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Social Studies
Social Studies > anthropology
    Bodies from the Ash:Life and Death in Ancient Pompeii
      With the help of detailed photographs, the author describes how historical fact is established by excavating and reconstructing the volcanic site of Pompeii.
      Author: Deem, James M. HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Breaking Ground, Breaking Silence
      In 1991, New York's long-ignored African Burial Ground was rediscovered. The description of what scientists found there and how they pieced together information about life serves as a backdrop for stories of life for African Americans in Colonial New York
      Author: Hansen, Joyce, & McGowan, Gary HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Corpses, Coffins, and Crypts
      "Drawing on extensive historical and anthropological research, personal accounts, and interviews of people who work in the funeral industry, Penny Colman examines... death and burial across cultures and societies" (dust jacket). Appendices include a chron
      Author: Colman, Penny HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Fortune's Bones
      A powerful poem, written in the form of a requiem, recovers the life and reconstructed history of a skeleton used by a Dr. Porter to teach anatomy in Waterbury, Connecticut. The format places author's notes across from sections of the poem told by differ
      Author: Nelson, Marilyn HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    If America Were a Village
      Smith uses the a village of 100 people to represent the 306 millions living in the US today. Facts and illustrations create a snapshot of who we are and what we do. This book helps to define America's diversity by shrinking it to a village of 100 people
      Author: Smith, Davei J HSE Descriptors: math | social studies | language arts - writing

    Indian Winter, An
      In 1833, a German prince and his servant and a Swiss artist traveled up the Missouri River Valley recording their contacts with the Mandan Sioux in journals and sketches. Russell Freedman stimulates the reader's curiosity through well-researched text and
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Library Book, The
      Although the title is a clever pun, this book recounts the history of storing language from tablets to information systems, highlighting famous libraries in the process. Side bars include additional facts and many web sites are included in the resources.
      Author: Sawa, Maureen HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Secrets of a Civil War Submarine
      The discovery in 1995 and the subsequent slow scientific recovery of the Civil War submarine USS Hurley from the Charleston harbor reads like a mystery story. Photographs, archival material, author's note, footnotes, bibliography, glossary, and suggested
      Author: Walker, Sally HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Written in Bones
      This thoroughly researched book explores human history through the study of bones. Maps, photographs, and archival materials illustrate the text. The text is complex and the print small.
      Author: Bahn, Paul HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > cultures
    Adventures of Marco Polo, The
      The author recounts the 13th Century life and exploration of the famous Venetian, Marco Polo. The fascinating illustrations reflect the style of the time and place of each segment of the story. The author includes ample supplemental information on the a
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    African Princess
      Illustrated with paintings, photographs, and artifacts, six biographies tell us about royal African women from Ancient Eygpt to the present: Hatshepsut of Egypt; Njinga of Matamba; Taytu Tetal of Ethiopia; Amina of Zaria; Tata Ajache of Dahomey; and Eliz
      Author: Hansen, Joyce HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Ancient Cliff Dwellers of Mesa Verde, The
      The Anasazi, "the ancient ones" in Navajo, had a unique and well developed culture. Around 1300, they simply vanished. Today, their home (Mesa Verde) is a national park. This carefully researched text recreates the Anasazi's way of life and explores th
      Author: Arnold, Caroline HSE Descriptors: social studies

    And the Soldiers Sang
      A fictional story about the 1914 Christmas Truce of WW I when Allied and German soldiers came together in friendship on the battle field. Illustrated in graphic novel style haunting artwork, the writing cuts through the gloomy circumstances with examples
      Author: Lewis, J. Patrick HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Ashanti to Zulu
      Each letter of this alphabet book describes a different African culture. It is meant as a reference or resource book, but the fabulous illustrations create a lively African world.
      Author: Musgrove, Margaret

    Black Star, Bright Dawn
      Bright Dawn, a teenaged Eskimo girl, takes her father's place in the grueling Iditarod, the 1000-mile dogsled race through the cold wilds of Alaska. In the process, she learns about herself, her family, and her culture.
      Author: O'Dell, Scott

    Bog Bodies
      The discovery of the Lindow Man in a bog in England in 1984 provides the structure for the archeological and anthropological study of human remains found in bogs. The author includes a map, source notes, a glossary, a bibliography, and an index that are
      Author: Buell, Janet HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Bread, Bread, Bread
      The photos and very easy text show/tell of people eating bread all over the world.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    Breaking Ground, Breaking Silence
      In 1991, New York's long-ignored African Burial Ground was rediscovered. The description of what scientists found there and how they pieced together information about life serves as a backdrop for stories of life for African Americans in Colonial New York
      Author: Hansen, Joyce, & McGowan, Gary HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Buried in Ice
      The authors explore the mysterious fate of Sir John Franklin's failed expedition to find the Northwest Passage in 1845. Sections of fictionalized history alternate with present-day, first-person narrative of the scientific search for answers. A glossary
      Author: Beattie, Owen & Geiger, John HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Castle Diary: The Journal of Tobias Burgess, Page
      Tobias, an 11-year-old boy, goes to serve as a page for a year in his uncle's castle in 13th Century England. Notes for the Reader contains additional historical information.
      Author: Platt, Richard HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - writing

    Christmas in the Big House, Christmas in the Quarters
      This story describes the customs used in both the plantation house and the slave quarters during the Christmas season during slavery years. The amount of detail--even recipes and songs are included--is unusual, and yet the book flows well and makes compe
      Author: McKissack, Patricia & McKissack, Frederick HSE Descriptors: social studies

    City of Angels: In and Around Los Angeles
      20 places or events in Los Angeles are briefly described. Each is accompanied by cartoon-like illustrations. A chronology of interesting tidbits of LA history concludes the book.
      Author: Jaskol, Julie & Lewis, Brian HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Come Go With Me: Old-timer Stories from the Southern Mountains
      The author recorded these oral histories of "Southern Mountain" old folks over a twenty-five year period in order to preserve aspects of community that were disappearing.
      Author: Thomas, Ray Edwin (collected by)

    Dogsong
      14-year-old Russel, an Eskimo, feels assailed by the modernity of his life. With the help of a wise elder, Russel learns how (and why) to make a 1400-mile dog run across his country. (Newbery Honor Book)
      Author: Paulsen, Gary HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Great Race, The
      A grandmother helps her granddaughter arrange paper cutouts of the Chinese zodiac by telling her a story of how 12 animals race to reach the Jade City. The author includes an appendix with information about the Chinese zodiac.
      Author: Bouchard, David

    History of Counting, The
      This is an accessible and interesting historical look at how and why numbers came to be. The author includes a useful glossary and index. Reviewers considered this a reference book rather than a leisure reading book.
      Author: Schmandt-Besserat, Denise HSE Descriptors: math

    House of Wisdom, The
      A true story is retold. Ishaq, a young boy in 9th century Baghdad, witnesses the "House of Wisdom," a cross between a library and an academy where books are shared and scholars come to read and exchange ideas.
      Author: Heide, Florence Parry, and Gilliland, Judith Heide HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Houses and Homes
      A fascinating photographic collection of houses in different world cultures. The photos show how colorful diverse homes and people are. There is very little text, but the index at the end identifies the location of each home.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    I Have an Olive Tree
      Colorful, stylized illustrations depict a girl and her mother as they travel back to Greece to see the olive tree her granfather left her when he died, a gift that grows in value as the story progresses.
      Author: Bunting, Eve HSE Descriptors: social studies

    I Saw Your Face
      Sketches from Tom Feelings's sketch book are used to frame a simple yet powerful poem about the "face game" played by the author with his mother that celebrates African-American heritage.
      Author: Dawes, Kwame HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - writing

    Immigrant Kids
      In this unique book, noted nonfiction writer Russell Freedman offers a rare glimpse of what it meant to be a young newcomer to America in the early 1900s.
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    In Nueva York
      This collection of short, interlocking stories depicts life in one of New York City's Puerto Rican communities.
      Author: Mohr, Nicholasa HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Indian School
      Subtitled "Teaching the White Man's Way," this book chronicles efforts to "civilize" Native American children and youth in the late 19th and early 20th century. Archival photographs, an index, a reading list, a bibliography, and a list of web sites comple
      Author: Cooper, Michael L. HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Indian Winter, An
      In 1833, a German prince and his servant and a Swiss artist traveled up the Missouri River Valley recording their contacts with the Mandan Sioux in journals and sketches. Russell Freedman stimulates the reader's curiosity through well-researched text and
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Jump at de Sun
      This interesting biography of the author and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston emphasizes her unique celebration of black life and language at the turn of the century when such topics were unpopular. Her niece wrote the introduction.
      Author: Porter, A. P. HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Kamishibai Man
      The award-winning author/illustrator introduces the reader to the street storytelling tradition of the "paper-theater man" from his Japanese childhood.
      Author: Say, Allen

