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PALM SPRINGS: DESIGN FOR THE DESERT
For Kids
Stories from Where We Live, The California Coast
Sara St. Antoine
Paul Mirocha
Trudy Nicholson
LITERATURE
2005
PAPER
248 PAGES
MIDDLE READERS (Age 9-12)
An anthology of writings about coastal California -- wonderfully useful as a young person's guide to people, nature and place. It includes Native American myths, poems and songs, historical accounts and modern short stories, as well as black-and-white drawings and maps. Ages 9 to 14.
(CAL94, $10.95) |
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Ishi, Last of his Tribe
Theodora Kroeber
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR
1973
PAPER
208 PAGES
YOUNG ADULTS
COMING IN
Kids in California inevitably read this book in school, and for good reason. As an elegy for a lost way of life and a lesson in Native American history, it's extremely appealing. Theodora Kroeber relates the life story of Ishi, the last Yahi Indian to survive the arrival of white settlers in California, who was reputedly starving when a white family discovered him hiding in their slaughterhouse in 1911. He was subsequently "adopted" by the anthropology department of the University of California, where Kroeber debriefed him. For this children's book, she embroidered the story a bit, fleshing out Ishi's youth and putting thoughts in his head, but it still qualifies as a classic true story. Ages 12 and up.
(CAL100, $6.50) |
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Island of the Blue Dolphins
Scott O'Dell
LITERATURE
1971
PAPER
192 PAGES
YOUNG ADULTS
Winner of the 1961 Newbery Medal, this is the gripping story of a courageous American Indian girl left abandoned by her tribe on an island off the California coast. Recommended for children ages 12 and up, Karana's struggle to survive is riveting.
(PAC78, $6.99) |
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