It Takes a Village
By Jane Cowen-Fletcher
Format: 32 pp.
ISBN: 0590465732
Age Range: 4-8 years
Publisher: New York: Scholastic, Inc., 1994. Text copyright 2004 Lectorum Publications, Inc
On market day in a small village in Benin, Yemi tries to watch her little brother Kokou and finds that the entire village is watching out for him too.
Deogratias, A Tale of Rwanda (graphic novel)
By Jean-Phillippe Stassen
Format: 79 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 9781596431034
Age Range: 16+ years
Publisher: NewYork: First Second, 2006.
The harrowing tale of the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda, as seen through the eyes of a boy named Deogratias. He is an ordinary teenager, in love with a girl named Bénigne, but Deogratias is a Hutu and Bénigne is a Tutsi who dies in the genocide, and Deogratias himself plays a part in her death. Told with great artistry and intelligence.
Why Chibchacum Carries the World (based on a Chibcha myth)
Retold by Sandy Sepehri. Illustrated by Brian Demeter
Format: 32 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-1600442155
Age Range: 9-14 years
Publisher: Vero Beach, FL: Rourke Publishers, 2007
Relates the story of a struggle between the gods Bochica and Chibchacum and the creation, fall, and repentance of the Chibcha people.
The Elephant Scientist
By Caitlin O’Connell and Donna M. Jackson. Photographs by Caitlin O’Connell and Timothy Rodwell
Format: 70 p.; col. ill., col. maps
ISBN: 978-0544668300
Age Range: 12-15 years
Publisher: Boston: HMH Books for Young Readers; Reprint edition (May 3, 2016)
Photographs and text recount Caitlin O'Connell's experiences observing African elephants in their natural habitat of Etosha National Park in Namibia, describing the discoveries she made about elephant communication.
Maria Had a Little Llama / Maria Tenia Una Llamita
By Angela Dominguez
Format: 32 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-0-8050-9333-9
Age Range: 4-7 years
Publisher: : New York: Henry Holt, 2013
An adaptation of the familiar rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb” set in Peru. Each verse is told in both English and Spanish.
The Best Beekeeper of Lalibela: A Tale from Africa
By Cristina Kessler; illustrated by Leonard Jenkins
Format: гтзфпув col. ill.
ISBN: 978-0-823-41858-9
Age Range: 4-8 years
Publisher: Publishers: New York: Holiday House, 2006/2018
In the Ethiopian mountain village of Lalibela, famous for its churches and honey, a young girl is determined to find a way to be a beekeeper—despite being told that is something only men can do.
I Drank My Tea: Family Adventures in Kyrgyzstan
Mary Atwood
Format: 170 pp.
ISBN: 978-1453885772
Age Range: Young adult
Publisher: Scotts Valley, CA: CreateSpace Publishing Company; 2011
Mary and Tracy Atwood moved with their three teenage children to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, in the fall of 1999. This memoir describes the joys and challenges of expatriate family life in Kyrgyzstan.
The Sun-Child: A Tale from Tonga
By Sara Mitchell. Illustrated by Fraser Williamson
Format: 24 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-0-947526184
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: Auckland, NZ: Clean Slate Press, 2017
Relates the tale of the sun child. Includes a look at the history and culture of Tonga.
The Soccer Fence: A Story of Friendship, Hope, and Apartheid in South Africa
By Phil Bildner. Illustrated by Jesse Joshua Watson
Format: 40 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-0-399-24790-3
Age Range: 6-8 years
Publisher: New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2014
Each time Hector watches white boys playing soccer in Johannesburg, South Africa, he dreams of playing on a real pitch one day. After the fall of apartheid, when he sees the 1996 African Cup of Nations team, he knows that his dream can come true.
Bamboo People
By Mitali Perkins
Format: 272 pp.
ISBN: 978-1580893299
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge, 2010/2012
Two Burmese boys, one a Karenni refugee and the other the son of an imprisoned Burmese doctor, meet in the jungle and in order to survive they must learn to trust each other.
Ryan and Jimmy: And the Well in Africa That Brought Them Together
By Herb Shoveller
Format: 56 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-1554532711
Age Range: 8-12 years
Publisher: Tonawanda, NY: Kids Can Press, 2006
Chronicles the friendship of Ryan Hreljac and Akana Jimmy, who became pen pals after Ryan, a Canadian boy, raised money to build a well in Jimmy's village in Uganda—and it explains how they became brothers.
A Weave of Words: An Armenian Tale
By Robert San Souci. Illustrated by Raul Colon
Format: 32 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN:978-0531330531
Age Range: 5+ years
Publisher: New York: Scholastic/Orchard Books, 1998
A reworking of an Armenian folktale in which a lazy prince learns to read, write, and weave to win his love only to have these very talents later save him from a three-headed monster.
Torina’s World: A Child’s Life in Madagascar
By Joni Kabana (text and photography)
Format: 52 pp. with photos
ISBN:978-0979477140
Age Range: 9-12 years
Publisher: Portland, OR: Arnica Publishing, 2007
This book documents daily life in a Malagasy village of Madagascar. It is divided into three sections: We Live!, We Grow!, and We Feel!
Outside In
By Jennifer Bradbury
Format: 278 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-44246-827-6
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2017
A twelve-year-old boy living on the streets of Chandigarh, India, stumbles across a secret garden full of sculptures and sees the possibility of another way of life as he bonds with the man who created them in this novel based on the true story of Nek Chand, one of India’s most beloved artists.
Yatandou
By Whelan, Gloria; illustrated by Peter Sylvada
Format: 32 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-58536-211-0
Age Range: 5–8 years
Publisher: Chelsea, MI: Sleeping Bear Press, 2007.
Eight-year-old Yatandou helps the women of her Mali village raise enough money to buy a machine that will replace their pounding sticks.
Go To Sleep, Gecko!: A Balinese Folktale
By MacDonald, Margaret Read; illustrated by Geraldo Valerio.
Format: unpaged; col. ill. pp.
ISBN: 978-1-939160-92-8
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: Little Rock, Ark: August House Little Folk, 2006.
Retells the folktale of the gecko who complains to the village chief that the fireflies keep him awake at night but then learns that in nature all things are connected.
Between Sisters
By Badoe, Adwoa
Format: 205 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-933979-23-6
Age Range: 14-18 years
Publisher: Toronto, Canada: Groundwood Books, 2010.
Sixteen-year-old Gloria, who lives in poverty in Accra, dreams of becoming a dressmaker but has difficulty with school, and when a distant relative offers to pay for dressmaking school in exchange for Gloria looking after her son in Kumasi, Gloria accepts the offer and finds that life in Kumasi is full of temptations and distractions which she must struggle to overcome.
One Shadow on the Wall
By Henderson, Leah
Format: 438 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-4814629-5-2
Age Range: 10-14 years
Publisher: New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2017
In Senegal, eleven-year-old orphan Mor has three months to prove to his aunt that he can support himself and his two younger sisters, allowing them to stay together in their village and fulfilling the promise he made to their dying father, but a malicious gang of boys threatens Mor's success and his integrity.
Pan de Sal Saves the Day
By Olizon-Chikiamco, Norma; illustrated by Salvatus, Mark Ramsel N
Format: 24 pp. col. ill.
ISBN: 978-0-8048-4078-1
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: North Clarendon, Vermont: Tuttle, 2009
Text mainly in English with some words in Tagalog. Pan de Sal, embarrassed by her humble home and upbringing, saves the day when her class becomes stranded on a broken-down bus and she is the only one who knows how to keep everyone entertained without fancy food, toys, or games.
Thanks to God and the Revolution: The Oral History of a Nicaraguan Family
By Hart, Dianne Walta
Format: 306 pp.
ISBN: 978-0-299-12610-0
Age Range: 14-18 years
Publisher: Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1990
A picture of a close-knit and loving family, the Lopez family. Tracing their story from the years of repression and guerrilla activity under Somoza through an era of personal and political revolution in the 1970s and 1980s, the author shows people persevering against every kind of adversity.
Waiting for the Biblioburro
By Brown, Monica. Illustrated by John Parra
Format: 32 unnumbered pp.
ISBN: 978-1-58246-353-7
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: Berkley, CA: Tricycle Press, 2011
Ana loves stories. She often makes them up to help her little brother fall asleep. But in her small village there are only a few books and she has read them all. One morning, Ana wakes up to the clip-clop of hooves, and there before her, is the most wonderful sight: a traveling library resting on the backs of two burros—all the books a little girl could dream of, with enough stories to encourage her to create one of her own. Based on real-life librarian Luis Soriano. The book introduce readers to the mobile library that journeys over mountains and through valleys to bring literacy and culture to rural Colombia.
What Elephants Know
By Dinerstein, Eric
Format: 273 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-48472-854-3
Age Range: 9-14 years
Publisher: Los Angeles, CA: Disney Hyperion, 2016
In the threatened jungle of the Borderlands between Nepal and India during the 1970s, an orphaned boy discovers his fate as a great elephant driver. Brings to life Nepal's breathtaking jungle wildlife and rural culture, as seen through the eyes of a young outcast, struggling to find his place in the world.
Serafina’s Promise: A novel in verse
By Burg, Ann E
Format: 299 pp.
ISBN: 978-0-545-53567-0
Age Range: 8-12 years
Publisher: New York: Scholastic, Inc., 2015
In a poor village outside of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Serafina works hard to help her family, but dreams of going to school and becoming a doctor—then the earthquake hits and Serafina must summon all her courage to find her father and still get medicine for her sick baby brother as she promised.
I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade
By Wilson, Diane L.
Format: 232 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-402-24027-0
Age Range: 12-16 years
Publisher: New York: Orchard Books, 1998
Oyuna tells her granddaughter the story of how love for her horse enabled her to win a race and bring good luck to her family living in Mongolia in 1339.
Chúcaro
By Kalnay, Francis; illustrated by Julian de Miskey
Format: 115 pp.
ISBN: 978-0-802-77387-6
Age Range: 8-12 years
Publisher: New York: Walker, 1993
Adventures of a boy and his pony on the Argentine Pampa.
The Mystery of the Grand Bazaar
By Moore, Jordan; illustrated by Gershom Griffith
Format: 32 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-1-48071-744-2
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: Huntington Beach, CA: Teacher Created Materials, 2014
A young boy named Zeyd enjoys working at the bazaar in Istanbul. One day, someone does the unthinkable and steals a bag of gold coins from the rug merchant! When the other merchants decide to close the bazaar until the thief is found, Zeyd finds an unlikely culprit.