    Library Book, The
      Although the title is a clever pun, this book recounts the history of storing language from tablets to information systems, highlighting famous libraries in the process. Side bars include additional facts and many web sites are included in the resources.
      Author: Sawa, Maureen HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Mama Provi and the Pot of Rice
      Mama Provi lives on the first floor of an apartment building and her granddaughter, Lucy, lives on the eighth floor. When Mama Provi heads up with a pot of arroz con pollo to comfort Lucy (who has chicken pox), a simple pot of chicken and rice is transfo
      Author: Rosa-Casanova, Sylvia

    Metropolis
      This book provides a detailed look at 10 cities, from 11th century Jerusalem to 20th century New York City. Readers will learn about culture, architecture, and everyday life over the centuries as well as historical information about the cities themselves.
      Author: Lorenz, Albert HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Midnight Zoo, The
      When their Gypsy encampment is attacked by Germans during WWII, three Romanian children flee. In an abandoned town, they find a zoo where the animals tell their stories as everyone seeks to reclaim their lives and freedom.
      Author: Harnett, Sonya HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies | language arts - writing

    Mist over the Mountains
      Memorable photographs and well-written text depict the history and present life in the geographic area known as Appalachia. The author includes a section on Further Reading.
      Author: Bial, Raymond HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Mosque
      Once again David Macaulay describes and illustrates the construction of a traditional structure, this time a fictional mosque (but similar to the Blue Mosque in Istanbul). An introduction, a map, and a glossary aid the reader in following the text.
      Author: Macaulay, David HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Mud City
      Shauzia, with her dog, has fled Afghanistan and survives on the streets of Peshawar, Pakistan, and in a refugee camp. This is the second part of a trilogy.
      Author: Ellis, Deborah HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Native Americans
      Rather than focus on individual tribes, the editors chose to organize the text and illustrations by cultural topics such as dress, transportation, rituals, and livelihood. Information boxes augment the brief text, giving the appearance of an intermediate
      Author: Thomas, David & Pendleton, Lorann (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Navajo: Visions and Voices Across the Mesa
      Shonto Begay's artwork has been celebrated throughout the southwestern U.S. for decades. Twenty of his paintings are the illustrations for this book. Each painting is accompanied by a poem.
      Author: Begay, Shonto

    O Jerusalem
      This book is a tribute to Jerusalem in honor of its 3000th year. Each poem is accompanied by a wonderful illustration and a paragraph of information about the history or traditions of Jerusalem.
      Author: Yolen, Jane

    On the Wings of Peace
      This is a collection of illustrations and various types of text, all provided by noted authors and illustrators, that focus on issues related to peace. Many cultures are represented among characters and in illustrations.
      Author: Hamanaka, Sheila (comp.) HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Out of the Dump: Writings and Photogrpahs by Children from Guatemala
      Approximately 1500 people, most children, live in a dump at the center of Guatemala City. In 1991 Nancy McGirr began a photography project with about 2 dozen children. She provided cameras; the children photographed their world. In 1993 Kris Franklin bega
      Author: Franklin, Kristine, & McGirr, Nancy (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Persepolis 2
      This graphic novel sequel to Persepolis, depicts the author's rebellious adolescence and early adulthood among dissident outsider friends in Vienna and her voluntary return to her family in fundamentalist Tehran. Readers should be cautioned about referen
      Author: Satrapi, Marjane HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Persepolis I: The Story of a Childhood
      In this first of two volumes about the author's life, Satrapi tells of her childhood and coming of age in Iran during the Islamic Revolution and the Iran/Iraq war.
      Author: Satrapi, Marjane HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - writing

    Right Here on This Spot
      Very easy text and beautiful illustrations chronicle changes in one farmer's field over the centuries.
      Author: Addy, Sharon Hart HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Rio Grande Stories
      In Albuquerque, 7th grade students decide to write a book on their diverse heritage to raise money for the school. As they research traditions and family stories, they learn unexpected things about themselves. Chapters alternate between stories about th
      Author: Meyer, Carolyn

    Roots and Blues
      Adoff uses a shaped speech style to create images of the birth of jazz and its rhythms of life in the South from ancestral drumbeats to sounds of everyday life and work.The unique poetry prances across the page making it as unique as the American form of
      Author: Adoff, Arnold HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Sacred River
      Beautiful illustrations and minimal text introduce the reader to the colorful riverfront scene in the Hindu pilgrimage center known as Benares or Varanasi, India.
      Author: Levin, Ted HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Salt: A Story of Friendship in Time of War
      Set in the Indiana Territory, this story of two friends - Anikwa, a Miami Indian and James, the son of a white trader become friends despite the conflict of their heritage. This book is uniquely crafted in two style of poetic verse. Salt plays a symbolic
      Author: Frost, Helen HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Selvakumar Knew Better
      Based on a true story, the book tells of a dog named Selvakumar who saved a South Indian boy from drowning during the tsunami of 2004.
      Author: Kroll, Virginia HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Silent Music
      A young boy in present-day Baghdad learns Arabic calligraphy to distract him from the bombing of his city. The gorgeous illustrations invite the reader to learn to write the Arabic words for "war" and "peace." An author's note gives the historical backg
      Author: Rumford, James HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Sioux, The
      This book is part of the "Lifeway Series," which also includes titles called The Cherokee, The Iroquois, and The Navajo. This title examines the origins, history, culture, beliefs, and language of the Native American tribe the S
      Author: Bial, Raymond HSE Descriptors: social studies

    So Far From the Sea
      A Japanese American visits Manazar, a Japanese relocation camp in World War II, to visit the grave of a grandfather.
      Author: Bunting, Eve HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Sold
      Lakshmi is a thirteen-year-old girl who lives with her family in a village in Nepal. Her stepfather sells her into sexual slavery and her life of prostitution begins in a large city in India. The book is written in short paragraphs, sentences, and phrases
      Author: McCormick, Patricia HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Song of Be
      When Be was a child, she and her mother left their people--the Namibian Bushmen--to work on a white man's plantation. Spending time with her grandfather helps her forget how much she misses others. With Namibia on the verge of freedom, Be finds the cour
      Author: Beake, Lesley HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Song of Hiawatha, The
      Excerpts from the long poem have been selected to tell the story of Hiawatha. Detailed illustrations accompany each excerpt.
      Author: Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Stories I Ain't Told Nobody Yet
      A collection of 49 poems, these vignettes of Appalachian life are funny, sad, moving, and silly. Not all of them are of great quality; teachers may want to pick and choose among them. The poem (on pg. 50) on abuse is powerful and likely to provoke good
      Author: Carson, Jo HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Tai Chi Morning: Snapshots of China
      The travel journal and poems of the author and the travel sketches of the illustrator combine to depict China a decade ago.
      Author: Grimes, Nikki

    Talking With Adventurers
      Several National Geographic scientists/explorers are interviewed in a Q & A format. What makes the book such an interesting read is how they see themselves and their work. The book offers maps, fabulous photographs, and contact information for particip
      Author: Cummings, Pat and Linda, (compilers) HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Tea With Milk
      May (the author's mother) is learning American ways when her family moves back to Japan. When her parents hire a matchmaker to find her a husband, May moves to Osaka, begins a career, and finds her own happiness.
      Author: Say, Allen

    They Sought A New World
      Through Kurelek's art and Margaret Englehart's additional text, this book tells the story of European immigrants to North America. In addition to describing issues like finding work and shelter, aspects of culture -- religion, maintaining cultural tradit
      Author: Kurelek, William HSE Descriptors: social studies

    This Our Dark Country: The American Settlers of Liberia
      This is a history of Liberia which was established on the west coast of Africa in 1822 as a haven for free African Americans. Some U.S. history is also included as background context. End matter includes photos, maps, endnotes, bibliography, and index. Th
      Author: Reef, Catherine HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Tibet Through the Red Box
      The author-illustrator returns to his father's home as an adult to learn the contents of a mysterious red box that his father had brought back from Tibet years before. The past is revealed through a diary, memories, and extraordinary illustrations.
      Author: Sis, Peter

