Jean's Books

Saving Hootie

Saving Hootie

A small, crooked pine named Needles is lonely for feathered friends. One evening, a baby owl falls onto its branches. Eager to rescue the owlet, wintering birds build a nest, feed, and care for the owlet they lovingly call Hootie. Needles is happy at last. All is peaceful until a father and his daughter search the forest for a tree to cut and take home. The daughter chooses the little, crooked pine. Can the birds save Needles? And Hootie?

Purchase Saving Hootie from:
Jean Flahive

The Canoe Maker

Teddy Roosevelt, Millie, and the Elegant Ride

Millie Thayer is a headstrong farmer's daughter who chases her dreams in a way you would expect a little girl nicknamed "Spitfire" would--running full tilt and with her eyes on the stars. Dreaming of leaving farm life, working in the city, and fighting for women's right to vote, Millie imagines flying away on a magic carpet. One day, that flying carpet shows up in the form of an electric trolley that cuts across her farm. A fortune-teller predicts that Millie's path will cross that of someone famous. Suddenly she finds herself caught up in events that shake the nation, Maine, and her family. Despairing that her dreams may be shattered, Millie learns, in an unexpected way, that dreams can be shared

Gold Winner - 2020 Eric Hoffer Book Award
Bronze Winner - 2020 Moonbeam Children's Book Award
Silver Winner - 2019 eLit Award

Reviews for Teddy Roosevelt, Millie, and the Elegant Ride

Purchase Teddy Roosevelt, Millie, and the Elegant Ride from:
Seashore Trolley Museum online store - book sales benefit the Museum and the Narcissus.
Amazon
p.morse31@gmail.com
Bookstores - wholesale purchases
Teachers - classroom/quantity purchases
207-985-9723

The Canoe Maker

The Canoe Maker

Young Tobias is on a quest with his father, David Moses Bridges, the Tribe’s master canoe maker. Together they go deep into the Maine woods to find the perfect birch and to gather spruce roots, cedar and spruce gum to build a canoe in the ‘old ways.’ In this magical tale, David weaves Native American storytelling into the ancient art and spirituality of canoe making, including the heart-rending, mythological legend of the partridge, the first canoe maker.

2020 Maine Literary Award Finalist

Reviews for The Canoe Maker

Purchase The Canoe Maker from:
Maine Authors Publishing
Amazon

My Image

The Old Mainer and the Sea

Sometimes hope comes in unexpected places.

Eben goes out fishing one day, rowing six miles from his island home towards the harbor on the mainland, hauling in cod as he goes. But a porpoise tangles his lines, fog rolls in, and an accident leads to a broken oar. Lonely, tired, and adrift, Eben is almost ready to give in to the embrace of the sea, when rescue comes in an unexpected form. The Old Mainer and the Sea is an allegorical tale about the circular nature of hope and deliverance.

Reviews for The Old Mainer and the Sea

Purchase The Old Mainer and the Sea from:
Islandport Press
Amazon

My Image

Billy Boy

Billy Laird, from Berwick, mustered in the 17th Maine to serve with his friends in the Union Army. Mentally challenged, Billy is ill-prepared for the training and fighting that follows, but he gets by with the help of his friends. Soon, however, he is sent alone to a different unit. Frightened and unsure of what to do on his own, Billy runs off and meets up with a runaway slave, Elijah. Together they make their way north on a perilous journey from Virginia to Maine, aided by compassionate Quakers and the Underground Railroad. As Bill Bushnell writes in a Kennebec Journal review, “They make it to Maine, but it’s not the sanctuary they sought. Betrayal awaits one, a solemn promise awaits the other.” What ultimately happened to Billy is a matter of record.

Reviews for Billy Boy

Purchase Billy Boy from:
Islandport Press
Amazon

My Image

Railroad to the Moon

Trapped between new found freedom and a promise, runaway slave Elijah is led by hands both seen and unseen to a destiny of which he could only dream. Elijah has been living with the Laird family on a small farm in Maine. The family continues to grieve their soldier son, Billy.

In their run north together, Billy had exacted a promise from Elijah, to take his place, to be a big brother to ten-year-old Jamie. Now, Jamie’s ability to heal hinges on his attachment to Elijah.

At the close of the Civil War, Elijah insists on going to his southern homeland to look for his father. Jamie is despondent, but Elijah pledges to return. His journey to the South is bittersweet. While committed to returning to Maine, Elijah is filled with conflicting desires. In a chance meeting, Elijah befriends Oren Cheney, founder of Bates College in Maine, who works tirelessly to solve his dilemma.

Weaving historical realities into a work of fiction, this is a tale of friendship, loyalty, and a solemn promise.

Read the book review written by Frank O Smith published in the Maine Sunday Telegram.

Purchase Railroad to the Moon from:
Maine Authors Publishing
Amazon

Remember Me book cover

Remember Me

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the man who would become the thirty-second president of the United States, joyfully spent his boyhood summers on Campobello Island. It was there that he met Tomah Joseph, a Passamaquoddy elder and former chief who made his living as a guide, birchbark canoe builder, and basketmaker. The story imagines the relationship that developed between these two as Tomah Joseph taught young Franklin how to canoe and shared some of the stories and culture of his people. A beautifully decorated birchbark canoe that he made for Franklin remains at Campobello Island, a tangible reminder of this special friendship.

Tilbury House Publishers has a wonderful Teachers Take Note page on their website outlining curriculum for grades 3-6, as well as list of related online resources.

"Remember Me is a wonderful story that describes not only the magic and mystery of our ancestral homeland but the giving nature of our elders."
-David Moses Bridges, Passamaquoddy master canoe builder

Remember Me was co-authored with Passamaquoddy Tribal historian Donald Soctomah and beautifully illustrated by Mary Beth Owens.

Remember Me won the Moonbeam Gold Award for “Best Multi-Cultural Picture Book in 2009.”

Purchase Remember Me from:
Amazon
Tilbury House

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