit Tyler, feeling out of place in the Puritan household of her aunt, befriends an old woman considered a witch by the community and suddenly finds herself standing trial for witchcraft.</description>
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            <title>Ginger Pye
            by Estes, Eleanor, 1906-1988.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=522853</link>
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            <description>The disappearance of a new puppy named Ginger and the appearance of a mysterious man in a mustard yellow hat bring excitement into the lives of the Pye children.</description>
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            <title>Shiloh
            by Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=516383</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>When he finds a lost beagle in the hills behind his West Virginia home, Marty tries to hide it from his family and the dogs real owner, a mean-spirited man known to shoot deer out of season and to mistreat his dogs.</description>
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            <title>In the heart of the sea : the tragedy of the whaleship Essex
            by Philbrick, Nathaniel.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=312743</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The ordeal of the whaleship Essex was an event as mythic in the nineteenth century as the Titanic disaster was in the twentieth. Nathaniel Philbrick now restores this story - which inspired the climactic scene in Herman Melvilles Moby Dick - to its rightful place in American history. In 1819, the 238-ton Essex set sail from Nantucket on a routine voyage for whales. Fifteen months later, the unthinkable happened: in the farthest reaches of the South Pacific, the Essex was rammed and sunk by an enraged sperm whale. Its twenty-man crew, fearing cannibals on the islands to the west, decided instead to sail their three tiny boats for the distant South American coast. They would eventually travel over 4,500 miles. The next three months tested just how far humans could go in their battle against the sea as, one by one, they succumbed to hunger, thirst, disease, and fear. Nathaniel Philbrick brings an incredible story to life, from the intricacies of Nantuckets whaling economy and the mechanics of sailing a square-rigger to the often mysterious behavior of whales. But it is his portrayal of the crew of the Essex that makes this a heartrending book. These were not romantic adventurers, but young working men, some teenagers, just trying to earn a living in the only way they knew how. They were a varied lot; the ambitious first mate, Owen Chase, whose impulsive nature failed at a crucial moment, then drew him to a more dangerous course; the cabin boy, Thomas Nickerson, whose long-lost account of the ordeal, written at age seventy-one, provides new insights into the story; and Captain George Pollard, who was forced to take the most horrifying step if any of his men were to survive.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>Holes
            by Sachar, Louis, 1954-
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=130987</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>As further evidence of his familys bad fortune which they attribute to a curse on a distant relative, Stanley Yelnats is sent to a hellish correctional camp in the Texas desert where he finds his first real friend, a treasure, and a new sense of himself.</description>
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            <title>American sphinx : the character of Thomas Jefferson
            by Ellis, Joseph J.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=33550</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In American Sphinx, Ellis sifts the facts shrewdly from the legends and the rumors, treading a path between vilification and hero worship in order to formulate a plausible portrait of the man who still today hover(s) over the political scene like one of those dirigibles cruising above a crowded football stadium, flashing words of inspiration to both teams. For, at the grass roots, Jefferson is no longer liberal or conservative, agrarian or industrialist, pro- or anti-slavery, privileged or populist. He is all things to all people. His own obliviousness to incompatible convictions within himself (which left him deaf to most forms of irony) has leaked out into the world at large - a world determined to idolize him despite his foibles. We watch him exhibiting both great depth and great shallowness, combining massive learning with extraordinary naivete, piercing insights with self-deception on the grandest scale. We understand why we should neither beatify him nor consign him to the rubbish heap of history, though we are by no means required to stop loving him. He is Thomas Jefferson, after all - our very own sphinx.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>The classical style : Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven
            by Rosen, Charles, 1927-2012
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=223839</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>This outstanding book treating the three most beloved composers of the Vienna School is considered basic to any study of classical-era music. Drawing on his rich experience and intimate familiarity with the works of these giants, Charles Rosen presents his keen insights in clear and persuasive language. For this expanded edition of The Classical Style, Rosen provides an entirely new, 64-page chapter on the later years of Beethoven and the musical conventions he inherited from Haydn and Mozart. Rosen has also written an extensive new preface in which he responds to other writers who have commented on his ideas. Finally, readers are treated to a compact disc, recorded by Rosen in 1996 and produced especially to accompany this new edition of the book. The CD offers complete performances of two late sonatas of Beethoven that are discussed extensively in the text: the Opus 106 in B[flat] major (the Hammerklavier) and the Opus 110 in A[flat] major.--BOOK JACKET.</description>
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            <title>The view from Saturday
            by Konigsburg, E. L.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=8503</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Four students, with their own individual stories, develop a special bond and attract the attention of their teacher, a paraplegic, who choses them to represent their sixth-grade class in the Academic Bowl competition.</description>
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            <title>Roller skates
            by Sawyer, Ruth, 1880-1970.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=165925</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Liberated for a year from her parents restrictions, ten-year-old Lucinda discovers true freedom in the care of her temporary guardians as she roller skates around the streets of turn-of-the-century New York.</description>
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            <title>Walk two moons
            by Creech, Sharon.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=95731</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>After her mother leaves home suddenly, thirteen-year-old Sal and her grandparents take a car trip retracing her mothers route. Along the way, Sal recounts the story of her friend Phoebe, whose mother also left.</description>
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            <title>Becoming a man : half a life story
            by Monette, Paul.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=218141</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Already a classic, Monettes critically acclaimed coming of age/coming out story traces the first quarter-century of a remarkable life. One of the most most complex, moral, personal, and political books to have been written about gay life.--LA Weekly.</description>
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            <title>Smoky, the cow horse
            by James, Will, 1892-1942.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=210644</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The experiences of a mouse-colored horse from his birth in the wild, through his capture by humans and his work in the rodeo and on the range, to his eventual old age.</description>
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            <title>Missing May
            by Rylant, Cynthia
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=135810</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>After the death of the beloved aunt who has raised her, twelve-year-old Summer and her uncle Ob leave their West Virginia trailer in search of the strength to go on living.</description>
