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Third
Culture Kids - Book List |
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Name |
Title |
Year
Published |
Summary |
4 |
Munnerlyn,
Jenn. |
The Adventure
Begins |
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|
5 |
Pollock,
David & Ruth Van Reken |
Third
Culture Kids: The Experience of Growing Up Among Worlds. |
2001 |
The “premiere”
book on TCKs with many insights and recommendations regarding helping
them maximize the advantages of their lifestyle and working through
the challenges. |
6 |
Blomberg,
Janet & David Brooks eds. |
Fitted
Pieces: A Guide for Parents Educating Children Overseas. |
2001 |
|
7 |
Knell,
Marion |
Families
on the Move: Growing up Overseas – and Loving It |
2001 |
About
TCKs – how to handle transitions, building bridges between cultures,
and re-entry issues. Written from a Christian perspective of a missionary
working with Arab World Ministries and Global Connections. Practical
and easy to read with lots of helpful graphs and charts that illustrate
the points. |
8 |
Miller,
Susan |
After
the Boxes are Unpacked: Moving on After Moving In. |
1998 |
Not specifically
about cross-cultural adjustment but about moving and the loneliness,
trauma, needs, challenges that accompany it. Addressed specifically
to women, but applicable to whole family. Organized in three sections:
letting go, starting over, moving ahead. |
9 |
Bowers,
Joyce (Ed) |
Raising
Resilient MKs: Resources for Caregivers, Parents, and Teachers. |
1998 |
A comprehensive
collection of the best and most current thinking on a wide range of
topics dealing with the nurture and education of “missionary kids”
(MKs). It provides resources for parents, teachers, school administrators,
and caregivers. [from William Carey Library website] |
10 |
Andrews,
Leslie (Ed) |
The Family
in Mission: Understanding and Caring for Those Who Serve. |
|
This
is a summary of several big research projects on TCKs along with several
editorial articles addressing the component topics. |
11 |
Books
for Kids Many of these are recommendations from SHARE/AERC. |
12 |
Gray,
Nigel & Philippe Dupasquier |
Country
Far Away |
1998 |
The book
consists of illustrations with a sentence or two of text on each page
contrasting ways of life in an African village and a British town. It
could be a model for a child-made book about his own contrasting lifestyles.
(elementary level) |
13 |
Viorst,
Judith |
Alexander
Who's Not (Do you hear me? I mean it!) Going to Move. |
1995 |
Alexander
struggles with fact that his family is moving. Humorous account of working
through his feelings until he finds himself packing. (elementary, middle
school) |
14 |
Williams,
Karen |
When
Africa Was Home. |
1991 |
A preschooler's
perspective on reentry. Returning to New York when his father's job
finishes and he longs for the familiar ways of living in Africa. He
articulates many of the things older children often feel but are unwilling
to express. (preschool, elementary) |
15 |
Howlett,
Bud |
I'm New
Here. |
1993 |
Spanish
speaking Jazmin integrates into an English speaking school. Her mother
prepares her, and a bilingual teacher helps, but Jazmin still feels
on the outside. (elementary, middle school) |
16 |
Danziger,
Paula |
Amber
Brown is not a Crayon. |
1994 |
A third
grader struggles with the fact that her best friend since Kindergarten,
Justin, is going to move away. Illustrates the difficulty but necessity
of saying good-bye. |
17 |
Freeman,
Martha |
The Year
My Parents Ruined My Life. |
1997 |
Chronicles
a middle schooler’s feelings about leaving suburban beachside sunny
California and moving to a small rural town in Pennsylvania in the middle
of winter. A novel about adjusting to a new town, sibling rivalry, and
the qualities that make a house a real home. |
18 |
McGraw,
Eloise Jarvis |
Moccasin
Trail. |
1986 |
Jim is
a pioneer boy who was raised by Crow Indians until his teens. When he
is reunited with his family, Jim struggles to understand and adjust
to their values and to figure out where he really belongs. |
19 |
Blohm,
Judith |
Where
in the World are you Going? |
1996 |
This
activity-oriented book helps children work through the process of an
international move. It includes not only discussion topics but practical
activities the child can do with a parent or teacher. (elementary) |
20 |
Maxfield,
Brenda |
Up, Up,
and Away. |
2000 |
A guide
for children who are moving from one culture to another. Explains the
third culture id concept in children's language. Includes activity sheets
and encourages them to see the positive aspect of a mobile life.
