Books about Flat water from Amazon.com



The Real McCoy
The Real McCoy is the biography of the Prohibition-era rum-runner turned national hero whose quality liquor and fair dealing perpetuated the phrase "it’s the real McCoy." Long out of print, this maritime classic has been updated with new text and photographs..
Price: $24.00 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Seaside Switch
A follow-up to the popular The Sunset Switch, The Seaside Switch artfully investigates the high-tide and low-tide cycle of the ocean's shore. This innovative picture book concept focuses on how the tides affect different sea and sand creatures. As the tid.
Price: $6.99 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Water on a Flat Rock: The Cherokee Love Story of John and Annie Coker
Water on a Flat Rock gives readers an intimate portrayal of John and Annie Coker, from their marriage in 1819 through the Trail of Tears and the Civil War, and opens with words from Annie herself: "Osiyo. I am Annie. I have come here to this place in the woods to tell you my story. I am glad you have come, hungry for the story that was lost. Learn that we are not so different, you and I. Learn that tragedy, happiness and love do not change through the years - Learn about John." Readers are transported to 1800s Tennessee where 16-year-old Annie Ratliff meets and marries 41 year-old John Coker. Drawing on the known facts of John and Annie Coker, the author offers a vivid picture, credibly filling in the gaps with imaginative fiction, a compelling love story of two Cherokee people, living in times of turbulence and change..
Price: $12.60 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Butterflies Still Sing: Sequel to Water on a Flat Rock
It is no small feat to create a world and record the history of a family, but author Kathy Lynn has done just that in the second book of her series about her Cherokee ancestors. Butterflies Still Sing is a delightful book that transcends age groups. It is a strikingly straight-from-the-heart portrait of Ellen Jane Cummins, who married Cherokee William Coker in 1843. Written through Ellen Jane’s eyes and covering three decades, the story begins in 1837, when Ellen was not quite 16, and her Methodist preacher father accepts a call to create a church among the Cherokees in Franklin County, Tennessee. This is a tale of love and values, capturing Ellen’s passions, loves, insecurities and fears, her anguish for the ill-fated Cherokees during the Trail of Tears, and the horrors of the Civil War. It is truly an unforgettable story of one white woman who loved and married a Cherokee man..
Price: $21.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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