The Red Pencil
Angela Davis Pinkney; illustrated by Shane W. Davis
Paperback: 128 pages
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers; Reprint edition (October 4, 2011)
ISBN-13: 978-0547577319
A Long Walk to Water begins as two stories, told in alternating sections, about a girl in Sudan in 2008 and a boy in Sudan in 1985. The girl, Nya, is fetching water from a pond that is two hours’ walk from her home: she makes two trips to the pond every day. The boy, Salva, becomes one of the "lost boys" of Sudan, refugees who cover the African continent on foot as they search for their families and for a safe place to stay. Enduring every hardship from loneliness to attack by armed rebels to contact with killer lions and crocodiles, Salva is a survivor, and his story goes on to intersect with Nya’s in an astonishing and moving way.

Chandra’s Magic Light: a story in Nepal<
Theresa Heine; illustrated by Judith Gueyfier
Format: 38pp., col.ill.
Age Range: 5–8 years
ISBN: 978-1-84686-866-5
Publishers: Cambridge, MA: Barefoot Books, 2014
A heartwarming story set in Nepal of two resourceful sisters who bring the safety of solar-powered light to their family.

Bamboo People
Mitali Perkins
Format: 272 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-58089-328-2
Age Range: 12 years+
Publisher: Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge, 2010
Two Burmese boys, one a Karenni refugee and the other the son of an imprisoned Burmese doctor, meet in the jungle and in order to survive they must learn to trust each other.

Radiant Girl
By Andrea White; illustrated by Elaine Atkinson
Format: 256 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-933979-23-6
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: Houston, TX: Bright Sky Press, 2008
This coming-of-age story follows the life of Katya, an eleven-year old Ukrainian girl whose life is turned upside down after the Chernobyl disaster.

Thank You, Baobab Tree!
Mi-hwa Joo; illustrated by Yun-heu Park
Format: 29 pp., col. ill.
ISBN: 978-1-925247-55-8
Age Range: 5–8years
Publisher: Minneapolis: Big and Small, 2016 (English version)
There are eight species of baobab tree, and they are all found in Madagascar, a country called the ‘home of the baobab.’ This story follows a family who relies on baobab trees for many things.

The Umbrella Queen
Shirin Yim Bridges; illustrated by Taeeun Yoo
Format: 34 pp.; col. ill.
ISBN: 978-0-06-075040-4
Age Range: 5–8 years
Publisher: New York: Greenwillow Books, 2008
In a village in Thailand where everyone makes umbrellas, young Noot dreams of painting the most beautiful one and leading the annual parade as Umbrella Queen, but her unconventional designs displease her parents.

Zarma Folktales of Niger
Translated by Amanda Cushman
Format: 95 pp.
ISBN: 978-0-9792999-8-8
Age Range: Young Adult
Publisher: Niantic, CT: Quale Press, 2010
These tales run the gamut from teaching ethical and moral lessons to portraying tricksters to naming animals to having fun. ZARMA FOLKTALES OF NIGER provides the cultural and historical context necessary to truly appreciate and understand these tales. The introduction outlines Niger's history and describes the relationships of the Zarma to neighboring tribes.

The Color of My Words
By Lynn Joseph
Format: 138 p.
ISBN: 978-1-413-14404-8
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: New York: Harper Trophy, 2000
When life gets difficult for Ana Rosa, a twelve-year-old would-be writer living in a small village in the Dominican Republic, she can depend on her older brother to make her feel better--until the life-changing events on her thirteenth birthday.
Caminar
Skila Brown
Format: 193 pp.
ISBN: 978-0763690946
Age Range: 10–14 years
Publisher: Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press, 2014
In 1981, with the arrival of soldiers in his Guatemalan village, Carlos must flee and join a band of guerillas who head to the mountains where his grandmother lives to warn her about the soldiers.
Chloe in India
Kate Darnton
Format: Hardcover, 224 pp.
ISBN: 978-0553535044
Age Range: 9–12
Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers, 2016

A poignant and delightful story involving class, race, social customs, and a unique friendship that questions them all.
Though they’re divided by class, language, appearance—you name it—Chloe and Lakshmi have a lot in common. Both girls are new to Class Five at Premium Academy in New Delhi, India, and neither seems to fit in. But they soon discover how extraordinary an ordinary friendship can be and how celebrating our individuality can change the world.
"Whether describing the heat of a Delhi summer or the emotions of a homesick preteen in a strange land, Darnton gets the details right, bringing characters and story to life and also educating readers about the economic discrepancies rampant in India. Blonde American Chloe's perspective gives Western readers a way into this tale of inequality in a foreign culture." —Kirkus
"A solid multicultural offering for middle grade collections." —SLJ
"The heart of the story—standing up for others, despite social or economic class—can offer a good discussion for readers and hopefully get them thinking about those around them." —Booklist
"An informed and informative work of fiction that incorporates eye- opening facts about poverty and social systems outside of the United States while never losing the protagonist’s authentic and relatable voice. Evocative in setting, sympathetic in character, and noble in intent, this story is for armchair travelers and seekers of fairness and friendship." —The Bulletin
Tales from Lesotho: 10 Basuto Folk Tales
Compiled by Minnie Martin
Format: Paperback, 102 pp.
ISBN: 978-1909302563
Age Range: 9–14 years
Publisher: Abela Publishing, 2014

Within this little volume you will find 10 unique folk tales and children's stories from the African mountain Kingdom of Lesotho: The story of Takane, who, despite having an arranged marriage, became a happy and devoted wife. The tale of how Khosi chooses Polomahache (Crocodile Child) to be his wife and of Mokete and Morongoe the Snake, and many more.
Included are stories of the Sun Chief, evil Witchdoctors, or Ngaka, the equivalent of an Evil Wizard, spells being cast and broken and beautiful maidens being set free. There are also tales of malevolent chiefs who rule their people with a fist of iron, not caring how much innocent blood they shed - and how their comeuppance is delivered by the hero of the day.
These tales were collected by Minnie Martin, wife of a Government Official, who came to South Africa and Basutoland, from England, in 1891. To enable a better understanding of the people and their customs, she began to study the language, collected these tales and became fairly fluent in the language.
Because the Bantu peoples of Southern Africa had no written language, it must be noted that the first people to record the various languages (the Boers and the British) did so phonetically, writing the language as they heard it being spoken. Unlike most European languages, there has been no influence of Latin, Greek, or Arabic, which makes the learning of those languages that little more difficult. Here you speak the word the way it is written e.g. Ngaka is read as In-gaa-kah, Takane as Tak-aan-eh, Khosi as Koh-see, etc. Enjoy this unique collection of tales, customs, and lore from a little-known place, unseen or heard in the West for many generations. 33% of the net profit will be donated to SENTEBALE - a charity supporting children in Lesotho orphaned by AIDS.

Anahita’s Woven Riddle
By Meghan Nutall Sayres
Format: 361 pp.
ISBN: 978-0-9848359-2-8
Age Range: 10–14 years
Publisher: Orange County,CA: Nortia Press, 2013
Growing up as part of a Muslim nomadic tribe in Iran, Anahita has always been headstrong and independent. When her parents try to make a marriage match between her and her tribe's khan (a type of inter-tribe leader), Anahita rebels. She will gladly marry, she says, but only to the man who can solve the riddle she weaves into her wedding carpet.