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            <title>The rise and fall of the Third Reich
            by Shirer, William L. 1904-1993.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=174998</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
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            <title>From Beirut to Jerusalem
            by Friedman, Thomas L.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=233933</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
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            <title>The Course of empire
            by De Voto, Bernard Augustine, 1897-1955.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=177749</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
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            <title>The Bronze bow
            by Speare, Elizabeth George.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=245222</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>When the Romans brutally kill Daniel bar Jamins father, the young Palestinian searches for a leader to drive them out, but comes to realize that love may be a more powerful weapon than hate.</description>
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            <title>The Door in the wall
            by De Angeli, Marguerite, 1889-1987.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=175155</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A crippled boy in fourteenth-century England proves his courage and earns recognition from the King.</description>
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            <title>A bright shining lie : John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam
            by Sheehan, Neil.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=172495</link>
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            <description></description>
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            <title>Joyful noise : poems for two voices
            by Fleischman, Paul.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=258180</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A collection of poems describing the characteristics and activities of a variety of insects.</description>
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            <title>The whipping boy
            by Fleischman, Sid, 1920-
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=258794</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A bratty prince and his whipping boy have many adventures when they inadvertently trade places after becoming involved with dangerous outlaws.</description>
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            <title>Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain : a biography
            by Kaplan, Justin.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=198844</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
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            <title>James Joyce
            by Ellmann, Richard, 1918-1987.
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=234526</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
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            <title>Diceys song
            by Voigt, Cynthia
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            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=35498</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Now that the four abandoned Tillerman children are settled in with their grandmother, Dicey finds that their new beginnings require love, trust, humor, and courage.</description>
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            <title>A visit to William Blakes inn : poems for innocent and experienced travelers
            by Willard, Nancy.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=64526</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A collection of poems describing the curious menagerie of guests who arrive at William Blakes inn.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Secret of the Andes
            by Clark, Ann Nolan, 1898-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=138426</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Cusi, a modern Inca boy, leaves his home high in the Andes mountains to learn the mysterious secret of his ancient ancestors. Accompanied by his pet Ilama, Misti, he slowly discovers the truth about his birth and his peoples ancient glory--now he must prove himself worthy to be entrusted with the fabulous secret from the past.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>A Gathering of days : a New England girls journal, 1830-32 : a novel
            by Blos, Joan W.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=59866</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The journal of a 14-year-old girl, kept the last year she lived on the family farm, records daily events in her small New Hampshire town, her fathers remarriage, and the death of her best friend.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Henry James
            by Edel, Leon, 1907-1997.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=229236</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The Westing game
            by Raskin, Ellen.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=97275</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The mysterious death of an eccentric millionaire brings together an unlikely assortment of heirs who must uncover the circumstances of his death before they can claim their inheritance.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Bridge to Terabithia
            by Paterson, Katherine
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=158888</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The life of a ten-year-old boy in rural Virginia expands when he becomes friends with a newcomer who subsequently meets an untimely death trying to reach their hideaway, Terabithia, during a storm.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>King of the Wind
            by Henry, Marguerite, 1902-1997.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=161326</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Follows the adventures of an Arabian stallion brought to England to become one of the founding sires of the Thoroughbred breed, and the mute Arab stable boy who tended him with loyalty and devotion all his life.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>The lives of a cell : notes of a biology watcher
            by Thomas, Lewis, 1913-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=9611</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The Grey king
            by Cooper, Susan, 1935-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=71141</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In this fourth book of The Dark Is Rising sequence, Will Stanton, visiting in Wales, is swept into a desperate quest to find the golden harp and to awaken the ancient Sleepers.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Strawberry girl
            by Lenski, Lois, 1893-1974.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=33639</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Set in a little-known backwoods region of Florida, Strawberry Girl is the first of the Lenski regional books and the winner of the Newbery award.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Young Fu of the upper Yangtze
            by Lewis, Elizabeth Foreman.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=138443</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>In the 1920s a Chinese youth from the country comes to Chungking with his mother where the bustling city offers adventure and his apprenticeship to a coppersmith brings good fortune.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Rabbit Hill
            by Lawson, Robert, 1892-1957.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=27307</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>When new folks come to live in the Big House, the animals of Rabbit Hill wonder if they will plant a garden, so food will be more plentiful.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Johnny Tremain : a novel for old &amp; young
            by Forbes, Esther.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=110589</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The summer of the swans
            by Byars, Betsy Cromer.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=29581</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A teen-age girl gains new insight into herself and her family when her mentally retarded brother gets lost</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Cocteau, a biography.
