Thursday, November 20, 2008

Historical Fiction by Joseph Bruchac for Native American Heritage Month


Code Talker
A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two

Dial, 2005




This work of historical fiction tells about a young Navajo named Ned Begay, a code talker, and his experiences in the Pacific during World War II. (It is a popular book with middle school boys.) This novel provides much information about the code talker program that remained classified for decades after the end of the war. Bruchac includes an author’s note with information about the Navajos and the code talkers and a selected bibliography that lists titles of books about the Navajos, the code talkers, and World War II.

More Information about Code Talkers


Squanto’s Journey
The Story of the First Thanksgiving

Illustrated by Greg Shed
Silver Whistle/Harcourt, 2000

This picture book is excellent for reading aloud in the elementary grades. Bruchac narrates the story in the voice of Squanto (Tisquantum), a Patuxet Indian. The book opens with Squanto telling about his capture by Captain Thomas Hunt who took him and other Patuxets to Spain to be sold as slaves in 1614, how Spanish friars set Squanto free and helped him to get to England, and his return to America in 1619 when he found that his people had been devastated by a disease. In the rest of the book, we learn about Squanto’s building a friendship with the Pokanokets and Nemaskets; Samoset, a Pemaquid Indian; the arrival of the Pilgrims on the Mayflower; and the relationship between Squanto and the English that helped the settlers at Plimoth make it through their first year in the New World. Includes an author’s note and a glossary.


The Winter People
Dial, 2002


Set during the French and Indian War, this exciting story tells about a fourteen-year-old Abenaki named Saxso whose village of Saint Francis (Odanak) is burned to the ground by the British. Saxso’s sisters and mothers are taken captive. With his father dead, Saxso takes it upon himself to track down the British raiders and bring his family back home. Although Saxso is a fictional character, the story is based on an event that occurred in October of 1759 when “Major Robert Rogers led a force of 200 men, some of whom were Stockbridge Indian scouts, in an attack on Saint Francis.” Includes a map and an extensive author’s note.


The Arrow over the Door
Illustrated by James Watling
Penguin Putnam, 1998


This historical novel is based on the “Saratoga Meeting” or “Easton Meeting”—an event that occurred in 1777 between a group of Abenakis and Friends at a Quaker Meetinghouse just before the battle of Saratoga in New York. The Abenakis arrived to find a congregation of peaceful people and embraced them as friends. The Arrow over the Door is told in alternating chapters by fictional characters Stands Straight, a young Abenaki, and Samuel, a Quaker boy. Both boys are changed by their encounter with each other that day.




Sacajawea
The Story of Bird Woman and the Lewis and Clark Expedition
Scholastic, 2000

This is a well-researched and informative historical novel about the young Shoshone who served as a translator, peacemaker, and guide for Lewis and Clark on their historic expedition. The book is told in alternating first person narratives by Sacajawea and William Clark. Includes a map, author’s note, and selected bibliography.
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Friday, November 14, 2008

The Sun in Me: Poems about the Planet


The Sun in Me: Poems about the Planet
Compiled by Grace Nicholls
Illustrated by Beth Krommes
Barefoot Books, 2003



Every week I spend quite a bit of time trying to decide what to post about on Poetry Friday. Yesterday, I went looking through my extensive personal collection of children’s poetry books. Then I pulled The Sun in Me: Poems about the Planet off the shelf. I hadn’t read from the book in a long time. I thought it would be a good anthology to review this week. Its poems celebrate nature—its beauty, the wonder it instills in us, the feelings it evokes. There are twenty-nine poems about the rain and the sea, about birds and the forest, about winter and snow, about corn growing, about stars and the sun. There are poems about observing the world and about listening to quiet sounds.


The book contains poems written by Emily Dickinson, Sappho, John Updike, David McCord, Ian Serrailler, Issa, and Charlotte Zolotow. It also includes many lovely poems I haven’t seen in other anthologies—poems by Grace Nichols, Jean Kenward, John Foster, Moira Andrew, Zaro Weil, an excerpt from a Passamaquoddy Indian song—as well as poems translated from other languages. Beth Krommes, the illustrator of Joyce Sidman’s award-winning poetry book Butterfly Eyes and Other Secrets of the Meadow, did the artwork for this book. Her scratchboard and watercolor illustrations are bold and striking and serve as a perfect complement to the poems selected by Grace Nicholls. (Click here to see an illustration from Butterfly Eyes.)