The Ugly One
Leanne Statland Ellis, 2013, AGES 8–12
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers; Reprint edition (2015)
Format: Paperback, 256 pages
ISBN-10: 0544439171
ISBN-13: 978-0544439177
Summary: At the height of the Incan empire, a girl called "The Ugly One" because of a disfiguring scar on her face seeks to have the scar removed and instead finds a life path as a shaman.
REVIEWS:
"[A] Quiet, deeply moving story." —The Bulletin
Publishers Weekly: Inspired by the author's travels to Peru, Ellis's coming-of-age tale follows the small but significant story of 12-year-old Incan girl named Micay, who is shunned by her community because of "the deep scar that ran like a river from my right eye down my cheek to my lip and lowered my mouth in a permanent half frown." That changes, however, when a "jungle stranger" comes to town and gives her a scruffy baby macaw named Sumac Huanacauri ("Handsome Rainbow"), who protects her from her tormentor Ucho's cruelty and teaches her to free herself from doubt, as well as accept that she may be destined for a greater purpose. Micay leaves her "wasi" (one-room home) to explore and study with Paqo, a "mighty shaman" from Cuzco. Micay's intimate narration weaves in Quechua vocabulary and abundant references to Incan folklore, enhancing the novel's vivid sense of time and place. Despite the element of shamanism and Micay's communication with spirits, her transformation is subtle and pragmatic as she evolves from fearful outsider to empowered individual. Ages 9–12.
Booklist: Forced to live with a horrible scar from her eyebrow to her lip, Micay does not remember a time when she was not the Ugly One. But when she is 12, a yunka stranger arrives in her small village and presents her with a gift, a baby macaw she calls Sumac Huanacauri, or Handsome Rainbow. As the girl and the bird bond, the bird perches himself on her right shoulder, thus covering the scarred portion of her face. He also takes her to the Paqo, the village seer and healer, whose apprentice she becomes. Thus begins a process and journey that eventually takes her to the Sacred Sun City, Machu Picchu, and her destiny. Ellis introduces readers to the Incan culture and myths through Micay’s lessons in healing, Uncle Turu’s stories, and her people’s struggle through a horrible drought that threatens their very survival. Just as Uncle Turu’s stories hold special truths concealed as fables, this quiet, deeply moving story reminds readers of the true nature of beauty. Grades 4–8.

Carolina’s Gift
Katacha Diaz, illus. Gredna Landolt, 2002, AGES 5–8
Publisher: Soundprint, 2002, 2011
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 1568996969
ISBN-13: 978-1-568-99696-7
Summary: Carolina lives in a village up in the Andes Mountains. Today she and her mother are traveling into town to find a birthday gift for Carolina's grandmother. There are so many things to see and so many gifts to choose from! Children will follow Carolina through her new experience. Carolina's Gift gives readers a fun and unique insight of a different culture, and a sense what life might be like for a child growing up in mountain village of Peru.
REVIEWS:
Booklist: Carolina hopes to find a birthday present at the market for her grandmother. After looking in all the stalls, she and her mother find the perfect gift—a carved walking stick, so Abuelita can accompany them to the market the next time they go. This simple story is a vehicle for introducing Spanish words and showing a marketplace in Peru that the author once visited. Back matter includes a map, information on the market, and translations of 10 Spanish words used in the text. … pleasant, color-saturated illustrations incorporate textile patterns and clothing. … good supplemental material for elementary-level social studies.

Turtle Songs: A tale for mothers and daughters
Margaret Wolfson, illust. Karla Sachi, 1999, AGES 5–8
Publisher: Beyond Words Publishing, 1999
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 1885223951
ISBN-13: 978-1885223951
Summary: Based on a Fijian myth, a princess and her daughter are captured by intruders from another island. They sing in harmony and call to the sea gods, who transform them into sea turtles so that they might escape.
REVIEWS:
Publishers Weekly: In this story based on a Fijian myth, a princess and her daughter are saved from kidnappers by a storm that destroys their canoe and transforms the mother and daughter into sea turtles. As turtles, the pair returns to their island and promise to come whenever the villagers sing to them. Wolfson's (Marriage of the Rain Goddess) verbose retelling is competent, but does little to develop the relationship between the mother and daughter. The princess and her daughter's connection to the sea, before their transformation into turtles, also seem tenuous (the only clue the author offers is the princess's glancing wish, at one point, that she and her daughter were giant turtles). An afterword hints at the importance of sea turtles in the Fiji islands, but their mythical associations don't come through in the story itself. In her first children's book, Sachi uses bright South Sea colors, from the princess's flowing pink dress to the intense colors under the ocean's surface. But the illustrations do not always contribute to the narrative. The real strength of the artwork shows in the spreads of aquatic life: the sea turtles, dolphins and tropical fish seem to swim off the page. Ages 5-up.
School Library Journal: Kindergarten-Grade 3-A charming Fijian folktale is brought to life in this story about a brave Princess and her daughter. The ocean figures so centrally in their idyllic lives that the two wistfully fantasize about transforming themselves into "a pair of giant [sea] turtles." Their daydreams turn out to be hauntingly prophetic as ruffians from a neighboring island kidnap mother and daughter shortly thereafter. Huddled on the deck of their captors' boat, the Princess remembers her grandmother's instruction that song could conjure the magical sea god and she and her daughter begin the melodic incantation that will summon the ferocious elements. Soon the water and sky begin to churn and the canoe's passengers are tossed overboard. The Princess and Rani, however, are miraculously transformed into-what else-giant sea turtles, and they return to the shore to ask the women of their village not to mourn their loss. From that day on, the women summon the sea turtles with song to give themselves hope and consolation. Light-filled, lushly colored illustrations accompany this well-told tale. Folklore collections will benefit from this unusual addition, the origins of which are well documented in both the author's and artist's notes.

Ghost Hands: A story inspired by Patagonia’s Cave of the Hands
T.A. Barron and William Low, 2011, AGES 5–8
Publisher: New York: Philomel Books
Format: unpaged
ISBN: 978-0-399-25083-5
Summary: Auki, a young member of the Tehuelche tribe in Patagonia, wants to prove himself as a hunter but when he sets out on his own to face the puma, he stumbles upon a sacred cave and its guardian.

War Brothers: the graphic novel
Sharon E. McKay, 2013, 15+ years
Publisher: Annick, Toronto, 2013
Format: Hardcover, 208 pages
ISBN-10: 1554514886
ISBN-13: 978-1554514885
Summary: A graphic novel adaptation of the author's novel about a group of boys in Uganda who are kidnapped and forced to join the Lord's Resistance Army, or LRA, and their desperate escape, only to return home to discover that their friends and family are afraid of them.

One Plastic Bag
Miranda Paul, illust. Elizabeth Zunon, 2015, AGES 6–10
Publisher: Millbrook Picture Books
Format: Library Binding, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 1467716081
ISBN-13: 978-1467716086
Summary: Ceesay figures out how to turn discarded plastic bags into crocheted purses and transform her community.
REVIEWS:
School Library Journal: Gr 1–4—The simple format of this picture book belies the strength of its content, a story lovingly supported by charming collage illustrations. As a girl, Ceesay realized that the goats on which her village relied were dying because they were eating plastic bags. She also saw that people were tossing the used bags on the ground just as they had always thrown away their baskets when no longer useful—except the plastic bags, unlike the baskets, weren't biodegradable. So Ceesay figured out how to use crochet, a skill with which the villagers were already familiar, to make purses out of the plastic bags. Simple but lyrical text conveys this beautiful, thought-provoking tale of ecological awareness and recycling ("The basket tips. One fruit tumbles. Then two. Then ten."). An inspiring account.
—Dorcas Hand, Annunciation Orthodox School, Houston, TX
"The simple format of this picture book belies the strength of its content, a story lovingly supported by charming collage illustrations. As a girl, Ceesay realized that the goats on which her village relied were dying because they were eating plastic bags. She also saw that people were tossing the used bags on the ground just as they had always thrown away their baskets when no longer useful except the plastic bags, unlike the baskets, weren't biodegradable. So Ceesay figured out how to use crochet, a skill with which the villagers were already familiar, to make purses out of the plastic bags. Simple but lyrical text conveys this beautiful, thought-provoking tale of ecological awareness and recycling ('The basket tips. One fruit tumbles. Then two. Then ten.'). An inspiring account." starred, School Library Journal.

This for That: A Togo Tale
Verna Aardema, illus. Victoria Chess, AGES 4–8
Publisher: Dial Books
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0803715536
ISBN-13: 9780803715530
Summary: When Rabbit is unable to convince Lion and Elephant that even though she didn't help dig their watering hole, she's entitled to drink from it, she sets off to find other more gullible creatures. Venturing from ostrich to man to ant and back again, Rabbit's crafty bartering techniques are quite successful--until her own boastfulness gets the best of her. Full color.