(elementary) |
21 |
Roman,
Beverly D. |
Footsteps
Around the World: Relocation Tips for Teens. |
2001 |
Relocation
tips for teens that help teens deal with their complex emotions during
a move. Helps them organize their belongings, make new friends, and
enjoy their experience. [from MTI's website] |
22 |
Sara
Mansfield Taber |
Of Many
Lands: Journal of a Traveling Childhood. |
1997 |
A collection
of memories/stories written by TCKs about their experiences and feelings
about growing up in many lands. |
23 |
Parent/Teacher
Resources |
24 |
Rader
& Sittig. |
New
Kid in School: Using Literature to Help Children in Transition. |
2003 |
This
parent resource book provides an explanation of the transition process
that all children people go through during a move. The authors rely
on Dave Pollock’s RAFT Model1 of transitions to provide a framework
to discuss the moving process and provide tools for children to make
successful transitions during any move, but particularly a move overseas.
A book outline, discussion questions and activities are given for 30
children’s books. Recommended reading levels are given for each book,
with a focus between grades K and 8. However, the material could easily
be extended for use with older children. |
25 |
Picture
Books - Picture Books aren’t just for little kids anymore. Older
kids still like them. Don’t overlook the power of picture books even
with teens. Leave a few of these laying around, and you may be surprised
by the level of connection kids make. |
26 |
Celebrating
Family and Keeping Memories |
27 |
Polocco,
Patricia |
The
Keeping Quilt |
2001 |
This
book reflects Patricia’s own story as the child of an immigrant Jewish
family from Russia. The central character, Anna, arrives in the United
States with few possessions. When she outgrows the dress that she wore
on the trip over, Anna’s mother combines the fabric with fabric from
other clothing to piece a quilt. That quilt is passed on to each generation
in Anna’s family with the stories represented in each piece of clothing
fabric. Black and white illustrations are punctuated with the colorfully
illustrated quilt to focus on the warmth and richness of memories. This
is a great story about how one family managed their transition between
two very different countries: holding onto what they value from the
old country while continuing to move forward in the new country. |
28 |
Fox,
Mem |
Wilfrid
Gordon McDonald Partridge |
1989 |
96-year-old
Miss Nancy lives in a retirement home next to young Wilfrid. Miss Nancy
has lost her memory, and Wilfrid sets out to help her find it, even
though he doesn’t know what a memory is. This story provides an opportunity
to talk about how we keep memories alive and what they mean to us. It
also underscores the special relationships that can develop across generations.
A family struggling with being distant from aging grandparents might
achieve both comfort and ideas for creative responses to the distance.
Mem Fox’s delightful play with the sound of words is sprinkled through
this book through people — "Mrs. Jordan who played the organ"
and "Mr. Hosking who told him scary stories." |
29 |
Koala
Lou, |
1994 |
Koala
Lou is loved by everyone, but it is her mother who loves her most of
all. She often tells her daughter, "Koala Lou, I DO love you."
As the family grows and her mother gets busier, Koala Lou yearns to
hear those words again. She responds to the stress of her family’s
life transitions through achievement by trying to win the Bush Olympics.
Mem Fox is an Australian TCK; many of her books reflect her Australian
roots or the perspective of a TCK. |
30 |
Condra,
Estelle |
See
the Ocean, |
1994 |
Nellie
enjoys her family's annual trips to the ocean. She feeds crumbs to the
seagulls, tosses pebbles into ponds, and handles seashells and driftwood.
There is no explicit reference to her blindness until the end, when
she claims to be able to see the ocean through a thick mist. A sweet
story that honors family and focuses on both savoring memories and looking
to the future. |
31 |
Talking
about Emotions |
32 |
Aliki |
Marianthe’s
Story: Painted Words Spoken Memories. |
1998 |
This
is two books in one. It tells the same story of moving to a new culture
from two perspectives. Story one is told in pictures before Marianthe
had the words in her new language to talk about what she was experiencing.
Story two adds in the words. |
33 |
Aliki |
Feelings |
1996 |
Happy,
sad, shy, excited…sometimes it's hard to find the words to talk about
our feelings. This book has a series of small vignettes that help get
the conversations started |
34 |
Aliki |
Manners |
1997 |
Aliki
offers a perspective on good manners. The author/illustrator offers
a flurry of do’s and don’ts in the context of real-life situations
faced by the small characters on each page. A strength of the book is
the message that the purpose of good manners is care for one another.