The Sun in Me opens with the poem Behold. On the double-page spread with the poem, Krommes shows a child in a small plane flying above a planet bursting with life—green trees, colorful flowers, and an ocean teeming with fish and a spouting whale.

Excerpts from selected poems included in the book:

From Behold
by Mary Kawena Pukui

Above, above
All birds in air

Below, below
All earth’s flowers…

Sing out and say
Again and refrain

Behold this lovely world.




From I Spun a Star
by John Foster

I spun a star
Which gleamed and glittered in the night.
I spun a star,
Stood watching spellbound from afar,
Until it disappeared from sight…


From The Snow
by Emily Dickinson

It ruffles Wrists of Posts
As Ankles of a Queen—
Then stills its Artisans—like Ghosts—
Denying they have been—


The book closes with The Sun in Me. Here are the first and last stanzas of the poem.

From The Sun in Me
by Moira Andrew

The sun is in me,
pale morning flames
setting my still-sleeping
heart alight.

The moon is in me,
sad silver beams
painting my dreams
with shadows.


The Sun in Me: Poems about the Planet would make a lovely gift for a young nature lover.

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At Blue Rose Girls, I have another poem by Sherman Alexie this week entitled Grief Calls Us to the Things of This World.


Yat-Yee Chong has the Poetry Friday Roundup this week.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Children's Books Written by Native Writers

Debbie Reese has an article in the November issue of School Library Journal. It’s especially apropos for American Indian Heritage Month. In the article, entitled Native Voices, Debbie includes recommendations for books written by American Indians for elementary, middle school, and high school students. She provides a brief summary for each book recommended. This is a good article to have on hand all through the school year—not just in November.

Here’s the first paragraph of Reese’s Native Voices:

"Robert Berkhofer Jr.’s The White Man’s Indian: Images of the American Indian from Columbus to the Present (Knopf) was published in 1979. Though not about children’s literature, the arguments he made apply to the Indians portrayed in most children’s books. In short, they aren’t really Indians. They have little basis in reality. These imaginings, however, have great staying power. As we approach 2009, stereotypical images of American Indians as bloodthirsty savages and tragic, heroic warriors still strike fear and evoke sympathy as they traipse across the pages of children’s books."

Click here to read the rest of the article.


You may also be interested in this earlier post at Wild Rose Reader: Native American Heritage Month: Book Lists & Resources.

In Celebration of Children's Books & Their Creators

November 16th looks to be a great day for lovers of children’s books in Massachusetts. Here's what will be happening at The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in Amherst and the R. Michelson Galleries in Northampton this coming Sunday.


Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art
125 West Bay Road

Amherst, MA

In Celebration of Children’s Literature
November 16, 2008
1:00 pm
Free with Museum Admission

Join Lolly Robinson, guest curator of Over Rainbows and Down Rabbit Holes: The Art of Children’s Books, in conversation with Kinuko Craft, Jerry Pinkney, Rosemary Wells, and Paul O. Zelinsky as they discuss the art and design of the picture book.

Virtual Tour of the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art

Directions to the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art




R. Michelson Galleries
132 Main Street

Northampton, MA 01060

19th Annual Children’s Illustration Show
Opening Reception: Sunday, November 16th from 4:00 to 6:00

Artists who will be in attendance at the reception:

Kathryn Brown
Diane deGroat
Tony DiTerlizzi
Jane Dyer
Scott Fisher
Mordicai Gerstein
Rebecca Guay
Jarrett J. Krosoczka
Barry Moser
Chris Raschka
Ruth Sanderson
Mo Willems


I'm hoping to attend both programs with my daughter. Come join us.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Buy Books for the Holidays: Book Lists



What's a better gift for a child than a great book? I give children's books as presents for all occasions. I've already started purchasing gift books for Christmas. Why not join those of us who are making a commitment to purchase books this holiday season? Do check out the Buy Books for the Holidays site to find out more about this initiative.


I've compiled a list of notable and best book lists for children in case some of you might like suggestions for excellent kids' books that will make the perfect present for a special child in your life. You might also consider buying books to donate to a school class, school library, shelter, hospital, or charitable organizations that help out families in need.
Note: Last year my husband and I adopted two DSS families in Massachusetts for Christmas. In addition to the requested toys and clothing, we got the families lots of great children's books.
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LINKS TO BOOK LISTS