The Biggest Soap
Carole Lexa Schaefer, illus. Stacey Dressen-McQueen, 2004, AGES 3–7
Publisher: New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 0-374-30690-7
ISBN-13: 978-0374306908
Summary: When Kessy is sent by his mother to buy laundry soap he discovers that his experience makes a good story.
It's laundry day on a South Pacific island, and Kessy is proud that Mama has chosen him to go to Minda's Store to buy the biggest soap. But he'll have to hurry if he wants to get back in time for the storytelling that accompanies the washing, so off he goes -- as fast as a typhoon wind! Along the way there are plenty of surprises, but Kessy returns with just enough soap to finish the wash and in time to tell stories galore from his big adventure.
Exploding with bright colors and patterns, this playful picture book celebrates the warmth of a close-knit island community and the independent spirit of its youngest member.
REVIEWS:
School Library Journal: On laundry day, Kessy loves to play in the washing pool while listening to the women tell stories. When Mama discovers that she needs soap, she instructs him to go to the store and bring back the biggest piece he can find. The boy is proud that he has been chosen for this job, but knows he must hurry if he wants to hear the stories. Along the way, he encounters family members and friends who invite him to join in their activities. Determined to get back quickly, he presses on. When he finally reaches his destination, the shopkeeper wraps the large chunk in a cloth and ties it on a stick for him. On his return trip, Kessy soon discovers that Mama is not the only one in need of soap. He becomes a small hero as he unwraps the cloth and shares its contents along the way. Back at the pool, he explains why the bar is so small, relating his own experiences with a bit of embellishment, and becomes a storyteller himself. With a combination of colored pencil, oil pastel, and acrylic, Dressen-McQueen playfully captures the people, sights, and sounds of a small South Pacific island community with brilliant colors that leap off the pages. Loaded with similes and some onomatopoeia, the text emphasizes the importance of the oral tradition. This is a solid purchase, perfect for reading aloud. –Tracy Bell, Durham Public Schools, NC
Booklist: *Starred Review* Schaefer's bouncy text and Dressen-McQueen's bright, Gauguin-inspired illustrations stage a vivacious, colorful tribute to Truk islanders of Micronesia. Mama sends Kessy to the store for the "biggest piece of laundry soap on Minda's shelf." He runs quickly because he doesn't want to miss the stories the women tell at the washing pool. He's diverted on the way by his two older brothers playing monsters in the muddy pool, his uncle Cho's work on a new bamboo window for his house, and his friend Amina's enticing new tin-can camera. On his return home with the soap, which Minda has put in a red cloth attached to a stick Kessy can carry on his shoulder, those same diversions slow him again: Amino cut her fingers on the can, so Kessy helps her clean the cut; Uncle Cho needs soap for his squeaky window; and his muddy brothers need a bath. Kessy returns home just in time for the stories, and he contributes plenty of his own as he explains why the soap is no bigger than a baby gecko. Both the text and the pencil, oil pastel, and acrylic artwork, alive with the sun-drenched colors and patterns of the South Pacific, bubble with happiness. Refreshing, engaging, and thoroughly delightful--just like a well-told story. Julie Cummins

The Butter Man
Elizabeth Letts Alalou and Ali Alalou, illust. Julie Klear Essakalli, 2008, AGES 5¬8
Publisher: Charlesbridge; Reprint edition (2011)
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 1580891276
ISBN-13: 978-1580891271
Summary: While Nora waits for the couscous her father is cooking to be finished, he tells her a story about his youth in the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco.
REVIEWS:
Booklist: Every Saturday night, Nora watches her Moroccan-born baba (father) prepare a couscous meal in a special pot that he carried with him to the U.S. in his suitcase. One evening, Baba shares a story about how he coped with a famine during his childhood, spent in the mountains of Morocco. The authors, a married couple who drew on Ali’s personal experience, write in descriptive language that speaks directly to children. Baba says that hunger, for example, feels like “a little mouse gnawing on my insides.” The folk-art paintings, created by a textile designer, feature whimsical characters and cozy domestic scenes, while the ochre, gold, and rust palette evokes the feeling of the dusty, sunlit landscape. An authors’ note adds cultural context, and an appended glossary defines the Berber words used in the text. This warm family story about a rarely viewed culture will have particular appeal among children of immigrants, who, like Nora, wonder about their parents’ mysterious, former lives in another land. Grades K-3. --Gillian Engberg
FROM THE AUTHORS
The story that Ali tells Nora takes place in a village in the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco. The High Atlas Mountains span the central part of the country of Morocco, which is located in the northwest corner of Africa.
Berbers or Imazighen (ee-mah-ZEER-een) are the native people of North Africa. The language they speak is called Tamazight (tama-ZEEK) or Berber. This language is spoken by an estimated 40 to 60% of all Moroccans, including almost all inhabitants of Morocco’s mountainous regions. Most Berbers are Muslims, like Ali’s family in the story. Many Berbers also speak Arabic, the other main language in Morocco.
In the High Atlas Mountains, people live in small villages clustered along river valleys. The primary occupation is farming. People grow wheat, barley, and potatoes, and raise chickens, sheep, goats, and cows for their butter. Some villages have electricity and some roads are paved, but many still appear much as in Ali’s story.
The mountain roads are difficult and often impassable in winter. Few people have cars, so there are many peddlers who travel from village to village carrying their wares in packs on the backs of their mules. Since the peddlers walk from village to village, you never know exactly what day they might pass through.
Traditional Berbers wear distinctive clothing. The women and girls wear colorful striped blankets called tahendirt (ta-hen-DEERT) tied around their shoulders. The blankets are made out of wool because winters in the mountains are cold and snowy. The blankets have distinctive patterns of stripes that identify which tribe the women belong to. They also wear bright headscarves that are often embroidered with sequins. Men wear heavy woolen robes with hoods called tajellebit (tah-jah-LAH-bit) in the winter, or lighter cotton robes called fokias (foh-KEE-yaz) in the summer. Some men wear long bands of cloth wrapped around their head like a turban to protect them from the hot sun.
Everyone in the village has a lot of work to do. Men go to the fields to plow and plant. They harvest crops and take goods to the weekly souk, or market, to be sold. At the weekly souk you can also buy almost anything you need―anything from kerosene for lanterns to plastic buckets; from fragrant spices to fruits and vegetables brought in from neighboring towns. Women walk far into the mountains to gather sticks for kindling. They carry the sticks piled onto their backs in bundles almost as big as they are. They use these sticks to light their cooking fires. There are lots of jobs for children to do, but they still have time to play soccer and other games and attend the village school, where they learn to read and write Arabic, the official language in Morocco.
--Elizabeth and Ali Alalou

Emmanuel’s Dream: The True Story of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboh
Laurie Ann Thompson, illus. Sean Qualls, 2015, AGES 5–8
Publisher: Schwartz & Wade
Format: Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 044981744X
ISBN-13: 978-0449817445
Summary: The true story of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah, a young man born with a severe disability in rural Ghana who bicycles across the entire country to raise awareness for disabled people throughout Africa and around the world.
Born in Ghana, West Africa, with one deformed leg, Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah was dismissed by most people—but not by his mother, who taught him to reach for his dreams. As a boy, Emmanuel hopped to school more than two miles each way, learned to play soccer, left home at age thirteen to provide for his family, and, eventually, became a cyclist. He rode an astonishing four hundred miles across Ghana in 2001, spreading his powerful message: disability is not inability. Today, Emmanuel continues to work on behalf of the disabled.
Thompson's lyrical prose and Qualls's bold collage illustrations offer a powerful celebration of triumphing over adversity.
REVIEWS:
School Library Journal This powerful and winning picture book tells the story of a young man overcoming the odds. Born in Ghana with a deformed left leg, Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah experienced stigma as a result of his disability: his father abandoned the family, and many assumed that the boy would be little more than a burden. However, with the encouragement of his mother, Yeboah refused to give up, hopping to school (instead of walking) and even learning to play soccer and cycle, despite receiving no extra help or accommodations. Thompson's lucidly written text explains how Yeboah cycled 400 miles in 2001 to raise awareness, forever changing how Ghanaians perceived those with disabilities. The narrative is simply and clearly written, and the illustrations are skillfully rendered in charmingly emotive ink and watercolor collages. A brief author's note explains how Yeboah inspired legislation upholding equal rights for the disabled and how he continues to make strides, working with organizations that provide wheelchairs to those who need them and setting up a scholarship fund for children with disabilities. VERDICT This uplifting account will resonate with readers and supplement global and cultural studies. A triumph.—Kathryn Diman, Bass Harbor Memorial Library, Bernard, ME
AWARDS
• Winner of the ALA Youth Media Awards Schneider Family Children's Book Award
• An Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC) Notable Children's Book for 2016
• Listed in CCBC Choices 2016 by the Cooperative Children's Book Center
• Recipient of a 2015 Eureka Honor Award from the California Reading Association
• Finalist for the 2015 Cybils Award for Elementary/Middle Grade Non-Fiction
• Finalist for the 2016-2017 Georgia Children's Picturebook (Gr. K-4) Award
• A Junior Library Guild selection
• A FirstBook #StoriesForAll featured title
• Included on the Winter 2014-2015 Kids' Indie Next List
• An Amazon Editors' Best Books of the Month Pick for January

Where the Winds Meet
Mi-Hwa Joo, illus. Oh Lee, 2015, AGES 5–8
Publisher: Lerner Publications
Series: Global Kids Storybooks
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 1925233499
ISBN-13: 978-1925233490
Summary: This is the story of a wind that wanders over Mongolia, a country that is well known for its deserts and grasslands. Travel with the wind and discover traditional Mongolian life.