You may not agree with every “rule of etiquette” suggested in this
book, but it is an excellent and fun way to start up some discussion
in the family. This book offers an opportunity to discuss and identify
good manners and how they affect social situations. Extend the discussion
to good manners in different cultural situations...or make your own
book! |
35 |
Fox,
Mem |
Boo!
to a Goose |
2001 |
A
child recites 12-plus reasons for not saying boo to a goose, including
"I'd eat all the butter in Calcutta” (say it with an Aussie accent
and it rhymes) and "I'd feed my pajamas to giant piranhas"
and will have children quickly chiming in on the repeating line "But
I wouldn't say 'boo' to a goose." Readers will have to wait until
the last page to find out why. This book reflects the TCK perspective
on taking risks in life…it's an adventure! But everyone has their
limits. What are yours? |
36 |
Lucado,
Max |
Just
in Case you Wonder |
1992 |
A
bedtime story to instill in your child just how much he or she is loved
not only by you, but also God. Christian author Max Lucado writes, "As
you grow and change, some things will stay the same. I'll always love
you. I'll always hug you. I'll always be on your side. And I want you
to know that . . . just in case you ever wonder." |
37 |
Cultural
Adjustment and Bicultural Identity |
38 |
Say,
Allan |
Tea
with Milk |
1999 |
This
picture book will have appeal into middle school and beyond. Whether
the subject is food ("no more pancakes or omelets, fried chicken
or spaghetti" in Japan) or the deeper issues of ostracism (her
fellow students call Masako "gaijin" a foreigner) and gender
expectations, Say provides gentle insights into human nature as well
as East-West cultural differences. His exquisite, spare portraits convey
emotions that lie close to the surface and flow easily from page to
reader: with views of Masako's slumping posture and mask-like face as
she dons her first kimono or alone in the schoolyard, it's easy to sense
her dejection. Through choice words and scrupulously choreographed paintings,
Say's story communicates both the heart's yearning for individuality
and freedom and how love and friendship can bridge cultural chasms.
Say is a prolific writer; look for other books by him as well. Grandfather’s
Journey is a companion to this book |
39 |
Goodman,
S |
Chopsticks
for my Noodlesoup |
1999 |
Five-year-old
Eliza Doolittle from Connecticut learns about a very different kind
of life when she spends a year in Malaysia with her scientist mother
and photographer father. This is a photo essay of a TCK child’s experience
of going to a new culture for the first time. In her new home, Eliza
discovers new ways to do everyday things. Eliza learns the language
and goes about her daily routine at home, school, market, and play.
This book is likely to reflect the experience of any TCK living in a
village situation and as such, could provide a model for putting together
your own photo essay of life. Those who live in the city might enjoy
doing some comparison and contrast of different ways to live. |
40 |
Moving
and Transitions |
41 |
MacLachlan,
Patricia |
What
You Know First, illustrated by Barry Moser |
1995 |
The
illustrations are the only clue that this book about moving away from
home is set in the U.S. Depression era. A young girl resists the move
her family must make by plotting to live in the attic, certain that
her parents will be comforted by the new baby who won’t know what
it is missing in the move. The text evokes feelings of loss and fear
inherent in transitions from a child’s perspective. As you read this
book with your child, make connections with Pollock’s RAFT model of
dealing with transitions. What stage is this child at? How
would you help her? Is the time and place setting important to this
story? How might the story be different if it were written to reflect
the experience of our own family? |
42 |
Looking
at Life from Different Points of View |
43 |
Wheatley,
Nadia |
My
Place |
1989 |
A
“backwards chronology” depicting life in Australia at different
times in its development by viewing one place in different years while
moving backwards from 1988 to 1788. Fun to read and explore the detailed
illustrations |
44 |
Mennen,
I & Daly, N |
Somewhere
in Africa |
1992 |
Africa
is a diverse continent. Frequently, only the exotic side of African
life is presented in literature. This book fills the need for going
beyond zebras, lions, and jungles to depicting everyday life in a very
modern South African city. The central character, Ashraf, vicariously
experiences the wild side of African children in other parts of the
world through books in the library. The authors create an immediately
appealing story at once universal and distinctly African. |
45 |
Svend,
Ott |
Children
of the Yangtze River |
1982 |
Picture
book set in China with illustrations depicting cultural detail: houses,
