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Archive for the ‘Booklists’ Category

Nonfiction

In Booklists on May 7, 2010 at 3:45 pm

Flags of the World  by Sylvie Bednar
Each nation’s flag is paired with facts and tidbits of history about that country, providing a window into the values and cultures of countries from around the globe.

Around the World on Eighty Legs  by Amy Gibson
An illustrated collection of poems that provides information about animals around the world.

Saving the Baghdad Zoo  by Kelly Milner Halls
A photo-illustrated firsthand account of how United States soldiers and volunteers saved the animals of the Baghdad Zoo after the start of the Iraq War.

African Acrostics  by Avis Harley
Contains color photographs of various African animals, each with a lighthearted poem that contains acrostics.

Our World of Water  by Beatrice Hollyer
Explore how children from six different countries use water every day.

One World, One Day  by Barbara Kerley
This beautiful photo book follows the course of one day in our world. Sunrise to sunset is captured in the essential things we all do daily, wherever we live in the world, and in the different ways we do them. The first meal of the day will take on a whole new dimension for American kids as an American pancake breakfast is contrasted with porridge in North Korea and churros in Spain.

What the World Eats  photographed by Peter Menzel
A collection of photographs depicting twenty-five families from twenty-one different countries, and includes Chad, Equador, Greenland, Japan, Mongolia, and others, and also describes the cost of a week’s worth of food, and other cultural information for each listed country.

Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya  by Donna Jo Napoli
Wangari Maathai, known as Mama Miti, mother of trees, shares her wisdom with other women by advising them to plant trees native to Kenya to solve their many problems.

Cycle of Rice, Cycle of Life  by Jan Reynolds
Photo-essay exploring the cultural and environmental aspects of traditional Balinese rice farming, a model of sustainable food production.

Wish: Wishing Traditions Around the World  by Roseanne Thong
An illustrated guide to wishing traditions from around the world, including Japan, China, Russia, Israel, Italy, Guatemala, the United States, and others, providing insights into the various cultures and highlighting the similarities.

Opuestos: Mexican Folk Art Opposites in English and Spanish by Cynthia Weill
Introduces opposites using painted wooden folk art animal sculptures made by artisans from Oaxaca, Mexico.

Biblioburro: A True Story from Colombia  by Jeanette Winter
Luis has so many books in his little house in Colombia that he buys two donkeys and travels throughout the land bringing the joy of reading to children.

My Village: Rhymes from Around the World  collected by Danielle Wright
Collects poems and nursery rhymes from around the world, including such countries as China, Ireland, Zimbabwe, and Iran, and provides the English translations along with the rhymes in their original languages.

Older Fiction

In Booklists on May 7, 2010 at 2:56 pm

Extra Credit  by Andrew Clements
As letters flow back and forth–between the prairies of Illinois and the mountains of Afghanistan, across cultural and religious divides–sixth-grader Abby, ten-year-old Amira, and eleven-year-old Sadeed begin to speak and listen to each other.

Blessing’s Bead  by Debby Dahl Edwardson
In 1917, Aaluk leaves for Siberia while her sister Nutaaq remains in their Alaskan village and becomes one of the few survivors of an influenza epidemic, then in 1986, Nunaaq’s great-granddaughter leaves her mother due to a different kind of sickness and returns to the village where they were born.

Sahwira  by Carolyn Marsden
The strong friendship between two boys, one black and one white, who live on a mission in Rhodesia, begins to unravel as protests against white colonial rule intensify in 1964.

A Long Walk to Water  by Linda Sue Park
When the Sudanese civil war reaches his village in 1985, eleven-year-old Salva becomes separated from his family and must walk with other Dinka tribe members through southern Sudan, Ethiopia, and Kenya in search of safe haven. Based on the life of Salva Dut, who, after emigrating to America in 1996, began a project to dig water wells in Sudan.

Tofu Quilt  by Ching Young Russell
Growing up in 1960s Hong Kong, a young girl dreams of becoming a writer in spite of conventional limits placed on her by society and family
.

Escape Under the Forever Sky  by Eve Yohalem
As a future conservation zoologist whose mother is the United States Ambassador to Ethiopia, thirteen-year-old Lucy uses her knowledge for survival when she is kidnapped and subsequently escapes.

Picture Books

In Booklists on April 26, 2010 at 11:34 am

My Little Round House  by Bolormaa Baasansuren
A Mongolian baby describes his first year of life in a nomadic community, from the smells of food cooking to the people he met.

El Barrio by Debbi Chocolate
A young boy explores his vibrant Latino neighborhood, with its vegetable gardens instead of lawns, Nativity parades, quinceañera parties, and tejana and salsa music.

How to Catch a Fish  by John Frank
Rhyming text and illustrations describe the ways fish are caught in various locations around the world.

Ten Days and Nine Nights  by Yumi Heo
A young girl eagerly awaits the arrival of her newly-adopted sister from Korea, while her whole family prepares.

A Giraffe Goes to Paris  by Mary Tavener Holmes
Recounts the 1827 journey of a young giraffe named Belle, a gift from the Pasha of Egypt to King Charles X of France, as she makes her way by boat and land to Paris, accompanied by her
devoted caretaker, Atir.

Say Hello by Rachel Isadora
A little girl greets people in her neighborhood in many different languages.

Can You Say Peace? by Karen Katz
Every September 21 on the International Day of Peace, children around the world wish in many different languages for peace.

Ready to Dream by Donna Jo Napoli
While drawing pictures of the animals she sees on her trip to Australia, a young girl named Ally meets Pauline, an aborigine woman and fellow artist, from whom Ally learns that art is not always created with just paper and paints, and that mistakes are actually happy accidents.

When it’s Six O’Clock in San Francisco  by Cynthia Jaynes Omololu
When Jared wakes up in San Francisco at six o’clock in the morning, children in other parts of the world are doing other things, like going to school in Buenos Aires, Argentina, playing soccer in London, England, and eating dinner in Lahore, Pakistan, because of the difference in time zones around the globe. Includes factual material about telling time and time zones.

How Big is the World? by Britta Teckentrup
Little Mole goes on a journey to see how big the world really is.

My Name is Sangoel by Karen Lynn Williams
As a refugee from Sudan to the United States, Sangoel is frustrated that no one can pronounce his name correctly until he finds a clever way to solve the problem.


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