    To Every Thing There Is a Season
      The extraordinarily beautiful art from different cultural and historic periods illustrates a Bible passage from Ecclesiastes. An end section describes the historical/geographical information about the art work.
      Author: Dillon, Leo and Dianne HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Voices of the Heart
      The author-illustrator creates stunning collages of Chinese characters and the Western symbol for the heart. The text reflects on the wisdom expressed by the components of the ideogram.
      Author: Young, Ed HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    When I Was Young in the Mountains
      The narrator remembers various aspects and details of growing up in a mountain community.
      Author: Rylant, Cynthia

    Who Was First? Discovering the Americas
      This book is the story of the many groups of people who discovered America before Columbus. The book is thoroughly researched and documented showing the contributions of the many people who inhabited America well before Columbus. The book includes bibliog
      Author: Freedman, Russel HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Who Was First? Discovering the Americas
      This book is the story of the many groups of people who discovered America before Columbus. The book is thoroughly researched and documented showing the contributions of the many people who inhabited America well before Columbus. The book includes bibliog
      Author: Freedman, Russel HSE Descriptors: social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > cultures > cultural attitudes
    At Her Majesty's Request
      Queen Victoria oversees the education and upbringing of an African princess after she was rescued from execution by a ship captain who brought her to England.
      Author: Myers, Walter Den HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Baboon King, The
      Set in Africa, this powerful book explores the themes of the importance of community through the exile of Morengaru from his tribe and survival, not against but with nature, in his life with a group of baboons.
      Author: Quintana, Anton

    Breadwinner, The
      This coming-of-age story, told from the point of view of a young Afghan girl left to fend for her family in the times of repressive Taliban influence is both moving and suspenseful.
      Author: Ellis, Deborah HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Breadwinner, The
      This coming-of-age story, told from the point of view of a young Afghan girl left to fend for her family in the times of repressive Taliban influence is both moving and suspenseful.
      Author: Ellis, Deborah HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Coal Miner's Bride, A: The Diary of Anetka Kaminska
      In journal format, the life of a thirteen year old girl in 1896 comes to life. Anetra Kaminska is sold to an older widower of three children in a mining town, for the price of her and her brother's tickets from Poland to America. Her life is extremely ha
      Author: Bartoletti, Susan Campbell HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | language arts - writing | social studies

    Don Quixote and the Windmills
      This retelling of the famous Spanish novel by Cervantes recounts Don Quixote's first adventure as a knight. An Author's Note contributes historical information about Cervantes.
      Author: Kimmel, Eric HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Far Beyond the Garden Gate
      Don Brown has written another intriguing book about an extraordinary woman, one who perservered in her desire to explore Tibet never seen by a Western woman. An author's note, a bibliography, and a map extend the possibilities of this beautifully illustr
      Author: Brown, Don HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Girls
      The subtitle, A History of Growing Up Female in America, tells it all. The 10 chapters cover history from colonial America to the Millennium. A good index and Selections for Further Reading make this a good reference text. The author selects girls from
      Author: Colman, Penny HSE Descriptors: science

    How I Discovered Poetry
      Marilyn Nelson describes her childhood in America in the 1950s, as the daughter of an African American Army officer. The poems span from her fourth to fourteenth year and touch aspects of civil rights, "Red Scare," atom bomb and the stirrings of the femin
      Author: Nelson, Marilyn HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies | language arts - writing

    I, Columbus: My Journal, 1492-3
      This handsome 57-page book, illustrated with watercolors, is taken directly from Columbus' diary. The book records his voyage and his adventures, and begins and ends with short accounts of historical information. It may not be appropriate for low level
      Author: Roop, Peter & Roop, Connie HSE Descriptors: social studies | math

    Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy
      This coming-of-age novel is a Newbery Honor Book. It tells the story of people in Maine in the early 1900s, a friendship between a minister's son and an island girl, and the ways greed and prejudice change all their lives.
      Author: Schmidt, Gary

    October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard
      On the night of October 6, 1998, a gay twenty-one year old University of Wyoming student named Matthew Shepard, was beaten, tied to a fence and left to die. The book is a collection of 68 poems from various perspectives concerning this crime.
      Author: Newman, Leslea HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Queen Victoria's Bathing Machine
      Queen Victoria wants to swim in the ocean but the British way of life is prim and proper and no one should ever see more than a lady's face and hands let alone the queen without all of her clothes. Prince Albert designs a machine that will allow the queen
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | language arts - writing | social studies

    Separate Is Never Equal
      A Spanish family's children are barred from attending the school of their choice in California. They fight the ruling in court and win the past practice of segregation based on ethnicity.
      Author: Tonatiuh, Duncan HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Snake Pits, Talking Cures, and Magic Bullets: A History of Mental Illness
      This is a roughly chronological history of thinking about and treatment for persons with mental illness. Boxed text throughout focuses on special issues. End material offers many opportunities for follow-up.
      Author: Kent, Deborah HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Step Toward Heaven, A
      When Young Ju emigrates with her immediate family to America from Korea, she misses her grandparents. As she grows older, she finds a refuge from her father's physical abuse in school achievement. The author mimics the style of narration with the age of
      Author: Na, An

    Twelfth Night
      This is a narrative retelling of Shakespeare's play. Many of the famous lines are embedded in the narrative.
      Author: Shakespeare, William (retold B. Coville) HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

Social Studies > anthropology > cultures > cultural conflict
    American Plague, An
      Subtitled "The True and Terifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793," this account focuses on the 1793 outbreak in Philadelphia but also addresses the politics of medical research. It won several awards.
      Author: Murphy, Jim HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Code Talkers
      After attending a white boarding school where his Navajo language and culture were belittled and punished, Ned Begay served as a code talker with the US Marines during operations in the Pacific during World War II. The narrator tells his story to his gra
      Author: Bruchac, Joseph HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Facing the Lion
      Enhanced by a few, vivid color photos, this memoir recounts the Maasi childhood and first encounters with European and American culture of an American teacher who spends part of each year working in Kenya. An afterword brings the reader up to date with L
      Author: Lekuton, Joseph HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Gleam and Glow
      The story of a family who fled from the Bosnian-Serb forces to a refugee camp in 1990. When they returned to their home in 1995 they found everything destroyed except 2 pet fish.
      Author: Bunting, Eve HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Gleam and Glow
      The story of a family who fled from the Bosnian-Serb forces to a refugee camp in 1990. When they returned to their home in 1995 they found everything destroyed except 2 pet fish.
      Author: Bunting, Eve HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Indian School
      Subtitled "Teaching the White Man's Way," this book chronicles efforts to "civilize" Native American children and youth in the late 19th and early 20th century. Archival photographs, an index, a reading list, a bibliography, and a list of web sites comple
      Author: Cooper, Michael L. HSE Descriptors: social studies

    It Is a Good Day to Die
      A brief introduction explains why the account of Custer's battle at Little Bighorn is told through individual recollections long after the encounter. In addition to the personal accounts, the book includes a helpful chronology of events, short biographie
      Author: Viola, Herman HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Light in the Forest, The
      At 15, true son John Butler is returned to his biological white family by his Native American adoptive father. After he escapes with his friend and rescuer Halt Arrow, he is caught between two families and two cultures.
      Author: Richter, Conrad HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Light Shining through the Mist
      Lush color photographs and text tell the story of how Dian Fossey studied the gorillas in Africa and died trying to protect them and their habitat during a time of political unrest.
      Author: Matthews, Tom HSE Descriptors: science

    Long Walk to Water, A
      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 D
      Author: Park, Linda Sue HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Me, All Alone, at the End of the World
      A boy enjoys living quietly by himself at the End of the World until Constantine Shimmer arrives and begins to "improve" the area with an inn and amusement park, demanding that tourists come and have "fun without end.
      Author: Anderson, M.T. HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Memories of Sun
      This is a collection of modern day short stories and poems about Africa. It has three divisions: 1) Africa 2) Americans in Africa 3) Africans in America. Although most of the 12 stories are engaging, teachers will want to read beforehand since some may
      Author: Kurtz, Jane (Ed.) HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Native Americans
      Rather than focus on individual tribes, the editors chose to organize the text and illustrations by cultural topics such as dress, transportation, rituals, and livelihood. Information boxes augment the brief text, giving the appearance of an intermediate
      Author: Thomas, David & Pendleton, Lorann (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Romeo and Juliet, (The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of)
      This lively, clear, prose retelling of Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet follows the original story very closely.
      Author: Shakespeare, William HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Salt: A Story of Friendship in Time of War
      Set in the Indiana Territory, this story of two friends - Anikwa, a Miami Indian and James, the son of a white trader become friends despite the conflict of their heritage. This book is uniquely crafted in two style of poetic verse. Salt plays a symbolic
      Author: Frost, Helen HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Shin-chi's Canoe
      Shin-chi's toy canoe, given to him by his father, sustains him during his first year at an Indian residential school. This story occurs when Native Americans were forced to attend Indian residential schools where they were made to learn the white man's w
      Author: Campbell, Nicola I. HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Walking the Choctaw Road
      A collection of twelve stories from the Mississippi and Oklahoma branches of the Choctaw People, including traditional lore arising from beliefs and myths, historical tales pased down through generations, and personal stories of contemporary life.
      Author: Tingle, Tim HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