multigenerational families, clothing, schools, favorite knacks, pets,
occupations, modes of transportation, and handwriting. |
46 |
Williams,
K.O. |
Galimoto |
1990 |
Set
in a small African village, this is a story of determination, resourcefulness,
and ingenuity. Seven-year-old Kondi decides to fashion a galimoto (a
generic term for various push-toys made from wires and sticks). Despite
opposition from his older brother who believes he is not able to undertake
such a difficult task, Kondi successfully scavenges the materials he
needs and makes his toy. This book would fit in with a unit about play,
character, families, and cultures |
47 |
Tompert,
Ann |
Grandfather
Tang’s Story |
1990 |
Here's
a folktale with a twist: Seven "tans" (standard-sized pieces
of a square) are arranged and rearranged to represent various characters
in the story. The fox fairies vie to outdo each other--the first one
becomes a rabbit, the other a dog who chases him, and so on--but when
the two chase each other right into danger, they finally have to set
their competition aside and pull together. |
48 |
Parry,
F. H. & Gilliland, J.H. |
The
Day of Ahmed’s Secret |
1990 |
The
busy streets of Cairo are depicted with warm illustrations and interpreted
through the eyes of young Ahmed as he wanders through the city on his
donkey delivery cart. He is pleased with his new found literacy skill
that no one who sees him would guess. Ahmed’s words encourage the
reader to personally experience the sites, sounds, and smells of a Middle
Eastern bazaar. The pride of Arabic-speaking people in their written
language is evident in Ahmed’s secret. |
49 |
Brusca,
Maria Cristina |
On
the Pampas |
1991 |
An
account of a little girl’s idyllic summer at her grandparents’ ranch
on the pampas of Argentina. |
50 |
Parry,
F. H. & Gilliland, J. H. |
Sami
and the Time of the Troubles |
1992 |
A
ten-year-old Lebanese boy goes to school, helps his mother with chores,
plays with his friends, and lives with his family in a basement shelter
when bombings occur and fighting begins on his street |
51 |
Takeshita,
Furmiko |
The
Park Bench |
1988 |
All
through the sunny day the white bench in the park provides pleasure
for the many people who come by, from the old man taking a walk to the
children playing in the park (bilingual Japanese/English) |
52 |
Carle,
Eric & Iwamura, Kazuo |
Where
are You Going? To See My Friend! |
2003 |
Originally
published in Japan, this picture storybook is in a unique bilingual
format that tells the same story from front to back in English and from
back to front in Japanese. Eric Carle’s well-known illustrations follow
a dog, a cat, a rooster, a goat, and a rabbit to meet the dog’s friend
who is a young boy with a guitar. The repetitive, predictable text follows
a simple format that uses line-drawing icons to indicate each speaker.
Kazuo Iwamura is Japan’s equivalent to Eric Carle. His illustrations
tell the same story beginning at the end of the book and moving toward
the front. The climax of this two-ended book is in the middle, where
all of the friends meet and celebrate their friendship. |
53 |
Zhensun,
Zheng, & Alice Low |
A
Young Painter |
1991 |
Examines
the life and works of the young Chinese girl who started painting animals
at the age of three and in her teens became the youngest artist to have
a one-person show at the Smithsonian Institution |
54 |
Ancona,
George |
Cuban
kids |
2000 |
Acona
is well known for his photo-essay books for children. His camera lens
depicts the joy, pride, and strength of each subject with vibrant full-color
pictures and accessible text. This book includes pictures of Cuban children
and their families in rural and urban settings at celebrations, school,
a doctor's office, farm work, sports, making music, and dance. Youngsters
dressed in their school uniforms are depicted reading and writing in
rustic classrooms. Acona avoids political discussion, choosing to focus
on the life and people of Cuba. Other books by Ancona: |
55 |
Carnaval |
|
similar
treatment of the famous festival in Brazil |
56 |
The
Pinata Maker |
|
modern-day
telling of traditional craftsmanship in Mexico |
57 |
Sneve,
Virginia Driving Hawk |
The
Sioux: A First Americans Book. |
1993 |
It
is difficult to find authentic, culturally-sensitive books for children
about Native Americans that are not also full of political statements.
These books are a highly recommended resource to meet the need. The
focus of the handsomely illustrated titles in the First Americans series
is on the history, beliefs, and daily life of the various Indian Nations.
Necessarily simplifying the tribes' stories for her young audience,
the author includes age-appropriate information about children's activities
and responsibilities, as well as descriptions of each nation's housing,
livelihood, social and cultural activities, and key rituals and ceremonies.
