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19
result(s) for
"Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction."
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Milo : sticky notes and brain freeze
by
Silberberg, Alan
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Parents Death Juvenile fiction.
,
Mothers Juvenile fiction.
2010
In love with the girl he sneezed on the first day of school and best pals with Marshall, the \"One-Eyed Jack\" of friends, seventh-grader Milo Cruikshank misses his mother whose death has changed everything at home.
Mood Management Leader's Manual: A Cognitive-Behavioral Skills-Building Program for Adolescents
2001
Written at a level that is easy for adolescents to understand, this illustrated skills workbook features exercises and checklists for participants to use as they work through the Mood Management program.
Isabelle Day refuses to die of a broken heart
by
St. Anthony, Jane
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Friendship Juvenile fiction.
,
Grief Fiction.
2015
After Isabelle's father tragically passes away, she and her mother move from Milwaukee to Minneapolis in the early 1960s, where Isabelle finds herself trying to escape her grief via the lives of her overly attentive landladies, the McCarthy sisters, and new friendships with classmates Margaret and Grace.
One amazing elephant
by
High, Linda Oatman, author
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Grief in animals Juvenile fiction.
,
Elephants Juvenile fiction.
2017
Loving her family but disliking the circus that is her grandparents' life, Lily is devastated when her grandfather passes away, a loss that leads her to develop an unexpected bond with her grandfather's equally grieving elephant.
Letters to the lost
by
Kemmerer, Brigid, author
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Mothers Death Juvenile fiction.
,
Romance fiction.
2017
\"Juliet Young has always written letters to her mother, a world famous photojournalist--even after her mother's death, she leaves letters at her grave. When Declan finds a haunting letter left beside a grave, he can't resist the urge to write back. Soon, he is sharing his pain with a perfect stranger. When real life interferes with their secret life of letters, Juliet and Declan discover truths that might tear them apart\"-- Provided by publisher.
The girl who threw butterflies
by
Cochrane, Mick
in
Baseball Juvenile fiction.
,
Pitchers (Baseball) Juvenile fiction.
,
Sex role Juvenile fiction.
2010
Eighth-grader Molly's ability to throw a knuckleball earns her a spot on the baseball team, which not only helps her feel connected to her recently deceased father, who loved baseball, but also helps in other aspects of her life as well.
Because of the sun
by
Torres Sanchez, Jenny, author
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Mothers and daughters Juvenile fiction.
,
Dysfunctional families Juvenile fiction.
2017
Seventeen-year-old Dani struggles with how to process the ambiguous grief she feels in the aftermath of her mother's death after moving to New Mexico with an aunt she never met.
The color of the sun
by
Almond, David, 1951- author
in
Grief in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Fathers Death Juvenile fiction.
,
Imagination Juvenile fiction.
2019
\"One hot summer morning, only weeks after his father's death, Davie steps out his front door into the familiar streets of the Tyneside town that has always been his home. But this seemingly ordinary day takes on an air of mystery and tragedy as the residents learn that a boy has been killed. Despite the threat of a murderer on the loose, Davie turns away from the gossip and sets off toward the sunlit hill above town, where the real and imaginary worlds begin to blur around him\"--Provided by publisher.
Willow
by
Hoban, Julia
in
Cutting (Self-mutilation) Juvenile fiction.
,
Self-mutilation in adolescence Juvenile fiction.
,
Guilt Juvenile fiction.
2010
Sixteen-year-old Willow, who was driving the car that killed both of her parents, copes with the pain and guilt by cutting herself, until she meets a smart and sensitive boy who's determined to help her stop.
Neanderthal opens the door to the universe
by
Norton, Preston, 1985- author
in
High schools Juvenile fiction.
,
Schools Juvenile fiction.
,
Visions Juvenile fiction.
2018
Nearly a year after his brother's suicide, sixteen-year-old Cliff \"Neanderthal\" Hubbard gets recruited to make life better at Happy Valley High by the school's quarterback, who claims he had a vision from God.