Social Studies > anthropology > cultures > cultural customs
    Androcles and the Lion
      This book retells the fable of Androcles, a runaway Roman slave, who befriends a wounded lion.
      Author: Nolan, Dennis HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Appalachia: The Voices of Sleeping Birds
      The author and the illustrator, both from Appalachia, lovingly remember the people, the customs, and the dogs.
      Author: Rylant, Cynthia

    Arrival, The
      An amazing and complex immigration story told in a wordless format. Once you start "reading", it's hard to stop - each picture draws you to the next.
      Author: Tan, Shaun HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Arrival, The
      An amazing and complex immigration story told in a wordless format. Once you start "reading", it's hard to stop - each picture draws you to the next.
      Author: Tan, Shaun HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Barrio
      Photographs present the life of Jose and his family who live in a barrio or Hispanic neighborhood in San Francisco. A glossary contains Spanish words used in the story. One reviewer felt that the glorification/simplification of the issues addressed may m
      Author: Ancona, George HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Bells of Christmas, The
      This long picture book may be read slowly, although it is not broken into chapters. It is a reminiscence of an African-American family's celebration of Christmas in the 1890s and is set in the farmlands of Ohio.
      Author: Hamilton, Virginia HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Circle Unbroken
      A young girl learns the tradition of making sweet grass baskets.
      Author: Raven, Margot HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Corpses, Coffins, and Crypts
      "Drawing on extensive historical and anthropological research, personal accounts, and interviews of people who work in the funeral industry, Penny Colman examines... death and burial across cultures and societies" (dust jacket). Appendices include a chron
      Author: Colman, Penny HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Dragon New Year, The
      A beautifully illustrated, imaginative tale about why the Chinese celebrate New Year with firecrackers. A bereaved mother is helped by Buddah to thwart the New Year dragon. The author includes the background information for his created myth.
      Author: Bouchard, David

    Facing the Lion
      Enhanced by a few, vivid color photos, this memoir recounts the Maasi childhood and first encounters with European and American culture of an American teacher who spends part of each year working in Kenya. An afterword brings the reader up to date with L
      Author: Lekuton, Joseph HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Girls
      The subtitle, A History of Growing Up Female in America, tells it all. The 10 chapters cover history from colonial America to the Millennium. A good index and Selections for Further Reading make this a good reference text. The author selects girls from
      Author: Colman, Penny HSE Descriptors: science

    Good Masters! Sweet Ladies!
      This Newberry Award winner gives voice to residents of a medieval English village circa 1255. Poems in monologue form interspersed with explanatory passages bring the village to life. The book includes a map locating the characters in the village and an
      Author: Schlitz, Laura Amy HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Home of the Brave
      An African refuge lives with his aunt and cousin in Minneapolis. He has problems adjusting and misses his mother (no one knows where she is). He finds comfort in an older lady and her cow whose name means family in his native language.
      Author: Applegate, Katherine HSE Descriptors: literature and arts | social studies

    In the Days of the Vaqueros
      Russell Freedman has created another interesting non-fiction book, this time on the vaqueros, who were the forerunners of cowboys. As usual, the author illustrates his essays with paintings, archival photographs and includes useful resources in a bibliog
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Irene Jennie and the Christmas Masquerade
      Irene Jennie is missing her parents as Christmas Day approaches in the slave quarters. The wild parade known as the Johnkankus diverts her loneliness and brings her a surprise.
      Author: Smalls, Irene HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Kente Colors
      A simple text and vibrant illustrations, which are organized by color, depict the customs of the Ashanti people in Central West Africa who wear Kente cloth for special occasions.
      Author: Chocolate, Debbi

    Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The
      This book is a wonderfully retold version of the classic story by Washington Irving. The illustrations contribute to the mysterious mood.
      Author: Irving, Washington HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Lights on the River
      A migrant girl keeps memories of her grandma close as she deals with hard times in the United States. Her voice is strong, and the illustrations are stunning.
      Author: Thomas, Jane Resh

    Mei Ling in China City
      Twelve year old Mei Ling Lee helps her parents during the Moon Festival celebration and raises money for Chinese women and children refugees in 1942. She also has a friend whose family was relocated to Manzanar War Relocation Center because she is Japanes
      Author: Smith, Icy HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Mei Ling in China City
      Twelve year old Mei Ling Lee helps her parents during the Moon Festival celebration and raises money for Chinese women and children refugees in 1942. She also has a friend whose family was relocated to Manzanar War Relocation Center because she is Japanes
      Author: Smith, Icy HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Native Americans
      Rather than focus on individual tribes, the editors chose to organize the text and illustrations by cultural topics such as dress, transportation, rituals, and livelihood. Information boxes augment the brief text, giving the appearance of an intermediate
      Author: Thomas, David & Pendleton, Lorann (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Nickommoh! A Thanksgiving Celebration
      The Native American harvest celebration, Nickommah, is described in simple text accompanied by interesting illustrations. Other information about Native American culture is also shared; a glossary of Native American terms concludes the book.
      Author: Koller, Jackie French HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Princess Ka'iulani: Hope of a Nation, Heart of a People
      This is a fascinating biography of Ka'iulani, Crown Princess of Hawaii. The history of Hawaii is also chronicled, as is a bit about life in the US and Europe in the late 19th century. Authentic photographs and political cartoons, a bibliography, and index
      Author: Linnea, Sharon HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Razia's Ray of Hope
      This is a fictional story about the a young girl in Afghanistan who wants to attend school and the building of the first school for girls in that country.Tolerance and determination are key themes.
      Author: Suneby, Elizabeth HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Ruby's Wish
      The author tells the story of her Chinese grandmother, Ruby, who yearned for learning and the opportunity to attend the university, which was against custom.
      Author: Bridges, Shirin Yim

    Sacred River
      Beautiful illustrations and minimal text introduce the reader to the colorful riverfront scene in the Hindu pilgrimage center known as Benares or Varanasi, India.
      Author: Levin, Ted HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Second Mrs. Gioconda
      In this fictionalized story of real people, Salai, servant of Leonardo da Vinci, tells how the painting of Mrs. Gioconda known as the Mona Lisa came to be painted.
      Author: Konigsburg, E. L. HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Street Through Time, A
      From the Stone Age to the Modern Age, the same location is depicted on double-page layouts filled with cultural details and daily activities. Endmatter includes a time-traveling quiz and a glossary. The illustrations are visually very busy.
      Author: Millard, Anne HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Waiting for the Owl's Call
      This narrative is rich in beautiful language - similes, personifications that describes the daily lives of Afghanistani children who work at rug looms looms using ancient patterns handed down from their ancestors. The narrator mentally creates new patter
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Waiting for the Owl's Call
      This narrative is rich in beautiful language - similes, personifications that describes the daily lives of Afghanistani children who work at rug looms looms using ancient patterns handed down from their ancestors. The narrator mentally creates new patter
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Way to Start the Day, The
      This is a hard book to categorize. The simple text is written like blank verse. The content is basically true. The text focuses on how people around the world celebrate or acknowledge the sunrise.
      Author: Baylor, Bryd HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Wild Boy, The
      The author tells a very sympathetic account of the wild child of Aveyron, France, who was captured and studied in the early 1800's. Dr. Itard and his housekeeper become the family of this boy who never acquired all the traits of a "civilized" person.
      Author: Gerstein, Mordicai

    Written in Bones
      This thoroughly researched book explores human history through the study of bones. Maps, photographs, and archival materials illustrate the text. The text is complex and the print small.
      Author: Bahn, Paul HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > customs
    Appalachia: The Voices of Sleeping Birds
      The author and the illustrator, both from Appalachia, lovingly remember the people, the customs, and the dogs.
      Author: Rylant, Cynthia