            by Steegmuller, Francis, 1906-1994.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=192061</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Sounder
            by Armstrong, William H. 1914-1999
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=251585</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Angry and humiliated when his sharecropper father is jailed for stealing food for his family, a young black boy grows in courage and understanding by learning to read and with the help of the devoted dog Sounder.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Call it courage
            by Sperry, Armstrong, 1897-
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=138427</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A legendary adventure story of how Mafatu, the son of the Great Chief of Hikueru, a Polynesian race who worship courage, conquers his fear of the sea and proves he isnt a coward. Mafatus story has a strength and simplicity that appeal to a wide range in age, and it is beautifully told.--New York Times Book Review. Newbery Medal; ALA Notable Childrens Book.</description>
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          <item>
            <title>Thimble summer
            by Enright, Elizabeth, 1909-1968.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=247081</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The Trumpeter of Krakow
            by Kelly, Eric Philbrook, 1884-1960.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=2644</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A Polish family in the Middle Ages guards a great secret treasure and a boys memory of an earlier trumpeter of Krakow makes it possible for him to save his father.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Shadow of a bull.
            by Wojciechowska, Maia, 1927-2002
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=69599</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Manolo Olivar has to make a decision: to follow in his famous fathers shadow and become a bullfighter, or to follow his heart and become a doctor.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The city in history: its origins, its transformations, and its prospects.
            by Mumford, Lewis, 1895-1990.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=220881</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Onion John
            by Krumgold, Joseph, 1908-1980.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=138446</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>His friendship with the town odd-jobs man, Onion John, causes a conflict between Andy and his father.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Mistress to an age; a life of Madame de Stael.
            by Herold, J. Christopher.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=163338</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Gay-Neck : the story of a pigeon
            by Mukerji, Dhan Gopal, 1890-1936.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=179231</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>The story of the training of a carrier pigeon and its service during the First World War, revealing the birds courageous and spirited adventures over the housetops of an Indian village, in the Himalayan Mountains, and on the French battlefield.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The measure of man : on freedom, human values, survival, and the modern temper
            by Krutch, Joseph Wood, 1893-1970.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=336681</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>A stillness at Appomattox.
            by Catton, Bruce, 1899-1978.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=41006</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Shen of the sea : Chinese stories for children
            by Chrisman, Arthur Bowie, 1889-1953.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=138440</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A series of fascinating Chinese stories, strong in humor and rich in Chinese wisdom, in which the author has caught admirably the spirit of Chinese life and thought.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Amos Fortune : free man
            by Yates, Elizabeth, 1905-2001.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=82308</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>John Newbery medal for the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children. 1951.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The twenty-one balloons
            by Pne du Bois, William, 1916-1993
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=138451</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description></description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Miss Hickory
            by Bailey, Carolyn Sherwin, 1875-1961.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=233389</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>Relates the adventures of a country doll made of an apple-wood twig with a hickory nut for a head.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>Hitty, her first hundred years
            by Field, Rachel, 1894-1942.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=251971</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>This Newbery Medal winner is a timeless classic about a very special doll of great charm and character.</description>
          </item>
		   
          <item>
            <title>The Cat who went to heaven
            by Coatsworth, Elizabeth Jane, 1893-1986.
            </title>
            <link>http://www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/record.jsp?R=33173</link>
            <pubDate></pubDate>
            <description>A little cat comes to the home of a poor Japanese artist and, by humility and devotion, brings him good fortune.</description>
          </item>
		  
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