Also in this series: Apaches, Navajo, Seminole, Nez Pierce, Iroquois,
Hopi, Cherokee, and Cheyenne. |
58 |
Bruchac,
J |
Squanto’s
Journey: The Story of the First Thanksgiving. |
2000 |
For
a view of American Thanksgiving that gives a broader point of view to
include that of the Indians, try this book. Told from Squanto's point
of view, this historically accurate and detailed story brings to life
one of the most important moments in America's past. Demonstrating how
much his people (the Patuxet, the People of the Falls) value honor,
Squanto befriends English traders, even after being kidnapped and taken
to Spain. After much hard work, Squanto manages to sail back to his
homeland, where, in spite of his discovery that many of his people have
died from disease brought by white people, he acts as the envoy between
the English and his own people and helps the pilgrims survive in their
new world. Throughout this moving tale, Squanto's belief that "these
men can share our land as friends" poignantly shines through. |
59 |
Fox,
Mem |
Possum
Magic |
1991 |
Grandma
Poss uses bush magic to make Hush invisible, but when Hush wants to
see herself again, Grandma can't remember which particular Australian
food is needed to reverse the spell. Traveling around the continent
in search of an antidote, Grandma and Hush sample Anzac biscuits, mornay,
vegemite, and pavlova until the right delicacy is found. Although the
characters, locales, and vocabulary are thoroughly Australian, Possum
Magic has universal appeal. Fox chooses her words carefully, making
readers believe that certain foods just might be magical. |
60 |
Dooley,
Norah |
Everybody
Cooks Rice |
1991 |
A
child is sent to find a younger brother at dinnertime and is introduced
to a variety of cultures through encountering the many different ways
rice is prepared at the different households visited. |
61 |
Lankford,
Mary |
Hopscotch
around the World |
1992 |
Presents
directions for playing variations of hopscotch, an ancient game still
played worldwide. |
62 |
Morris,
Anne |
Bread,
Bread, Bread |
1989 |
A
photographic trip around the world, depicting the importance of bread
in every culture. |
63 |
Hats,
Hats, Hats. |
|
|
64 |
Houses,
Houses, Houses |
|
|
65 |
Anno,
Mitsumasa. |
All
in a Day |
1986 |
Brief
text and illustrations by ten internationally well-known artists reveal
a day in the lives of children in eight different countries showing
the similarities and differences and emphasizing the commonality of
humankind. |
66 |
Lauber,
Patricia |
What
You Never Knew About Fingers, Forks, & Chopsticks |
1999 |
A
delicious blend of humor and fascinating facts in this historical and,
at times, hilarious tour through the rules and tools of eating. From
the Stone Age to modern times, all over the globe, the discovery and
fine-tuning of utensils that help us slice, jab, and scoop our food
are vividly described and depicted. The lively, linear drawings incorporate
amusing asides in dialogue balloons that will entertain readers as the
text enlightens them about the subject. There are brief instructions
on how to use chopsticks; rules of etiquette in the Middle Ages; some
modern table-manner tips; and acknowledgments that, at various times
and in different cultures, the tool of choice may well be the fingers. |
67 |
Furlaud,
S, Verboud P. and Ommer, U. |
Families:
Around the World, One Kid at a Time. (we
have same book title but different author) Lakin, Patricia |
2003 |
This
large-format book, adapted from photographer Ommer's exhibition and
580-page coffee-table tome, 1000 Families, (2000),
will broaden children's horizons with stunning photographs of families
from countries as diverse as Finland and Peru, Eritrea and Turkmenistan.
Hints of globalization (an Adidas logo here, a Disney T-shirt there)
will likely surprise young readers as much as the more exotic details,
such as the neck-stretching copper bands worn by a 10-year-old Palaung
girl. Opposite each full-page photograph, readers will find
a map of the country, vital statistics, and some text clumsily styled
as a quote from one of the family's children, "My father is a polygamist,
which means he has two wives." But Ommer's exquisite photos carry
the day |
68 |
Maya
K. Ajmera and Anna Rhesa Versola's |
Children
from Australia to Zimbabwe |
1997 |
These
overviews look at life in their respective countries through the perspective
of one "typical" family. The most useful information is found
in the introductions, which have a map, basic facts, and a clear picture
of the flag. Countries available: China, Persian Gulf, Germany, Japan,
Eskimo, India, Australia, Vietnam, France |
69 |
Barnabas
and Anabel Kindersley |
Families
Around the World Series |
1995 |
70 |
Children
Just Like Me |
1995 |
Similar
to Ommer’s book (above) but a bit smaller. This book was published
in association with the United Nations Children’s Fund specifically
with a children’s audience in mind. The Kindersleys traveled the globe
for nearly two years visiting with contacts that were obtained through
UNESCO. They met with these families, photographed them, and tell their
stories with words and pictures in the succinct style that DK Publishing
books are known for. Each two-page spread focuses on one child, his
family, and various aspects of his/her daily life and culture. There
are statements by each child that express their hopes and dreams and
worldview, as well as a handwriting sample of their name. |
71 |
Poetry |
72 |
Reflecting
a Multicultural TCK Perspective and for young children |
73 |
Mora,
Pat |
Confetti:
Poems for children |
1996 |
Narrative
poems in free verse capture the rhythms and uniqueness of the Southwest
and its culture as seen through the eyes of a Mexican-American girl.