    Black Potatoes
      The causes and consequences of the Irish potato famine are examined, using individual portraits and anecdotes. Archival photographs, a map of the counties of Ireland, a bibliography, and a timeline complement the text.
      Author: Bartoletti, Susan HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Raising Yoder's Barn
      After a fire destroys Yoder's barn, the Amish community gathers to build a new one. The gorgeous illustrations extend the reader's view of Amish life. One reader found a "blackface" depiction of a boy, dirty from the ashes, negatively suggestive.
      Author: Yolen, Jane HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Sioux, The
      This book is part of the "Lifeway Series," which also includes titles called The Cherokee, The Iroquois, and The Navajo. This title examines the origins, history, culture, beliefs, and language of the Native American tribe the S
      Author: Bial, Raymond HSE Descriptors: social studies

    They Sought A New World
      Through Kurelek's art and Margaret Englehart's additional text, this book tells the story of European immigrants to North America. In addition to describing issues like finding work and shelter, aspects of culture -- religion, maintaining cultural tradit
      Author: Kurelek, William HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Weddings
      The book explores weddings around the world through photographs and simple text. An index identifies the geographic location and the religious custom involved.
      Author: Morris, Ann

Social Studies > anthropology > daily life
    Arrival, The
      An amazing and complex immigration story told in a wordless format. Once you start "reading", it's hard to stop - each picture draws you to the next.
      Author: Tan, Shaun HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Arrival, The
      An amazing and complex immigration story told in a wordless format. Once you start "reading", it's hard to stop - each picture draws you to the next.
      Author: Tan, Shaun HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Auld Lang Syne
      Told from first person perspective, this life story of Robert Burns from childhood to adulthood highlights the poets efforts to keep alive Scottish songs and verses. Most familiar to many will be the song of the book's title.
      Author: Findon, Joanne HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Barrio
      Photographs present the life of Jose and his family who live in a barrio or Hispanic neighborhood in San Francisco. A glossary contains Spanish words used in the story. One reviewer felt that the glorification/simplification of the issues addressed may m
      Author: Ancona, George HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Bodies from the Ash:Life and Death in Ancient Pompeii
      With the help of detailed photographs, the author describes how historical fact is established by excavating and reconstructing the volcanic site of Pompeii.
      Author: Deem, James M. HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Breaking Ground, Breaking Silence
      In 1991, New York's long-ignored African Burial Ground was rediscovered. The description of what scientists found there and how they pieced together information about life serves as a backdrop for stories of life for African Americans in Colonial New York
      Author: Hansen, Joyce, & McGowan, Gary HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Calling the Doves
      The author joyously recounts the songs, the food, and the love of his parents of his boyhood in a migrant Mexican family in rhythmic, lyrical language with a bilingual format. The colorful illustrations recall both Diego Rivera and Marc Chagall in their
      Author: Herrera, Juan

    Castle Diary: The Journal of Tobias Burgess, Page
      Tobias, an 11-year-old boy, goes to serve as a page for a year in his uncle's castle in 13th Century England. Notes for the Reader contains additional historical information.
      Author: Platt, Richard HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - writing

    Childtimes
      Three African American women, grandmother, mother, and daughter, reminisce about their childhoods.
      Author: Greenfield, Eloise & Little, Lessive Jones

    Dear Mr. Rosenwald
      This is a fictionalized story of one community's efforts to build a school based on the historical Rosenwald schools. These schools in the American South were financed by Julius Rosenwald of Sears Roebuck and required collaboration of black and white com
      Author: Weatherford, Carole Boston HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Family Farm
      Two children learn that their family is in danger of losing its farm. They devise a plan for saving it.
      Author: Locker, Thomas

    Fannie in the Kitchen
      Accompanied by delightful Victorian-style illustrations, this biography of Fannie Farmer, the cookbook writer, is told in a storybook format with a recipe and cooking tips thrown in for good measure.
      Author: Hopkinson, Deborah

    God Went to Beauty School
      An unusually humorous and poignant collection of poems places God in everyday situations as suggested by the title. Some devout Christians may find this book offensive for the light-hearted portrayal of God; some non-Christians may find it annoying.
      Author: Rylant, Cynthia

    Going Back Home: An Artist Returns to the South
      This book is a partnership between African American artist, Michele Woods, who returned to the South and painted her family history, and author Toyomi Igus, who gave words to Woods's paintings.
      Author: Igus, Toyomi HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Good Masters! Sweet Ladies!
      This Newberry Award winner gives voice to residents of a medieval English village circa 1255. Poems in monologue form interspersed with explanatory passages bring the village to life. The book includes a map locating the characters in the village and an
      Author: Schlitz, Laura Amy HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Heavenly Village, The
      This is subtitled "A Novel," but it's really more a loosely connected set of short stories, all of which take place in the "Heavenly Village," a place for those who have died but are not quite yet ready to leave earth behind. (Note: religious overtones, i
      Author: Rylant, Cynthia HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    House, House
      In the late 1800's, the How brothers took photographs of houses in Hatfield, Massachusetts. Author Jane Yolen wrote text to accompany photographs of the same houses taken by her son in the 1990's. A bibliography extends the historical information.
      Author: Yolen, Jane HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Houses and Homes
      A fascinating photographic collection of houses in different world cultures. The photos show how colorful diverse homes and people are. There is very little text, but the index at the end identifies the location of each home.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    If America Were a Village
      Smith uses the a village of 100 people to represent the 306 millions living in the US today. Facts and illustrations create a snapshot of who we are and what we do. This book helps to define America's diversity by shrinking it to a village of 100 people
      Author: Smith, Davei J HSE Descriptors: math | social studies | language arts - writing

    In Nueva York
      This collection of short, interlocking stories depicts life in one of New York City's Puerto Rican communities.
      Author: Mohr, Nicholasa HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    In the Days of the Vaqueros
      Russell Freedman has created another interesting non-fiction book, this time on the vaqueros, who were the forerunners of cowboys. As usual, the author illustrates his essays with paintings, archival photographs and includes useful resources in a bibliog
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Mama Provi and the Pot of Rice
      Mama Provi lives on the first floor of an apartment building and her granddaughter, Lucy, lives on the eighth floor. When Mama Provi heads up with a pot of arroz con pollo to comfort Lucy (who has chicken pox), a simple pot of chicken and rice is transfo
      Author: Rosa-Casanova, Sylvia

    Maritcha: A Nineteenth Century American GIrl
      Based on an unpublished memoir, this picture book tells the story of daily life for a middle-class African American girl in New York in the 19th century. Maps and photographs illustrate the story.
      Author: Bolden, Tonya HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Matilda Bone
      Sometime in medieval Europe, a sombre-minded priest leaves a 14-year-old orphaned girl to be a bonesetter's apprentice. She reads and writes Latin but knows very little about the world and the people in it.
      Author: Cushman, Karen HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Momma, Where Are You From?
      When a young girl asks her mother where she comes from, she receives a loving description of her hard-working childhood in the segregated South told in rich, rhythmic language with lush illustrations.
      Author: Bradby, Marie HSE Descriptors: social studies

    On the Go
      A simple text and photographs from around the world tell how people move and carry things from place to place.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    Out of the Dump: Writings and Photogrpahs by Children from Guatemala
      Approximately 1500 people, most children, live in a dump at the center of Guatemala City. In 1991 Nancy McGirr began a photography project with about 2 dozen children. She provided cameras; the children photographed their world. In 1993 Kris Franklin bega
      Author: Franklin, Kristine, & McGirr, Nancy (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Persepolis I: The Story of a Childhood
      In this first of two volumes about the author's life, Satrapi tells of her childhood and coming of age in Iran during the Islamic Revolution and the Iran/Iraq war.
      Author: Satrapi, Marjane HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - writing

    Raising Yoder's Barn
      After a fire destroys Yoder's barn, the Amish community gathers to build a new one. The gorgeous illustrations extend the reader's view of Amish life. One reader found a "blackface" depiction of a boy, dirty from the ashes, negatively suggestive.
      Author: Yolen, Jane HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Shutting Out the Sky
      Subtitled "Life in the Tenements of New York, 1880-1924,," the chapters in this book offer information and perspectives on all aspects of immigration and life in NYC. Photographs and text document the experiences of five individuals from Belarus, Italy, L
      Author: Hopkinson, Deborah HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Silent Music
      A young boy in present-day Baghdad learns Arabic calligraphy to distract him from the bombing of his city. The gorgeous illustrations invite the reader to learn to write the Arabic words for "war" and "peace." An author's note gives the historical backg
      Author: Rumford, James HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Song Shoots Out of My Mouth, The
      This is an exciting collection of vibrantly illustrated poetry about music--classical, jazz, gospel, blues, opera, marching band. Backnotes extend learning about music, artists, and key works.
      Author: Adoff, Jaime HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Stranded at Plimoth Plantation 1626
      This is the fictitious journal of a 13-year-old orphan stranded at Plimoth (sic) Plantation. Bowen constructed the 80-page journal from historical records and illustrated the words with marvelous woodcuts. The end pages too feature fascinating maps. Te
      Author: Bowen, Gary HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Tai Chi Morning: Snapshots of China
      The travel journal and poems of the author and the travel sketches of the illustrator combine to depict China a decade ago.
      Author: Grimes, Nikki