The Greedy Sparrow: An Armenian tale
Lucine Kasbarian, illust. Maria Zaikina, 2011, AGES 4–8
Publisher: Two Lions
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0761458212
ISBN-13: 978-0761458210
Summary: Retelling of a story about a trickster who is out-tricked: Once there was a sparrow who caught a thorn in his foot. When a kind baker removes the thorn, the sparrow tricks her into giving him some bread. Each time the sparrow meets new people, he tricks them out of bigger and better things. Will the sparrow’s greed get the best of him? Through this endearing Armenian folktale illustrated with mixed media, readers will learn that people who engage in dishonest or selfish behavior may end up losing whatever they gained because of that behavior.
REVIEWS:
School Library Journal: A homely sparrow turns a thorn in his foot to fine advantage in this simple spin on the familiar folktale of the rising fortunes and eventual downfall of one who overreaches. Revisiting the obliging baker who removed the thorn, sparrow asks for its return. Alas...she has thrown it in the oven. The tale moves forward in alternate bits of narrative atop or below each full-page scene and dialogue set in speech balloons. Either give me my thorn or give me some bread. The sparrow journeys far, conning the folks he encounters and parlaying the loaf of bread into a sheep, which in turn yields a bride from a countryside wedding. The sparrow s trade-ups involve leaving each of his gains for safekeeping with someone along the way who then ends up having to pay a forfeit. Either you give me the bride or give me the lute. Zaikina s expressive portrayals of both animal and human characters, rendered in bold outline and rich color, beautifully convey the tale s goofy fun. Her use of wax and oil paint in a kind of scratchboard technique smartly blends folk and cartoon styles. Though some may find the cartoon arrangement of conversation intrusive for reading aloud, others will find that it moves smoothly, adding nicely to the character portrayals. In the end, of course, sparrow s cockiness results in a fall (literally) from glory with nothing but a thorn in his foot.
"This story about a trickster who is out-tricked is a good choice for reading aloud...The humor and action in the bright illustrations will appeal to young children, as will the triumph of kindness over cheating." –Booklist Online
"This classic Armenian fable (Crime never pays! is the lesson at the end) is retold to the accompaniment of richly chromatic, folkloric scenes by a Moscow native that bring to mind Ukrainian Easter eggs." —ForeWord Reviews
"Armenian folk attire and references to places in Armenia authenticate the tale. It's a rhythmic read-aloud beginning readers can share." —Kirkus Reviews
AWARDS
2013 Nautilus Awards Silver Winner in the Children's Picture Books Category
2012 Honor Book by the Storytelling World Awards Committee

Gecko’s Complaint: a Balinese folktale
Ann Martin Bowler, illus. Gusti Made Sukanada, 2003, AGES 5–8
Publisher: Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd (2009 ed.)
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0794604846
ISBN-13: 978-0794604844
Summary: The endless flashing of fireflies disturbs a well-fed gecko's sleep. Gecko complains to the lion Raden, who is the king of the jungle, sending him on a tour of his domain. But each new animal's complaint leads Raden to yet another irritable animal, and it is only when he speaks to the Rain that Raden finally finds an answer for himself and all his subjects.
GoogleBooks: Filled with delightful characters and vivid illustrations, 'Gecko’s Complaint' is a story about those who are all too ready to see the faults of others while turning a blind eye to their own shortcomings. The story begins when a well-fed gecko complains to the royal lion Raden about being kept awake by fireflies. The king of the jungle sets out on a tour of his domain. Every animal he encounters seems to have a complaint about one of his neighbors. Only after speaking to the Rain does Raden find a solution to the problems. Children’s book writer Ann Martin Bowler’s retelling of a classic Balinese folktale is accompanied by the work of veteran illustrator, I Gusti Made Sukanada.
AMAZON: Featured as a "Top Pick" on TravelForKids.com, Gecko's Complaint tells the story of a Gecko who once lived on the island we now call Bali, in a jungle dense with flowers and vines.
After hundreds of fireflies disturb Gecko's sleep, he complains to kindly Raden, the jungle's lion leader. In his efforts to get to the bottom of Gecko's troubles, Raden discovers all too much complaining and far too many irritable animals. Can Raden help the animals with their troubles? Can peace and happiness return to the jungles of Bali?
A simple yet absolutely delightful Balinese folktale for kids, this bilingual edition, which features both English and Indonesian text, is a perfect introduction to the true spirit of Bali. The Indonesian island of Bali has a strong art and storytelling tradition—folktales that have been passed down from generation to generation. As a nation with over 18,000 islands, Indonesia has hundreds of traditional languages and cultures, each with myths and legends to tell. With its backdrop of volcanoes, earthquakes, dense jungles, diverse wildlife and people, it is not surprising that Indonesia is rich with fabulous, imaginative tales.
REVIEWS:
"Bowler retells this folktale in simple, yet skillful prose. Sukanada's acrylic paint, pen, and ink illustrations show leafy landscapes saturated with color, and have depth and beauty." —School Library Journal
"An enjoyable read enhanced by soft, full-color artwork…" —Midwest Book Review
"Gecko's Complaint is a sparkling retelling of a classic Balinese folktale." —Bali Advisor
"Lovingly illustrated by Gusti Made Sukanada, this book shows a side of Bali that is not often seen." —Singapore Straits Times
Desert Danger (Wild Rescue)
Desert Danger (Wild Rescue)
Jan Burchett and Sara Vogler, illus Diane Le Feyer, 2013, AGES 8–11
Publisher: Stone Arch Books
Format: 152pp
ISBN-13: 978-1434248923
Synopsis: Ben and Zoe travel to the Kalahari Desert in Namibia to rescue a lion cub who has fallen down a well, but a sandstorm threatens to overwhelm them before they can get the cub back to its pride.
Moldova (Cultures of the World)
Patricia Sheehan, 2010, AGES 11+
Publisher: Cavendish Square Publishing
Series: Cultures of the World, Second (Book 20)
Format: 144 pp
ISBN-10: 1608700259 / ISBN-13: 978-1608700257
Synopsis: Broad overview of culture, geography, and history for Grades 5-9. … Clearly presented, easy-to-understand texts discuss government, economy, people, lifestyles, religion, language, arts and leisure, festivals, and food. … Inviting and user-friendly. Colorful photographs and reproductions complement and reinforce facts presented. A "Quick Notes" page lists important facts and provides a handy referral and access to material. Appealing, informative, and engaging resource. S. Shaver, for School Library Journal.

The Princess and the Foal
Stacy Gregg, 2014, AGES 10+
Publisher: Philomel Books, an imprint of Penguin Group, NY
Format 263 pp
ISBN 978-0-399-16887-1
Synopsis: Princess Haya loves her family more than anything—especially her mother, who brings light and happiness into King Hussein's house. So when Queen Alia is killed in a tragic accident, Princess Haya is devastated. Knowing how unhappy she is and how much she loves horses, Haya's father, King Hussein, gives her a special present: a foal of her very own. And this foal changes Princess Haya's world completely" –Provided by publisher.

Go and Come Back
Joan Abelove, 1998, AGES 12+
Publisher: Puffin Books, NY, 2000, 1998.
Format: 176 pp.
ISBN 0-14-130694-7
Synopsis: Alicia, a young tribeswoman living in a village in the Amazonian jungle of Peru, tells about the two American women anthropologists who arrive to study her people's way of life.

Be Patient, Abdul
Dolores Sandoval, 1996, AGES 5+
Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books, NY
Format unp.: col. ill.
ISBN 0-689-50607-4
Synopsis: With the help of his younger sister, seven-year-old Abdul raises money to go to school by selling oranges in the marketplace in Sierra Leone.

