Description
A Cherokee girl learns traditional skills and customs from the members of her family.
Web discounts do not apply to Bebop books
A Cherokee girl learns traditional skills and customs from the members of her family.
A Cherokee girl learns traditional skills and customs from the members of her family.
Web discounts do not apply to Bebop books
Karen Hjemboe was born in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. She has written many stories for children’s magazines, and has taught first grade for six years on the Santo Domingo Pueblo Indian reservation in New Mexico. Karen loves animals. She has seven cats, a dog, and a horse named Tally Man. Karen and her husband live in Corrales, New Mexico.
Dorothy Sullivan is an award-winning artist whose Cherokee heritage provides much of the inspiration for her work. She was especially pleased to be able to introduce children to traditional Cherokee customs through her illustrations for this book. Dorothy and her husband live in Norman, Oklahoma, where they delight in the antics of their first great granddaughter.
On her way to the park, an African American girl sizes up herself and the world around her.
A celebration of the many different ways a multiracial group of seven friends braid their hair.
An African American girl scores for her team by hitting a home run.
Three African American boys find, pick, and eat a perfect juicy peach.
A Latina girl scores a goal in an after-school game of soccer with her friends.
Inspired by his box of animal crackers, a Latino boy daydreams about the exotic animals he would give to his family and friends.