    Talking with Tebe
      Editor Lyons collected these excerpts about Clementine Hunter, considered one of America's finest folk artists, from magazine and newspaper articles and tape-recorded interviews. The artist's work illustrates the book.
      Author: Lyons, Mary E. (Ed.) HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Teacup Full of Roses
      Three brothers live with their mother, disabled father and aging aunt in Washington, D.C. during the Vietnam war. Paul, the oldest and his mother's favorite, returns home from another drug rehabilitation program just as Joe, the middle very responsible s
      Author: Mathis, Sharon HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Toilets, Toasters, and Telephones
      Subtitled "the how and why of everyday objects," this book offers a history of everyday objects. Chapters focus on inventions for bathrooms, kitchens, cleaning, and communication. The final chapter introduces principles of industrial design.
      Author: Rubin, Susan Goldman HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Travels of Benjamin of Tudela, The
      In 1159, Benjamin Tudela, a Jew, left Tudela, Spain, set off to see Jerusalem and as many places mentioned in the Bible as possible. Fourteen years later he returned to tell of his travels. The author extensively researched the period to fill in details
      Author: Shulevitz, Uri HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Uptown
      Colorful collage and an easy-reading text belie a very sophisticated tour of Harlem including the Metro-North train, brownstones, shopping on 125th street, a barbershop, summer basketball, the Harlem Boys' Chois, and sunset over the Hudson River
      Author: Collier, Bryan

    Voices from the Fields
      Photographs, poems, and interviews capture glimpses of life for today's migrant children.
      Author: Atkin, S. Beth HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Waiting for the Owl's Call
      This narrative is rich in beautiful language - similes, personifications that describes the daily lives of Afghanistani children who work at rug looms looms using ancient patterns handed down from their ancestors. The narrator mentally creates new patter
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Waiting for the Owl's Call
      This narrative is rich in beautiful language - similes, personifications that describes the daily lives of Afghanistani children who work at rug looms looms using ancient patterns handed down from their ancestors. The narrator mentally creates new patter
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Walking the Log
      The author paints scenes and reminisces about her childhood in the turn of the century South. The books contains information about daily life, work (especially picking cotton), childhood games, family values, and the author's life long interest in art.
      Author: Nickens, Bessie

    Way Things Never Were, The
      The eight chapters of this interesting book, subtitled "The Truth About the 'Good Old Days,'" contrast life in the 50s and 60s with today. Topics addressed include communication, health, transportation, education, world events, etc. The print insets for p
      Author: Finkelstein, Norman HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Whale Port
      In this book about a fictitious combination of real places, the text and colored-pencil drawings present the chronological development of a New England whaling town and its related businesses. The use of cut away art provides a glimpse inside the building
      Author: Foster, Mark HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Words West: Voices of Young Pioneers
      Diary and journal excerpts and archival photographs enliven a well-written text about the Westward Movement as seen from the perspective of children. The book includes short biographies of the children who are quoted often as well as a chronology, furthe
      Author: Wadsworth, Ginger HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Year on Monhegan Island, A
      Photojournalist Julia Dean chronicles a year in the life of residents of Monhegan Island, a small island off the east coast of Maine. We learn about their culture, government, and economy, as well as a bit about part-time resident Jamie Wyeth.
      Author: Dean, Julia HSE Descriptors: social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > daily life > clothing
    Girls
      The subtitle, A History of Growing Up Female in America, tells it all. The 10 chapters cover history from colonial America to the Millennium. A good index and Selections for Further Reading make this a good reference text. The author selects girls from
      Author: Colman, Penny HSE Descriptors: science

    Hats, Hats, Hats
      Photographs of hats worn by people around the world--hats for work, play, comfort, and show. An index gives further information about the activity depicted and the geographic location.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    In the Days of the Vaqueros
      Russell Freedman has created another interesting non-fiction book, this time on the vaqueros, who were the forerunners of cowboys. As usual, the author illustrates his essays with paintings, archival photographs and includes useful resources in a bibliog
      Author: Freedman, Russell HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Native Americans
      Rather than focus on individual tribes, the editors chose to organize the text and illustrations by cultural topics such as dress, transportation, rituals, and livelihood. Information boxes augment the brief text, giving the appearance of an intermediate
      Author: Thomas, David & Pendleton, Lorann (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Shoes, Shoes, Shoes
      The photographs and very simple text document the types and function of shoes throughout the world.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    We The People
      American history from Colonial times to the present is presented through 65 poems about individuals--some real and some imaginary. A timeline of historic events runs across the lower part of the page and a note about writing the book appears at the end.
      Author: Katz, Bobbi HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > daily life > food
    Bread, Bread, Bread
      The photos and very easy text show/tell of people eating bread all over the world.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    Food
      The evolution of the acquisition, distribution, and consumption of food throughout history is described in interesting text and colorful, informative illustrations. The author includes a helpful glossary.
      Author: Ventura, Piero HSE Descriptors: social studies | science

    Harvest Year
      This book offers a month-by-month presentation of the regional harvesting of food in the U.S.A. with photographs, maps, and simple clear text.
      Author: Peterson, Cris

    Mama Provi and the Pot of Rice
      Mama Provi lives on the first floor of an apartment building and her granddaughter, Lucy, lives on the eighth floor. When Mama Provi heads up with a pot of arroz con pollo to comfort Lucy (who has chicken pox), a simple pot of chicken and rice is transfo
      Author: Rosa-Casanova, Sylvia

    Native Americans
      Rather than focus on individual tribes, the editors chose to organize the text and illustrations by cultural topics such as dress, transportation, rituals, and livelihood. Information boxes augment the brief text, giving the appearance of an intermediate
      Author: Thomas, David & Pendleton, Lorann (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand
      Pearl M., a long-time resident of her city street, refuses to let the city chop down the last gingko tree on the block. The book depicts the different ethnic groups that have moved on the street, but shows a real community of people interacting and livin
      Author: Levine, Arthur A.

Social Studies > anthropology > daily life > houses
    Home Place
      While on a hike, a family discovers the site of a ruined house. They find a few abandoned objects and, through terse and poetic words, imagine the family who once lived there. Through superior illustrations Pinkney evokes a world that is part dream and
      Author: Dragonwagon, Cresent

    House, House
      In the late 1800's, the How brothers took photographs of houses in Hatfield, Massachusetts. Author Jane Yolen wrote text to accompany photographs of the same houses taken by her son in the 1990's. A bibliography extends the historical information.
      Author: Yolen, Jane HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Houses
      An illustrated history of the construction of houses presents interesting information about the evolution of family dwellings.
      Author: Ventura, Piero

    Houses and Homes
      A fascinating photographic collection of houses in different world cultures. The photos show how colorful diverse homes and people are. There is very little text, but the index at the end identifies the location of each home.
      Author: Morris, Ann

    If America Were a Village
      Smith uses the a village of 100 people to represent the 306 millions living in the US today. Facts and illustrations create a snapshot of who we are and what we do. This book helps to define America's diversity by shrinking it to a village of 100 people
      Author: Smith, Davei J HSE Descriptors: math | social studies | language arts - writing

    Native Americans
      Rather than focus on individual tribes, the editors chose to organize the text and illustrations by cultural topics such as dress, transportation, rituals, and livelihood. Information boxes augment the brief text, giving the appearance of an intermediate
      Author: Thomas, David & Pendleton, Lorann (Eds.) HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Street Through Time, A
      From the Stone Age to the Modern Age, the same location is depicted on double-page layouts filled with cultural details and daily activities. Endmatter includes a time-traveling quiz and a glossary. The illustrations are visually very busy.
      Author: Millard, Anne HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Toilets, Toasters, and Telephones
      Subtitled "the how and why of everyday objects," this book offers a history of everyday objects. Chapters focus on inventions for bathrooms, kitchens, cleaning, and communication. The final chapter introduces principles of industrial design.
      Author: Rubin, Susan Goldman HSE Descriptors: social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > daily life > shoes
    Elijah of Buxton
      Eleven-year-old Elijah, the first to be born free in a Canadian settlement for runaway slaves at the end of the Underground Railroad, though considered "fra-gile" and talkative by adults, performs an heroic feat with his chucking stones.
      Author: Curtis, Christopher Paul