Roses for Isabella
Diana Cohn, illus Amy Córdova, 2011, AGES 6+
Publisher: Steiner Books, Great Barrington, MA
ISBN: 9780880107310
Synopsis: Isabella writes for a school assignment about the new "fair trade" rose farm in Ecuador where her parents work.

Even a Little Is Something: Stories of Nong
Tom Glass, illus Elena Gerard, 1997, AGES 9–12
Publisher: Linnet Books, North Haven, Conn.
Format 119 p.
ISBN 0-208-02457-3
Synopsis: Twenty-three vignettes present Nong, a ten-year-old girl living in present-day Thailand, and the characters of her village as they slowly make the transition from rural poverty to western modernization.

My Rows and Piles of Coins
Tololwa M. Mollel, illus E. B. Lewis, 1999, AGES 4–8
Publisher Clarion Books, NY
Format 32 pp
ISBN 0-395-75186-1
Synopsis: A Tanzanian boy saves his coins to buy a bicycle so that he can help his parents carry goods to market, but then he discovers that in spite of all he has saved, he still does not have enough money.

The Storyteller's Beads
Jane Kurtz, illus Michael Bryant, 1998, AGES 12–15
Publisher: Harcourt Brace, San Diego, CA
Format 154 pp
ISBN 0-15-201074-2
Synopsis: During the political strife and famine of the 1980's, two Ethiopian girls struggle to overcome many difficulties, as they make the dangerous journey out of Ethiopia.

The Enchanted Book: A Tale from Krakow
Janina Porazinska, illus Jan Brett, transl Bozena Smith, 1987, AGES 7+
Publisher: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, San Diego, CA
Format 32 p. : col. ill.
ISBN 0-15-225950-3
Synopsis: A retelling of the traditional Polish tale in which a miller's youngest daughter succeeds in outwitting an evil sorcerer.

Uncle Monarch and the Day of the Dead
Judy Goldman, illus René King Moreno, 2008, AGES 7–9
Publisher: Boyds Mills Press, Honesdale, PA
Format 32 pp
ISBN 978-1-59078-425-9
Synopsis: Upon the death of her beloved Tio Urbano, who has taught her that monarch butterflies are the souls of the dead, young Lupita gains a deeper understanding of Dia de los Muertos, the Day of the Dead, as it is observed in rural Mexico. Includes glossary of Spanish terms and facts about the Day of the Dead.

The Hungry Coat: A Tale from Turkey
Demi, 2004, AGES 6–10
Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books, NY
Format 34pp; col. ill
ISBN 0-689-84680-0
Synopsis: After being forced to change to a fancy new coat to attend a party, Nasrettin Hoca tries to feed his dinner to the coat, reasoning that it was the coat that was the invited guest.