Many Spanish words are interwoven into the verses and translated in
a glossary at the book's end giving the perspective of a bicultural
identity. The beauty of the natural world is captured in Sanchez's acrylic
illustrations. |
74 |
Benjamin,
Floella, ed |
Skip
Across the Ocean: Nursery Rhymes from Around the World |
1995 |
A
multicultural collection of 32 nursery rhymes, some of which appear
in their original languages — French, German, Spanish, Norwegian,
Fanti, Luganda, and Yoruba as well as in English. The sprightly, brightly-colored
folk-art illustrations have a childlike quality, complementing the rhymes,
which are divided into categories of lullabies, action rhymes, nature,
and miscellaneous. |
75 |
Adoff,
Arnold |
In
for Winter, Out for Spring |
1991 |
This
collection of poems told from the perspective of a young girl, celebrates
family life throughout the yearly cycle of seasons. |
76 |
Ho,
Minfong |
Maples
in the Mist: Poems for Children from the Tang Dynasty |
1996 |
These
beautiful poems about everyday sights have been translated into a poetic
form of English to be enjoyed by modern English readers. Illustrations
accompany the text. |
77 |
Reflecting
a Multicultural and TCK Perspective for young adults |
|
|
|
78 |
Soto,
Gary |
A
Fire in My Hands |
1999 |
Hispanic
writer who focuses on common, everyday observations about first love
as a young teen, looking for role models who look like him, and fitting
in. |
79 |
Nye,
Naomi Shihab, ed |
This
Same Sky: A collection of poems from around the world |
1996 |
Selections
from the Middle East, Asia, Africa, India, and South and Central America.
They are indexed by country as well as by poet. This is a lengthy collection,
close to 200 pages long, brimming with much lovely material. The poems
are about many things: the nature of poetry (and language itself), the
beauty of the natural world, how feelings about childhood are colored
by memory, the love of parent for a child (and vice versa). |
80 |
Wong,
Janet |
A
suitcase of seaweed |
1996 |
Poems
that reflect the author’s Korean, Chinese, and American heritage and
memories. The quiet, touching poems are divided into three sections,
each honoring another part of her ethnicity. The Korean section deals
with such diverse topics as hospitality, acupuncture, or the spicy kimchi
that was a frequent dinner food. The author learned about Chinese culture
from her father's parents, whose presence plays a large role in these
poems of family. As an American, Wong writes poems of realization and
identity. |
81 |
Good
Luck Gold |
1994 |
Most
of the 42 poems in this collection give readers insight into the experiences
of Chinese-American children. Starting with the "Good Luck Gold"
of charms on a bracelet, they explore feelings about food, language,
shopping, the importance of grandparents, and holidays. A number of
the selections reflect on serious themes such as racism, the death of
loved ones, divorce, and illness, all of which represent universal experiences. |
82 |
Mora,
Pat |
My
Own True Name: New and Selected Poems for Young Adults. |
2000 |
Mora
has selected poems from her adult collections and added some new ones.
She speaks of her own experience as a Latina in the Southwest and of
the experiences of those people whose lives have touched her own. Using
the metaphor of a cactus, she has grouped the selections into three
sections: "Blooms" (of loves and joys), "Thorns"
(of hardships and sorrows), and "Roots" (of family, wisdom,
home, and strength). Some of her most poignant poems for the TCK will
be those that reflect on the experience of learning a second language. |
83 |
About
living with a learning disability |
84 |
Abeel,
S. |
Reach
for the Moon. Pfeifer-Hamilton Publishers. |
1994 |
|
85 |
Brown,
D.S |
I
Know I Can Climb the Mountain. Mountain Books and Music. |
1995 |
|
86 |
Young
Adult Fiction — Cultural Adjustment and Bicultural Identity |
87 |
Na,
An |
A
Step from Heaven |
2003 |
This
book is for older readers who can handle some of the difficult issues
this book brings up. In many ways it is a hard look at a struggling
immigrant family who goes through the acculturation process in various
ways. TCKs will identify with the experience of cultural adjustment
and learning to balance the culture of family and the host culture.