    January's Sparrow
      After a fellow slave is beaten to death, Sadie and her family flee the plantation for freedom through the Underground Railroad. As they make a new life in Michigan, they must remain alert for the slave catchers.
      Author: Polacco, Patricia HSE Descriptors: social studies

    January's Sparrow
      After a fellow slave is beaten to death, Sadie and her family flee the plantation for freedom through the Underground Railroad. As they make a new life in Michigan, they must remain alert for the slave catchers.
      Author: Polacco, Patricia HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Shoes, Shoes, Shoes
      The photographs and very simple text document the types and function of shoes throughout the world.
      Author: Morris, Ann

Social Studies > anthropology > folklore
    Cupid and Psyche
      This is a retelling of the classic Greek myth.
      Author: Craft, M. Charlotte HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Ghost of the Southern Belle
      This is a ghost story set on the high seas. The young son of a ship's captain finds a way to end the curse of a ghost ship.
      Author: Bodkin, Odds

    Going Back Home: An Artist Returns to the South
      This book is a partnership between African American artist, Michele Woods, who returned to the South and painted her family history, and author Toyomi Igus, who gave words to Woods's paintings.
      Author: Igus, Toyomi HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Great Depression, The
      This reference book covers the period of the Great Depression told with highlighted examples of the many ways Americans kept a positive outlook as they faced an uncertain future.
      Author: Fremon, David K. HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Night Rainbow, The
      Simple poetic verse describes the Aurora borealis or northern lights from the perspective of legends of several cultures.
      Author: Esbensen, Barbara Juster HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | science

    One City, Two Brothers
      Wonderfully illustrated retelling of the Jewish and Arabic folktale about the founding of Jerusalem. The tale is story of King Solomon and his attempt to mediate a dispute between two brothers squabbling over an inheritance. Simple, but powerful themes d
      Author: Smith, Chris HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Story of the Three Kingdoms, The
      This colorfully illustrated fable celebrates the gift of storytelling.
      Author: Myers, Walter Dean

Social Studies > anthropology > folklore > folk heroes
    Ain't Nothing But a Man: My Quest to Find the Real John Henry
      The author is a historian who became interested in John Henry, a supposedly mythical ex-slave who outraced the steam engine in digging a tunnel through the side of the Allegheny Mountains. This book chronicles the author's efforts to find the truth about
      Author: Nelson, Scott Reynolds HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Casey Jones's Fireman
      Sim Webb, Casey Jones's fireman, tells the story of the fateful crash of the Cannonball.
      Author: Farmer, Nancy HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Drylongso
      Drylongso, which takes place west of the Mississippi in 1975, is the story of a poor farming family's battle with a drought. Drylongso, "a youth imbued with simple human kindness . . . a folk hero" (author's notes) arrives, and with him comes ho
      Author: Hamilton, Viginia

    People Could Fly, The
      These collected folk tales that were told by slaves fall into four categories: animal stories, tall tales, the supernatural, and tales of freedom. The author includes an introduction and a bibliography.
      Author: Hamilton, Virginia HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

Social Studies > anthropology > folklore > folktales
    Casey at the Bat
      This is the famous baseball poem told in scrapbook form with illustrations and "news clippings".
      Author: Bing, Christopher HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Contest, The
      This adaptation of an Armenian folktale tells of two robbers who discover that they are engaged to the same young woman and decide to hold a contest with her as the prize. (Caldecott Honor Book)
      Author: Hogrogian, Nonny

    Dawn
      In this adaptation of a traditional tale, a wounded Canada goose takes on the shape of a woman. An island man, a sailmaker, loves her and she him. But when he demands that she help him make an intricate sail, she plucks out all her feathers and kills he
      Author: Bang, Molly

    Faithful Friend, The
      This is a retelling of the traditional tale from the French West Indies in which two friends, Clement and Hippolyte, encounter love, zombies, danger, and adventure on the island of Martinique.
      Author: San Souci, Robert HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Freedom's Fruit
      Mama Marina, a conjure woman in the Low Country of the Carolinas in the time of slavery, uses a magic spell to free her daughter and the man she loves. The book includes an Author's Note that compares the American folktale with the Greek myth of Persepho
      Author: Hooks, William

    Ghost Train
      Choon-yi is a painter. Her father leaves China for North America to find work. He asks her to join him, but when she arrives, she discovers that he has been killed on the job. As Choon-yi tries to paint the train, a ghostly presence beckons her.
      Author: Yee, Paul

    Golem
      Illustrated with beautiful cut-paper collages, the author/illustrator retells the legend of the Golem (a man created from clay), who saves the Jews of 16th Century Prague from persecution. A lengthy endnote recounts the history of the Golem and the perse
      Author: Wisniewski, David HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Her Stories
      The book focuses on stories of females-animal stories, supernatural tales, folktales, and oral histories. It includes an afterword by Virginia Hamilton and an excellent bibliography.
      Author: Hamilton, Virginia

    Musicians of the Sun
      This beautifully illustrated book of an Aztec myth of the beginning of the earth celebrates Native American folktales.
      Author: McDermott, Gerald HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    One City, Two Brothers
      Wonderfully illustrated retelling of the Jewish and Arabic folktale about the founding of Jerusalem. The tale is story of King Solomon and his attempt to mediate a dispute between two brothers squabbling over an inheritance. Simple, but powerful themes d
      Author: Smith, Chris HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    People Could Fly, The
      These collected folk tales that were told by slaves fall into four categories: animal stories, tall tales, the supernatural, and tales of freedom. The author includes an introduction and a bibliography.
      Author: Hamilton, Virginia HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Rich Man and the Parrot, The
      This Persian folktale by 13th century poet Mawlana Jalal ad-Din Rumi tells how a merchant provides his talking parrot with everything the parrot could have but not the one thing that the parrot wanted--his freedom.
      Author: Nadimi, Suzan HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Secret Room, The
      A king is impressed with a man's wisdom and appoints him to the court, but his chief counselor becomes jealous.
      Author: Shulevitz, Uri

    Secret-Keeper, The
      This is a fairy tale about Kalli, the secret-keeper, who takes others' secrets on so that they can be released from them. All the bad secrets threaten to make her ill until the townspeople come to her rescue.
      Author: Coombs, Kate

    Song of the Chirimia
      This story includes both the English and the Spanish text on each page. It begins with a map and a note about the ancient Mayans. In this tale, the king wants to find the right husband for his daughter. The illustrations are colorful and folk baroque i
      Author: Volkmer, Jane Ann

    Sorrow's Kitchen: The Life and Folklore of ZN Hurston
      Part of the Great Achievers series, this book chronicles the life and writings of Zora Neale Hurston, the important African-American writer of the first-half of this century. The book is 121 pages and contains lots of photographs. The author has woven c
      Author: Lyons, Mary E. HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    Stone-Cutter, The
      A man gets what he wishes for, but then oversteps his bounds because of his desire to show off his power. Illustrations are bold color collages.
      Author: McDermott, Gerald

    Talk, Talk
      This Ashanti legend tells of the day when all the animate objects--animals, yams, stones, and dogs--began to talk and frighten the villagers.
      Author: Chocolate, Deborah

    Toad is the Uncle of Heaven
      Illustrations draw on traditional Vietnamese figures. They may be foreign looking to Americans, but they are not childish.
      Author: Lee, Jeanne

    Unexplained
      The author explores several categories of unexplained phenomena from Stonehenge to Roswell, N. M. UFO sightings, suggesting origins of superstitions and possible explanations. Sidebar information, photographs, and paintings illustrate the text and back m
      Author: Allen, Judy HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Walking the Choctaw Road
      A collection of twelve stories from the Mississippi and Oklahoma branches of the Choctaw People, including traditional lore arising from beliefs and myths, historical tales pased down through generations, and personal stories of contemporary life.
      Author: Tingle, Tim HSE Descriptors: social studies | language arts - reading