Crocodile Crossing
Schuyler Bull, illus Alan Male, 2003 AGES 4+
Publisher: Soundprints, Norwalk, CT
Format: 27 p., col. ill.
ISBN: 1592490514
Synopsis: Follow a mother crocodile and her dozens of babies as they make their way from a small pond to the Luangwa River during a long, dry season in Eastern Africa.
E is for Ethiopia
By Ashenafi Gudeta, 2010
Format: Hardcover, 32 pp.
ISBN: 978-1845078256
Age Range: 6–9 years, Nonfiction
Publisher: Frances Lincoln Children's Books, 2011
The Fortune-Tellers
By Lloyd Alexander, Trina Hyman, 1992
Format: Paperback, 32 pp.
ISBN: 978-0140562330
Age Range: 3–8 years
Publisher: Puffin Books; Reprint edition, 1997
Reef
By Romesh Gunesekera, 1994
Format: Paperback, 192 pp.
ISBN: 978-1573225335
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Riverhead Books, 1996
Read more at www.theguardian.com
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind
By Wm. Kamkwamba & B. Mealer, 2009
Format: Paperback, 304 pp.
ISBN: 978-0147510426
Age Range: YA+
Publisher: Puffin Books; Reprint edition, 2016
Read more at www.amazon.com
The Stone of Destiny: Tales from Turkey
By Elspeth Tavaci, Paul Hess, 2012
Format: Paperback, 144 pp.
ISBN: 978-1847802798
Age Range: 8-11 years
Publisher: Frances Lincoln Children's Bks, 2013
Journey to Jo'burg, A South African Story
By Beverly Naidoo, illustrated by Eric Velasquez, 1986
Format: Paperback, 96 pp.
ISBN: 978-0064402378
Age Range: 11+ years
Publisher: HarperCollins; Reprint edition, 2002
Read more at www.harpercollins.com
Secrets in the Fire
By Henning Mankel, translated Anne Connie Stuksrud, 2003
Format: Paperback, 166 pp.
ISBN: 978-1550378009
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Annick Press; 1st Paperback Edition edition, 2003
Read more at www.umanitoba.ca
Disaster in Oceania
By Ed Hanson, 2005
Format: Paperback, 192 pp.
ISBN: 978-1573225335
Age Range: 10+ years
Publisher: Riverhead Books, 1996
Read more at www.theguardian.com
Broken Memory, A Novel of Rwanda
By Elisabeth Combres, translated Shelley Tanaka, 2009
Format: Paperback, 149 pp.
ASIN: B00IN8P8OY
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Groundwood Books; 1 edition, 2009
Read more at read-learn-create-grow.blogspot.com
Colibri
By Ann Cameron, 2003
Format: Paperback, 256 pp.
ISBN: 978-0440420521
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Laurel Leaf; Reprint edition, 2005
Read more at www.childrensliteraturenetwork.org
The Blue Sky: A Novel
By Galsan Tschinag, translated Katharina Rout, 2006
Format: Paperback, 192 pp.
ISBN: 978-1571310552
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Milkweed Editions; 1 edition, 2006
The Birdman
By Veronika M. Charles, illustrated A. Galauchko & S. Daigle, 2006
Format: Hardcover, 32 pp.
ISBN: 978-0887767401
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: Tundra Books, 2006
Read more at www.tundrabooks.com
Tiger of the Snows: Tenzing Norgay, The Boy Whose Dream was Everest
By Robert Burleigh, illustrated, Ed Young, 2006
Format: Hardcover, 40 pp.
ISBN: 978-0689830426
Age Range: 8-12 years
Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2006
The Children of Mauritania: Days in the Desert and at the River Shore
by Lauren Goodsmith
Format: Paperback, 56 pages
ISBN: 0876148496
Age Range: 8+ years
Publisher: Carolrhoda Books, 1993
One Round Moon and a Star for Me
by Ingrid Mennen
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1845070243
Age Range: 4-7 years
Publisher: Orchard Books, 1994
The Queen of Water
by L. Resau
Format: Paperback, 346 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0375859632
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Ember, 2011
Bouki Cuts Wood: A Haitian Folktale
by St John & Revell
Format: Paperback, 24 pages
ISBN: 978-1609731359
Age Range: 5+ years
Publisher: Childs World Inc, 2011
The Jacob Ladder
by Gerald Hausman & Uton Hinds
Format: Paperback, 120 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1617201974
Age Range: 9-12 years
Publisher: Irie Books, 2011
The Spider Weaver: A Legend of Kente Cloth
by Margaret Musgrove (Author) and Julia Cairns (Illustrator)
Format: Hardcover, 40 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0590987875
Age Range: 4+ years
Publisher: Blue Sky Press, 2001
Wild Wings
by Gill Lewis
Format: Paperback, 287 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1442414464
Age Range: 8-12 years
Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2011
Cora Cooks Pancit
by Dorina Lazo Gilmore
Format: Paperback, 56 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1885008350
Age Range: 5+ years
Publisher: Shen's Books, 2009
Waiting for the Owl’s Call
by Gloria Whelan
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1585364183
Age Range: 5-8 years
Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press, 2009
Over a Thousand Hills I Walk with You
by Hanna Jansen
Format: Hardcover, 342 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1575059273
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: Carolrhoda Books, 2006
Revolution Is Not a Dinner Party
by Ying Chang Compestine
Format: Paperback, 248 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0312581497
Age Range: 10+ years
Publisher: Square Fish, 2007
The Clay Marble
by Minfong Ho
Format: Paperback, 176 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0374412296
Age Range: 10-14 years
Publisher: Square Fish, 1993
Lemur Landing: Story of a Tropical Dry Forest
by Deborah Dennard (Author), Kristin Kest (Illustrator)
Format: Hardcover, 36 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1568999784
Age Range: 4+ years
Publisher: Soundprints, 2001
The Snow Leopard
by Theresa Radcliffe
Format: Hardcover, unpaged
ISBN-10: 0-670-85052-7
Age Range: 5–9 years
Publisher: New York: Viking, 1994
The Disappeared
by Gloria Whelan
Format: Paperback, 136 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0-8037-3275-9
Age Range: 12+ years
Publisher: New York: Dial Books, 2008
Gabon: Philippe Ngome's painting "My family goes to market"
by Touba, Jacquiline
Format: Library Binding, 24 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0-8239-5102-4
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: New York: PowerKids Press, 1997
The Voices Of Silence
by Bel Mooney
Format: Paperback, 180 pages
ISBN-10: 0-440-22758-5
Age Range: 10–14 years
Publisher: New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Books for Young Readers, 1997
The Great Cake Mystery: Precious Ramotswe's Very First Case
by Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor Books, c2012
ISBN-13: 978-0-307-94945-5
73 pages
Ages 8-12
Broken Moon
by Kim Antieau
Format: Hardcover, 183 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1-41691767-0
Age Range: 14+ years
Publisher: New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books, 2007
Mansa Musa: the lion of Mali
by Khephra Burns
Format: Hardcover, unpaged
ISBN-10: 0-15-200375-4
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: San Diego: Gulliver Books/Harcourt, 2001
Gift Of the Crocodile: a Cinderella story
by Judy Sierra
Format: Hardcover, 40 pages
ISBN-10: 0-689-82188-3
Age Range: 4–8 years
Publisher: New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2000
Kofi and His Magic
by Maya Angelou
Format: Hardcover, 42 pages
ISBN-10: 0-375-82566-5
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: New York: Crown, 2003
The Three Golden Keys
by Peter Sis
Format: Hardcover, unpaged
ISBN-10: 0-385-47292-7
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: New York: Doubleday, 1994
The Llama's Secret
by Argentina Palacios
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0-8167-3050-4
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: Mahwah, NJ: Trol, 1993
Little Eagle
by Chen Jiang Hong; translated by Claudia Zoe Bedrick
Format: Hardcover, 36 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1-59270-071-4
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: New York: Enchanted Lion Books, 2007
Grannie jus' come!
by Ana Sisnett; pictures by Karen Lusebrink
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0-89239-150-9
Interest Level: K-3
Age Range: 9–14 years
Publisher: Children's Book Press, c1997
Flyaway girl
by Ann Grifalconi
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0-316-32866-1
Interest Level: K-3
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: Little, Brown, c1991
Moldova
by Patricia Sheehan and Lynette Quek
Format: Library binding, 144 pages
ISBN: 978-0-89239-150-9
Interest Level: 5-8
Age Range: 10–14 years
Publisher: Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, p2011, c2011
The Queen of Water
by Laura Resau and Maria Virginia Farinango
Format: Hardcover, 368 pages
ISBN: 978-0-385-73897-2
Interest Level: YA
Age Range: 13+ years
Publisher: Delacorte Press, p2011, c2011
Ananse and the lizard: a West African tale
retold and illustrated by Pat Cummings
Format: Hardcover, 40 pages
ISBN: 978-0-8050-6476-6
Interest Level: K-3
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: Henry Holt, p2002, c2002
Tonight is Carnaval
by Arthur Dorros; illustrated with arpilleras sewn by the members of the Club de Madres Virgen del Carmen of Lima, Peru
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0-525-44641-5
Interest Level: K-3
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: Dutton, c1991
Monkey For Sale
by Sanna Stanley
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0374350178
Interest Level: PreK-3
Age Range: 2–9 years
Publisher: Frances Foster Books, c2002
We need to go to school: voices of the rugmark children
compiled by Tanya Roberts-Davis
Format: Hardcover, 48 pages
ISBN: 0-88899-425-7
Age Range: 10+ years
Publisher: Groundwood / Douglas & McIntyre, 2001
Jubela
by Cristina Kessler; illustrated by JoEllen McAllister Stammen
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0-689-81895-0
Interest Level: K-3
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, c2001
The breadwinner
by Deborah Ellis
Format: Paperback, 170 pages
ISBN: 978-0-88899-416-5
Interest Level: 5-8
Age Range: 10–14 years
Publisher: House of Anansi, Distributed in the U.S.A. by Publishers Group West, c2000
The mitten: a Ukrainian folktale
adapted and illustrated by Jan Brett
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0-399-25296-9
Interest Level: K-3
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons, p2009, c1989
Georgia to Georgia: making friends in the U.S.S.R.
by Laurie Dolphin; photographs by E. Alan McGee
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0-688-09897-1
Interest Level: 3-6
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: Tambourine, p1991, c1991
The distant talking drum: poems from Nigeria
by Isaac Olaleye; paintings by FranÈ Lessac.
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-1563979415
Age Range: 12–16 years
Publisher: Honesdale, Pa.: Wordsong; [New York]
Distributed by St. Martin's Press, 1995
My grandpa and the sea
by Katherine Orr
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-1512439755
Age Range: 5–9 years
Publisher: Minneapolis: Carolrhoda Books, 1990
Be patient, Abdul
Written and Illustrated Dolores Sandoval
Format: Library Binding
ISBN: 978-0689506079
Age Range: 6–9 years
Publisher: New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1996
To go singing through the world:
the childhood of Pablo Neruda
by Deborah Kogan Ray
Format: Hardcover, 40 pages
ISBN: 978-0374376277
Age Range: 7–10 years
Publisher: New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006
The happiness of Kati
by Jane Vejjajiva; translated by Prudence Borthwick
Format: Paperback, 120 pages
ISBN: 978-1741147537
Age Range: 9–13 years
Publisher: New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2006
Tuko and the birds: a tale from the Philippines
by Shirley Climo; illustrated by Francisco X. Mora
Format: Hardcover, 40 pages
ISBN: 978-0805065596
Age Range: 5–10 years
Publisher: New York: Henry Holt, 2008
Elizabeti's school
by Stephanie Stuve-Bodeen; illustrated by Christy Hale
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-1600602344
Age Range: 4–7 years
Publisher: New York: Lee & Low Books, 2002
The bee tree
by Stephen Buchmann and Diana Cohn; with illustrations by Paul Mirocha
Format: Paperback, 40 pages
ISBN: 978-1935955146
Age Range: 7–11 years
Publisher: El Paso, TX: Cinco Puntos Press, 2007
Boys without namess
by Kashmira Sheth
Format: Paperback, 320 pages
ISBN: 978-0061857621
Age Range: 9–12 years
Publisher: New York: Balzer & Bray, 2010
Yeny and the children for peace
by Michelle Mulder
Format: Paperback, 104 pages
ISBN: 978-1897187456
Age Range: 12–16 years
Publisher: Toronto: Second Story Press, 2008
One hen: how one small loan made a big difference
written by Katie Smith Milway; illustrated by Eugenie Fernandes
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-1554530281
Age Range: 4–9 years
Publisher: Toronto: Kids Can Press, 2008
Beneath my mother's feet
by Amjed Qamar