At age four, Young Ju is not happy to be leaving her Korean home and
loving Halmoni (grandmother) to move with her parents to Mi Gook (America),
believed to be the land of great promise. Through Young Ju's experiences,
listeners hear the family unravel as difficulties mount for them in
the States. Young Ju's parents struggle with several low-paying jobs,
handicapped by their language barrier. Young Ju's alcoholic and bitter
father abuses his wife and children and forbids Young Ju to socialize
with American friends. |
88 |
Ryan,
Pam Munoz |
Esperanza
Rising |
2002 |
Ryan
uses the experiences of her own Mexican grandmother as the basis for
this compelling story of immigration and assimilation, not only to a
new country but also into a different social class. Esperanza's expectation
that her 13th birthday will be celebrated with all the material pleasures
and folk elements of her previous years is shattered when her father
is murdered by bandits. His powerful stepbrothers then hold her mother
as a social and economic hostage, wanting to force her remarriage to
one of them, and go so far as to burn down the family home. Esperanza's
mother then decides to join the cook and gardener and their son as they
move to the United States and work in California's agricultural industry.
They embark on a new way of life, away from the uncles, and Esperanza
unwillingly enters a world where she is no longer a princess but a worker. |
89 |
Yep,
Laurence |
The
Lost Garden |
1996 |
In
this somewhat desultory but affecting autobiography, Yep (Dragonwings)
describes himself as a collection of disparate puzzle pieces: a Chinese-American
raised in a black neighborhood, a child too American to fit into Chinatown
and too Chinese to fit in anywhere else. Writing, he explains, has conferred
on him the role of puzzle-solver, allowing him imaginatively to join
and even reinvent the pieces. |
90 |
Child
of the Owl |
|
Casey
struggles with her own insecurities as a culturally-different American. Casey
realizes valuing her Chinese roots does not take away from her identity
as an American and finds balance to her inner battle for self-acceptance. |
91 |
Later,
Gator |
1995 |
Teddy
and his family live in San Francisco’s Chinatown during the 1960’s.
He is an older brother with a bent for mischief and little regard for
his younger sibling. When Bobby’s birthday approaches,
Teddy’s mom encourages him to choose a pet turtle for his little brother
instead of his usual gift, white gym socks. Always resistant to adult
instruction, Teddy purchases a baby alligator instead. This cast of
characters live between two worlds: the old China and the new America.
In the bi-cultural world that Yep recreates, the boys learn to weigh
the mixed messages they encounter. TCKs will identify with the boys'
sense of being between two worlds that causes some misunderstandings
and frustration as well as enriching their life. |
92 |
Pinkwater,
Manus |
Wingman |
1975 |
Short
novel about Donald Chen, a Chinese-American native New Yorker, who felt
alienated from school and created his own comic book hero, Wingman,
to help him with the difficulties he experienced. Portrays the strengths
of the Chinese-American family and reveals how a teacher was able to
encourage the work of an individual child by valuing the child’s abilities
and cultural background. |
93 |
Lucado,
Max |
You
are Special |
1997 |
This
book shows how true freedom for us comes by not being enslaved to the
opinions of others. Max Lucado tells the story to communicate to children
(and mostdefinitely to adults as well) that by taking time
to experience and remember God's love for us, we can have a deep joy
that isn't contingent upon whether people bestow praise (represented
by gold stars) or insults (gray dots) upon us. |
94 |
Nye,
Naomi Shihab |
Habibi |
1999 |
When
Liyana's doctor father, a native Palestinian, decides to move his contemporary
Arab-American family back to Jerusalem from St. Louis, 14-year-old Liyana
is unenthusiastic. Arriving in Jerusalem, the girl and her family are
gathered in by their colorful, warmhearted Palestinian relatives and
immersed in a culture where only tourists wear shorts and there is a
prohibition against boy/girl relationships. When Liyana falls in love
with Omer, a Jewish boy, she challenges family, culture, and tradition,
but her homesickness fades. Liyana’s story can be traced using the
grid of transition management (R.A.F.T.) and traditional models of the
acculturation process. A unique feature of this book is its
portrayal of the “American” as an immigrant to another culture.