    White Wave
      Retold from ancient sources, this Chinese tale of a lonely peasant's discovery of a magic shell relates the changes in his life that follow. The delicate pencil drawings by Ed Young complement the text. The author includes a note on the evolution of the
      Author: Wolkstein, Diane HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Wolf of Gubbio, The
      A legend tells the story of a wolf who terriorizes a community until the boy who became St.Francis of Assisi, negotates an agreement.
      Author: Bedard, Michael

Social Studies > anthropology > folklore > magic
    Cupid and Psyche
      This is a retelling of the classic Greek myth.
      Author: Craft, M. Charlotte HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    December
      Simon and his mother celebrate Christmas in the cardboard house they built for themselves. They offer to share the little they have with an old woman. Later, Simon sees a miracle.
      Author: Bunting, Eve HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Faithful Friend, The
      This is a retelling of the traditional tale from the French West Indies in which two friends, Clement and Hippolyte, encounter love, zombies, danger, and adventure on the island of Martinique.
      Author: San Souci, Robert HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Ghost Train
      Choon-yi is a painter. Her father leaves China for North America to find work. He asks her to join him, but when she arrives, she discovers that he has been killed on the job. As Choon-yi tries to paint the train, a ghostly presence beckons her.
      Author: Yee, Paul

    My Ol' Man
      Patricia Polacco once again uses her rich family background to tell the story of her father, a traveling salesman, and the magic, hope, and dreams he inspired. (Photos of the author and her family adorn the inside covers.)
      Author: Polacco, Patricia

    Queen Victoria's Bathing Machine
      Queen Victoria wants to swim in the ocean but the British way of life is prim and proper and no one should ever see more than a lady's face and hands let alone the queen without all of her clothes. Prince Albert designs a machine that will allow the queen
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | language arts - writing | social studies

    Unexplained
      The author explores several categories of unexplained phenomena from Stonehenge to Roswell, N. M. UFO sightings, suggesting origins of superstitions and possible explanations. Sidebar information, photographs, and paintings illustrate the text and back m
      Author: Allen, Judy HSE Descriptors: social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > folklore > superstitions
    Anno's Medieval World
      In Anno's beautifully illustrated medieval world, superstitions rather than science explain natural phenomena, especially the shape and movement of the earth. Anno uses medieval styled illustrations to share these beliefs of the Middle Ages up to the Age
      Author: Anno, Mitsumasa HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Corpses, Coffins, and Crypts
      "Drawing on extensive historical and anthropological research, personal accounts, and interviews of people who work in the funeral industry, Penny Colman examines... death and burial across cultures and societies" (dust jacket). Appendices include a chron
      Author: Colman, Penny HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Cycle of the Werewolf
      Short mystery/horror story depicting the sequence of events as a werewolf terrorizes a small town in Maine over the course of a year. A ten year old parapalegic uncovers the mystery and slays the beast with the help of his fun loving uncle. Short chapte
      Author: King, Stephen HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Duck's Breath and Mouse Pie: A Collection of Animal Superstitions
      This is a collection of 17 superstitions about animals. Collage illustrations are interesting. Historical notes at the end of the book explain the origins of the superstitions.
      Author: Jenkins, Steve HSE Descriptors: science

    Freedom's Fruit
      Mama Marina, a conjure woman in the Low Country of the Carolinas in the time of slavery, uses a magic spell to free her daughter and the man she loves. The book includes an Author's Note that compares the American folktale with the Greek myth of Persepho
      Author: Hooks, William

    One Kingdom: Our Lives with Animals
      Subtitled "the human-animal bond in history, science, and story," this fascinating book focuses on animals, real and not real, throughout history, particularly as they have interacted with humans.
      Author: Noyes, Deborah HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Theodoric's Rainbow
      Although Theodoric of Freiberg lived, wrote, and experimented from 1250 AD to 1311 AD, the author has created a fictionalized personal life of this man who studied reflection and refraction of light in a period in which science was in conflict with religi
      Author: Kramer, Stephen HSE Descriptors: science

    Unexplained
      The author explores several categories of unexplained phenomena from Stonehenge to Roswell, N. M. UFO sightings, suggesting origins of superstitions and possible explanations. Sidebar information, photographs, and paintings illustrate the text and back m
      Author: Allen, Judy HSE Descriptors: social studies

    When Plague Strikes: The Black Death, Smallpox, AIDS
      This carefully written book contains three parts: a prologue, a five-chapter account of the Black Plague, a five-chapter account of the causes and effects of smallpox, a seven-chapter account of AIDS, and a fascinating conclusion on the failures of antibi
      Author: Giblin, James Cross HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > folklore > witch
    Sanctuary, The
      Little Man, age 10, thinks that Tico and Aaron should let him join their gang. But first he must retrieve a piece of junk from the altar "sanctuary" that "crazy" Lucy Johnson built in her backyard. Little Man gets caught and comes to know and love the o
      Author: Eskridge, Ann HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Snake Pits, Talking Cures, and Magic Bullets: A History of Mental Illness
      This is a roughly chronological history of thinking about and treatment for persons with mental illness. Boxed text throughout focuses on special issues. End material offers many opportunities for follow-up.
      Author: Kent, Deborah HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Widow's Broom, The
      A widow helps a witch recover from a fall, and in gratitude the witch leaves behind her broom to help the woman do her work. Suspicious neighbors try to burn the broom, but in the end the broom settles in with the woman.
      Author: Van Allsburg, Chris

Social Studies > anthropology > forensic
    Fortune's Bones
      A powerful poem, written in the form of a requiem, recovers the life and reconstructed history of a skeleton used by a Dr. Porter to teach anatomy in Waterbury, Connecticut. The format places author's notes across from sections of the poem told by differ
      Author: Nelson, Marilyn HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

    Secrets of a Civil War Submarine
      The discovery in 1995 and the subsequent slow scientific recovery of the Civil War submarine USS Hurley from the Charleston harbor reads like a mystery story. Photographs, archival material, author's note, footnotes, bibliography, glossary, and suggested
      Author: Walker, Sally HSE Descriptors: science | social studies

Social Studies > anthropology > island life
    Caribbean Dozen: Poems from Caribbean Poets, A
      This book includes many short poems, some childish and some more complex, written by contemporary Caribbean poets. It also includes fascinating biographies on each author.
      Author: Agard, John & Nichols, Grace HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Color of My Words, The
      This is an easy-reading novel, part poetry and part prose, about Ana Rosa, a young writer who is growing up poor in a seaside village in the Dominican Republic where she learns about family community, the merengue, and the power of words.
      Author: Joseph, Lynn HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Faithful Friend, The
      This is a retelling of the traditional tale from the French West Indies in which two friends, Clement and Hippolyte, encounter love, zombies, danger, and adventure on the island of Martinique.
      Author: San Souci, Robert HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Morning Girl
      In alternating chapters, Morning Girl (age 12) and her brother describe life on a Bahamian island in 1492. (Note: this book won the Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction.)
      Author: Dorris, Michael HSE Descriptors: social studies

    Once On This Island
      Twelve-year-old Mary and her older brother and sister tend the family farm on Michigan's Mackinac Island while their father is away fighting the British in the War of 1812.
      Author: Whelan, Gloria HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Tempest, The
      This is a prose retelling of Shakespeare's play The Tempest, a story of an exiled Duke and his daughter during their stay on an enchanted island. The book ends with an author's note.
      Author: Shakespeare, William (retold by Coville, Brice) HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

Social Studies > anthropology > multicultural
    Grandmothers
      In the introduction, the editor, after describing her own strong grandmother, says that grandmothers help us make the transition from childhood to adulthood and "civilize" us. The essays, poems and short stories that follow introduce us to a wide cultura
      Author: Giovanni, Nikki (Ed.) HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    In Nueva York
      This collection of short, interlocking stories depicts life in one of New York City's Puerto Rican communities.
      Author: Mohr, Nicholasa HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading

    Keep on Singing
      The story of the life of the singer Marian Anderson is told in ballad form. The author's notes at the end of the book include additional biographical information.
      Author: Livingston, Myra Cohn HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Langston Hughes
      This well written and engaging biography is accompanied by many of Hughes's poems, some of his other writing, and intriguing illustrations. Especially interesting for Ohio readers is the focus on his life in Cleveland and the influence of Karamu House.
      Author: Meltzer, Milton HSE Descriptors: language arts - reading | social studies

    Seedfolks
      Thirteen people of different ethnic backgrounds who are strangers to each other tell their stories of a vacant lot in Cleveland that becomes a neighborhood garden. The book jacket refers to the "harvest of hidden lives" and a "hymn to the power of plants
      Author: Fleischman, Paul


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