Format: Paperback, 208 pages
ISBN: 978-1442414518
Age Range: 12–14 years
Publisher: New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2008
From another world
Ana Maria Machado; translated by Luisa Baeta; with illustrations by Lucia Brandao
Format: Paperback, 128 pages
ISBN: 978-0888996411
Age Range: 9–12 years
Publisher: Toronto: Groundwood Books, 2005
Keeping Corner
by Sheth, Kashmira
Format: Paperback, 304 pages
ISBN: 978-0786838608
Age Range: 12–16 years
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion; Reprint edition, 2007
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 2008)
In a spellbinding story, one girl’s struggle to determine her own future plays out against the backdrop of India’s fight for independence as a nation. Twelve-year-old Leela is widowed before she even has a chance to move in with her husband and his family. Now, the tradition of her caste dictates she will spend a year “keeping corner.” Head shaved, she is not allowed to leave home. For the rest of her life, she will be a widow. Leela’s older brother is outraged: Leela’s future should not be sacrificed to tradition. India is changing, he tells his parents. Under the leadership of Ghandi, people are finding the strength and inspiration to stand together and defy the status quo in the name of justice. Leela is her parent’s beloved youngest child. They are devastated by what has happened, but they also believe that following tradition is a way to protect both Leela and their family. But they do agree to let Saviben, the principal of Leela’s school, come into their home and give Leela lessons. Saviben encourages Leela to read the paper, to think about what is happening in India and the larger world. Leela begins to understand she can be part of something bigger—part of the intoxicating changes happening in her country—but it’s all dependent on convincing her parents to let go of their fears. Kashmira Sheth’s storytelling is steeped in evocative descriptions of place and time, and peopled with vivid, complex characters in a rich, multilayered novel. Ages 12-16.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
Warriors, wigmen and the crocodile people: journeys into Papua New Guinea
by Margolies, Barbara A.
Format: Library Binding, 40 pages
ISBN: 978-0027622836
Age Range: 5–9 years
Publisher: New York: Four Winds Press; Toronto: Maxwell Macmillan Canada; New York: Maxwell Macmillan International; Simon & Schuster, 1993
Margolies' photographs are the draw in this oversize volume in which she introduces two communities in Papua New Guinea. Ages 5 to 9.
Horse Song: The Naadam of Mongolia
by Lewin, Ted and Lewin, Betsy
Format: Paperback, 304 pages
ASIN: B00P4V6D9C
Age Range: 7–11 years
Publisher: Lee & low Books Inc., New York, NY 2008
A Girl Named Disaster
by Farmer, Nancy
Format: Paperback, 309 pages
ASIN: B004IGWSHU
Age Range: 11–14 years
Publisher: New York: Orchard Books, c1996
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
A young girl's spell-binding, treacherous journey from her village in Mozambique to the country of Zimbabwe is the subject of this riveting narrative from Nancy Farmer. Nhamo, a Shona girl of almost 12, flees her village to escape a forced marriage. Her mother died when she was three, but her father and his family are in Zimbabwe and it is there, her maternal grandmother tells Nhamo, that she must go. Her travels are perilous yet transforming. Swept off course into the waters of the great Lake Cabora Bassa, weak and hungry, Nhamo gains strength and skills for survival from the spirits of her Shona ancestors. Later, help comes from a group of people who open Nhamo's eyes to the possibilities that life can hold for her, while members of her father's family answer the questions in her heart. The author, who has lived in both Zimbabwe and Mozambique, has provided readers with a glossary, brief essays on the history of the peoples of Zimbabwe and Mozambique and the belief system of the Shona, and an extensive bibliography to help ground the experience of this tale set in 1981 that shows the juxtaposition and blending of traditional ways and modern life. Ages 11-14.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
Hush! A Thai Lullaby
by Ho, Mingfong
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0786838608
Age Range: 2–5 years
Publisher: Scholastic Inc.; Reprint edition, 2000
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
A worried Thai mother tries to quiet all the animals and insects that might wake her napping baby in rythmic verse graced with gentle humor. Observant readers and listeners will find delight in the supposedly sleeping baby's active endeavors while his mother appeals to each animal in turn to "Hush!", and all will enjoy the soothing pattern of the text. Cut-paper collage illustrations in warm earth tones fill each double-page spread with varied visual perspectives. Ages 2-5.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
Rickshaw Girl
by Perkins, Mitali
Format: Paperback, 96 pages
ISBN: 978-1580893091
Age Range: 7–10 years
Publisher: Charlesbridge; unknown edition, 2008
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
Ten-year-old Naima lives in Bangladesh, where her father earns a meager living as a rickshaw driver. With the best of intentions, Naima tries pedaling her father’s new rickshaw, determined to prove she can handle the job and help out. Instead, she accidentally crashes the vehicle. Burdened with guilt despite her family’s reassurances, Naima decides to turn to something she knows she can do—painting and design—to help pay for the rickshaw repairs. Since it goes against her cultural traditions for a woman or girl to work for money, she takes the plan she had for pedaling the rickshaw—posing as a boy—and puts it to a different use. Determined to convince the owner of the new rickshaw repair shop in the neighboring village to hire her to decorate rickshaws, Naima discovers—to her astonishment—that the owner is a woman. She opened her business with the support of a loan from the Woman’s Bank, and she offers Naima the opportunity to work—as a girl—and develop her talents. Mitali Perkins introduces Bangla culture and customs in the context of an appealing, child-centered story that also highlights changing attitudes and times. An author’s note provides additional information on microfinance—the system that has enabled small businesses throughout Bangladesh to start up and thrive, including many run by women. Ages 7-10.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
The Enchanted Lake
by Jamil, Leena
Format: Paperback
ASIN: B01FEM7ZQ0
Age Range: 5–8 years
Publisher: Gomer Press, 2007
Honey, Honey—Lion!: a story from Africa
by Brett, Jan
Format: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-0399244636
Age Range: 4–7 years
Publisher: New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons, c2005
African animals and landscapes take center stage in this lively retelling of a traditional folktale from Botswana. Honeyguide (a small bird) leads Badger to a honeycomb, which he breaks open with his strong claws for both of them to share. One day, for unknown reasons, Badger does not share, and Honeyguide angrily plots revenge. Shield-shaped vignettes (decorated in feathers and beads) within Brett's signature borders show other animals (including elephants, hippos, warthogs and bishop birds) responding to this news as Honeyguide leads Badger ("pitter patter," "splish splash," etc.) to-surprise!-a lion hiding behind a lift-the-flap acacia bush. Lion chases Badger back to his burrow with sound effects repeating at an accelerated pace. The tale concludes with the animals passing the moral of the story to one another via "bush telegraph": "If Honeyguide leads you to a beehive, be sure and reward her, or next time, she will lead you to a lion." The cumulative patterns, sound effects and suspense, together with the dramatically depicted animals, will make this a popular choice for reading aloud. Ages 4 to 7.
© 2005 Kirkus Reviews/VNU eMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.
I’m Jose and I’m Okay: three stories from Bolivia
by Holzwarth, Werner
Format: Hardcover, 38 pages
ISBN: 978-0916291907
Age Range: 7–11 years
Publisher: Brooklyn, N.Y. : Kane/Miller Book Publishers, 1999
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
Eleven-year-old José lives and works with his Uncle Ramos, who owns an auto repair shop in a Sorata, Bolivia. Hard-working, resourceful José also takes time to dream -- of his favorite soccer team and of winning the local bicycle race, even though he's much smaller than the other contestants. He even dreams of taking revenge on his uncle who sometimes expects José to work harder than he does. Three surprisingly funny and non-judgmental short stories based on the life of a real child are illustrated with a series of panels that not only suit the episodic action but will appeal to reluctant older readers as well. CCBC categories: Easy Fiction; Contemporary People, Places and Events. 1999, Kane/Miller, 36 pages, $13.95. Ages 7-11.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
Elizabeti’s Doll
by Stuve-Bodeen, Stephanie
Format: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN: 978-1584300816
Age Range: 3–7 years
Publisher: New York : Lee & Low Books, c1998
Patricia Kuntz (Africa Access Review) Stephanie Stuve-Bodeen has written a biographical story of a young girl whom she met while a Peace Corps volunteer in Tanzania.
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
After her mother has a new baby, little Elizabeti wants a baby of her own to hold and cuddle. She has no doll but finds a rock that is just the right size and she names the rock Eva. As Elizabeti's motehr cares for the baby, Elizabeti mimics her actions with Eva--feeding and burping her rock, changing its diapers, and tying it to her back with a kanga while she does her daily chores. When Eva the rock diappears one day, readers will be as surprised as Elizabeti to discover where she went, and they will find the resolution satisfying. Although the Tanzanian village setting will be unfamiliar to most children in the United States, they will recognize the warm family nurturing and Elizabeti's resourceful imagination. Highly Commended, 1999 Charlotte Zolotow Award. Ages 3-7.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
The Honey Jar
by Menchu, Rigoberta
Format: Hardcover, 56 pages
ISBN: 978-0888996701
Age Range: 8–12 years
Publisher: Groundwood Books; Translation edition, 2006
Celebrating the Hero
by Becerra de Jenkins, Lyll
Format: Hardcover, 179 pages
ISBN: 978-0525673996
Age Range: 12–16 years
Publisher: New York: Lodestar Books, c1993
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
Seventeen-year-old Camila is the only daughter of an Anglo father and a Colombian mother. She has grown up in the United States and most of what she knows of her mother's heritage comes from stories her mother told about her childhood growing up in San Javier, a small town in Colombia where her father was something of a local hero. Camila's maternal grandmother was rarely mentioned in her mother's stories. After her mother's death, Camila agrees to represent her at a local celebration in honor of her famous grandfather. But there is a mix-up in the flight arrangements and Camila arrives in San Javier a full 24 hours before anyone else in her family knows she's there. And that gives her just enough time to try to find out who her grandmother was and why she is never mentioned. The details she manages to uncover reveal much about her heritage that her mother probably could never have divulged, details that Camila's status as an outsider likely sharpen and amplify. Lyll Becerra de Jenkins' brilliant novel explores the depths of human identity connected to gender, culture and age, even as she spins out all the intrigue of a great mystery story and keeps the reader riveted to the page. Ages 12 and older.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.
De colores and other Latin-American folk songs for children
selected, arranged, and translated by Jose-Luis Orozco; illustrated by Elisa Kleven
Format: Paperback, 179 pages
ISBN: 978-0140565485
Age Range: 4–8 years
Publisher: New York: Lodestar Books, c1993
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1993)
Each of the twenty-seven Latin American songs, chants and rhymes chosen by performer/songwriter Orozco for inclusion in this text are presented with lyrics in Spanish and English, simple musical arrangement, and explanatory notes about the song's subject and how it is traditionally sung. Kleven's brightly colored collage illustrations are lively, joyous accompaniments to the music. CCBC categories: The Arts; Activities; Folklore, Mythology And Traditional Literature. 1994, Dutton, 56 pages, $16.99. Ages 5-10.
© Cooperative Children’s Book Center. Reprinted with permission.