Although Liyana is an Arab American, it soon becomes clear to the reader
that she is more American than she realizes. Liyana’s expression of
a universalist, religious orientation that is common to American youth
culture today should provide an opportunity for discussion. |
95 |
Meir,
Mira |
Alina:
A Russian Girl Comes to Israel, translated by Zeva Shapiero,
Jewish Publication Society of America, Philadelphia. |
1982 |
Photos
illustrate the frustrations and eventual joys of acclamation to a new
home by a young “Russian” Jew. Excellent story for understanding
how to treat any newcomer. Celebrates the immigration of former Soviet
Jews to Israel. |
96 |
Soto,
Gary |
Baseball
in April |
1990 |
Eleven
short stories give a glimpse of life from the perspective of an emerging
adolescent. Soto masterfully recreates the vulnerable child/adult world
of young teens struggling to make sense of their world. His viewpoint
as a middle-class Hispanic youth in suburbia may strike a chord for
TCKs. |
97 |
“Broken
Chain” — Young Alfonso tries to get his brother to lend him his
bicycle so he can take his first love for a ride. |
98 |
“Baseball
in April” — Michael and Jesse swing their way through a baseball
season of lost games. |
99 |
“Two
Dreamers” — Hector and his grandfather’s dreams about real estate
feed each other when Hector’s grandfather enlists him to represent
him to a broker on the phone because he is embarrassed about his English. |
100 |
“Barbie”
— Veronica pines for a real Barbie and then loses the doll’s head
when she finally gets one. |
101 |
“The
No-Guitar Blues” — Fausto longs for a guitar and is rewarded with
a family heirloom. |
102 |
“Seventh
Grade” — “Great rosebushes of red” bloom on Victor’s cheeks
when he shows off to his love interest in French class. Then, to his
relief, she is impressed and the |
103 |
“rosebushes
of shame” become “bouquets of love.” |
104 |
“Mother
and Daughter” — Yollie and her mother scheme to stretch their limited
income to include a new dress for the school dance. |
105 |
“The
Karate Kid” — Gilbert is relieved when the expensive karate lessons
he “just had to have” are cancelled and he doesn’t have to admit
that they are boring. |
106 |
“La
Bamba” — Manuel goes through the predictable phases of stage fright
when he volunteers to perform for a school talent night. |
107 |
“The
Marble Champ” — Lupe finds a sport she can win with a lot of hard
work and learns the big impact that little things can have. |
108 |
“Growing
Up” — Maria feels that she is too big to go on family vacations
now that she is a teenager. When she stays home by herself for the week,
she gains a new appreciation for her family. |
109 |
Yokota,
Junko |
“Issues
in Selecting Multicultural Children’s Literature,” Language
Arts, Vol 70. |
1993 |
|
110 |
Manna,
A.T. & C.S. Brodie |
"Jewish
American Experiences in Children’s Books," Many Faces,
Many Voices: multicultural literary experiences for youth |
1992 |
|
111 |
Lynée
Ward |
Books
for TCKs and their Families |
2005 |
|
112 |
Beverly
D Roman |
Let’s
Move Overseas |
2000 |
provides
activities, discussion starters and other resources to help young children
process their move and learn about their newculture |
113 |
Robin
Ballard |
Goodbye,
House |
|
a girl
says goodbye to each room in her house and remembers special events
there. Will help with RAFT |
114 |
Judith
M Blohm |
Where
in the world are you going? |
|
an activity-oriented
book to help children work through an international move |
115 |
Paula
Danziger |
Amber
Brown is not a Crayon |
|
|
116 |
Bernard
Weber |
Ira Says
Goodbye |
|
Ira’s
best friend is moving: how not to tell a child about a move |
117 |
Brenda
Maxfield |
Up, Up
and Away |
|
Explains
the TCK concept in children’s language and includes activity sheets,
encouraging the positive aspect of a mobile life. Obtainable from www.state.gov/www/flo/fsyl.html |
118 |
Sara
Mansfield Taber |
Of Many
Lands: Journal of a Travelling Childhood |
|
Workbook
to help TCKS process and document their experiences |
119 |
Beverly
D Roman |
Footsteps
Around the World: Relocation Tips for Teens |
|
Journal
for teens with practical advice. Obtainable from www.branchor.com |
120 |
Edith
Baer |
This
is the Way we go to School |
|
School
is part of life for all children but can look very different |
121 |
Nigel
Gray |
A Country
Far Away |
|
Side-by-side
illustrations of similar situations in a western town and a rural African
village |
122 |
Maya
Ajmera and Anna Rhesa Versola |
Children
from Australia to Zimbabwe |
|
children
from around the world, descriptions of daily life and great Photographs |
123 |
Beatrice
Hollyer |
Wake
Up, World! |
|
A chronological
day in the life of 8 children (Australia, India, US, Ghana, Vietnam,
England, Brazil and Russia) |
124 |
Diana
Kidd |
Diana
Kidd |
|
a Vietnamese
refugee grieves the loss of her family and home and writes letters to
her animal friends left at home |
125 |
Carol
M Schubeck |
Let’s
Move Together |
|
An illustrated
story book for younger children experiencing a global lifestyle |
126 |
Ros Piper |
The ABC
Book of Oman |
|
A4 colouring
book designed for pre-schoolers. Obtainable from alroya@omantel.net.om |
127 |
Ruth
E Van Reken |
Letters
I never wrote |
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