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  • James A. Houston

    James Houston's Treasury of Inuit Legends (Odyssey Classics (Odyssey Classics))
    James Houston made his first journey to the Canadian Arctic in 1948 in search of a new land to paint. There he found a warm, friendly people living in a vast, cold, hauntingly beautiful world. He lived with the Inuit and Indian people in the Arctic and grew to understand them and their way of life. He also helped introduce Inuit culture to the world with his remarkable art and stories.     
        
    Here are four of his exciting Inuit folktales--Akavak, Tiktaliktak, The White Archer, and Wolf Run--collected for the first time in one beautiful volume. Houston's striking illustrations for each story bring the Arctic and its people to life. This inspired collection is sure to fascinate readers of all ages.
     
    Includes an introduction by Theodore Taylor.
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  • Veronika Martenova Charles

    Maiden of the Mist

    Canadian Children's Book Centre "Our Choice" Award 2002

    Honour Title, Storytelling World Award 2002

    Long ago, a Seneca tribe lived on the Niagara River, just upstream from a great waterfall. With plenty of fish and crops to feed them, life was good in their village. Then a sickness came to the people, and everything changed. As the situation worsened and people died, Lelawala, the chief_s daughter, came up with a plan to help. She would go to the thunder god, Hinu, and find out why he wouldn_t help her people. But to do that, Lelawala would have to go to his home under the great falls, and never return.

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  • Molly Bang

    Dawn
    First published in 1983, this stunning adaptation of the Japanese legend of the Crane Wife by three-time Caldecott Honor-recipient Molly Bang is set in nineteenth-century New England. After a shipbuilder rescues an injured goose, a mysterious woman arrives offering to work as a sail maker. She weaves sails of unparalleled quality and the two soon fall in love. But when a rich man orders a set of special sails, their happiness is threatened by an astonishing secret.
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  • Margaret Bateson Hill

    Shota and the Star Quilt (Folk Tales series)
    Shota is a young Lakota girl who lives in a contemporary American city. When the block that her family and friends live on is threatened by development, they use long-standing Lakota traditions to find a solution that saves their homes. In working together, they create a beautiful quilt that resolves more than just their problem. This story weaves together traditional folktale values with modern concerns for the urban environment and green issues. In addition to the beautiful folk-style native art illustrations, the complete text of the story is presented in Lakota as well as English.
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  • Jane Ray

    TWELVE DANCING PRINCesses
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  • Priscilla Galloway

    Truly Grim Tales (Laurel-Leaf Books)
    Based on the well-known fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, Charles Perrault, and Hans Christian Andersen, these retellings will intrigue and disturb readers. From a futuristic "Little Red Riding Hood" in which giant clams and carnivorous beasts stalk humans, to the real reason why the giant in "Jack and the Beanstalk" needs to eat human bones, to a version of "Snow White" told from the wicked stepmother's point of view, fans of fairy and folk tales will find much to interest them.
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  • Fantastic Companions
    Winner of Foreward Magazine's Silver Book of the Year Award in the Science Fiction category

    Finalist for the 2006 Prix Aurora Best Work in English Award

    Fantastic Companions is an anthology of nineteen original short stories, chosen to illustrate the use of anthropomorphism in fantasy. Individual stories range from more traditional techniques, such as talking animals, to more unusual, such as the personification of constellations, ancient gods, and story itself. Aimed at both trade and educational markets, this diverse anthology is an amazing look at how writers deal with what makes us truly human, through the lens of imagination.

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  • Margery Bernstein, Janet Kobrin

    How the Sun Made a Promise and Kept It: A Canadian Indian Myth
    A Bungee Indian tale tells how, in releasing the captive sun in return for a promise, the beaver came to look like he does today.
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  • Paul Yee

    Tales from Gold Mountain: Stories of the Chinese in the New World
    Eight unforgettable stories tell of the triumph of the human spirit despite the bitterness of daily toils. Elegant paintings brilliantly complement each magical story. ". . . Ng's cool, brooding full-page paintings have an intense presence that enhances the stories' exotic flavor . . . A book not to miss."--Booklist, starred review. Booklist Editor's Choice. 1990 Notable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies.
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  • Alison Lurie

    Fabulous Beasts
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  • Mayer

    Iduna & the Magic Apples
    The evil giant Thiassi vows to capture Iduna and her magic apples which give the gods on Valhalla everlasting life.
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  • E. Pauline Johnson

    Legends of Vancouver (Canadian Children's Classics Series)
    Emily Pauline Johnson (Tekahionwake) (1861-1913), was a Canadian writer and performer. She is often remembered for her poems that celebrate her aboriginal heritage. She created a series of articles for the Daily Province based on stories related by her friend Chief Joe Capilano of the Squamish people of North Vancouver. In 1911, to support the ill and poor Johnson, a group of friends organized the publication of these stories under the title Legends of Vancouver. They remain classics of that city's literature.
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  • Veronika Martenova Charles

    Don't Eat That! (Easy-to-Read Spooky Tales)
    In short lines, large type, and text broken into phrases, three more stories are told. Marcos, Leon, and “I” try to out-do each other with warnings against tasting things that may not be safe. Dire consequences and ridiculous outcomes take the boys to new heights of hilarity in these spooky tales from Australia, Italy, and Eastern Europe.
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  • Veronika Martenova Charles

    Don't Forget! (Easy-to-Read Spooky Tales)
    Baba Yaga, The Golden Arm, and Monster Gogo all come out to play with the imaginations of the boys this time. Children around the world all know that they mustn’t forget important things and these generously illustrated tellings from Russia, England, and West Africa drive the point home in a memorable way.
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  • Veronika Martenova Charles

    Don't Talk to Strangers! (Easy-to-Read Spooky Tales)
    This time a lost dog sparks the theme of strangers and the wisdom in avoiding them. And what a collection of strangers they are! Headless trolls, people with pointy ears and huge eyes, and long-lost “aunties,” who enjoy eating their guests. Stories from Scandinavia, Sierra Leone, and Iraq are highlighted in this universal warning.
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