Picture Stories
-
Doesn’t Fall Off His Horse by Virginia A. Stroud (Cherokee). Dial, 1994.
(jPS STRO) Ages 5-9
An old Kiowa warrior tells his great-granddaughter
a story of daring from his youth on the Oklahoma plains.
-
Dreamcatcher by Audrey Osofsky. Illustrated by Ed Young. Orchard, 1992.
(jPS OSOF) Ages 6-10
A quiet story about how the Ojibwa people weave dream catchers to keep away bad dreams.
-
Jingle Dancer by Cynthia Leitich Smith (Muscogee Creek).
Illustrated by Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu. Morrow, 2000.
(jPS SMIT) Ages 4-8
A Muscogee girl is determined to dance like her grandmother at the next powwow.
-
Morning on the Lake by Jan Bourdeau Waboose (Ojibway). Illustrated by Karen Reczuch. Kids Can Press, 1997.
(jPS WABO) Ages 4-9
An Anishinabe boy learns respect for
the ways of nature during a day spent with his grandfather.
-
Muskrat Will Be Swimming
by Cheryl Savageau (Abenaki). Illustrated by Robert Hynes. Northland, 1996.
(jPS SAVA) Ages 6-10
Grandpa uses a Seneca creation story to help a
contemporary Native American girl overcome her classmates’ taunting.
-
The Range Eternal
by Louise Erdrich (Turtle Mountain Ojibway). Illustrated by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher. Hyperion, 2002.
(jPS ERDR) Ages 5-8
A young mother fondly remembers the old woodstove that warmed her family in South Dakota where she grew up.
-
Red Bird
by Barbara Mitchell. Illustrated by Todd L.W. Doney. Lothrop, 1996.
(jPS MITC) Ages 5-9
A city girl dances at the Nanticoke Indian powwow held
annually at a farm in Delaware.
-
The Seasons and Someone by Virginia L. Kroll. Illustrated by Tatsuro Kiuchi.
Harcourt, 1994.
(jPS KROL) Ages 5-9
A poetic account of a year in the life of a young Eskimo (Inuit) girl and her love of summer berries.
-
The Star People: A Lakota Story
by S.D. Nelson (Standing Rock Sioux).
Abrams, 2003.
(jPS NELS) Ages 6-9
Sister Girl and her younger brother are lost after a prairie fire, but led back home by the
spirit of their deceased grandmother.
Also:
Gift Horse: A Lakota Story.
-
What’s the Most Beautiful Thing You Know About Horses? by Richard Van Camp (Dogrib). Illustrated by George Littlechild (Plains Cree). Children’s Book Press, 1998.
(jPS VANC) Ages 5-10
A Dogrib boy wonders about an animal he has never seen
in his Northwest Territories Canadian home. Also:
A Man Called Raven
-
Where Did You Get Your Moccasins? by Bernelda Wheeler (Cree/Salteaux). Illustrated by Herman Bekkering. Peguis, 1992.
(jPS WHEE) Ages 3-7
At school, an urban boy explains how his
grandmother hand made his beaded moccasins following traditional methods.
Legends & Folklore
-
Baby Rattlesnake by Te Ata (Chickasaw). Adapted by Lynn Moroney. Illustrated by
Mira Reisberg. Children’s Book Press, 1989.
(j398.2452 ATA) Ages 3-7
An elder tells the tale of how a little rattlesnake learns to use its rattle wisely.
-
Coyote Fights the Sun: A Shasta Indian Tale by Mary J. Carpelan (Shasta/Cahuilla). Heyday, 2002.
(j398.2089 CARP) Ages 5-8
A distraught father blames the sun for his
own mistake in thinking that spring had arrived.
-
Fire Race: A Karuk Coyote Tale by Johathan London, with Larry Pinola (Pomo/Miwok).
Illustrated by Sylvia Long. Chronicle, 1993.
(j398.2 LOND) Ages 4-9
Coyote steals fire from the Yellow Jacket sisters in this
action-packed legend from the northwest of California.
-
The Girl Who Married the Moon: Tales from Native North America by Joseph Bruchac (Abenaki) & Gayle Ross (Cherokee). Illustrated by S. S. Burrus (Cherokee). Bridgewater, 1994.
(j398.2089 BRUC) Ages 9-13
A collection of 16 lesser known tales that give fresh
focus to girls and young women in traditional cultures.
Also:
Between Earth and Sky: Legends of Native American Sacred
Places;
The Story of the Milky Way; and
other titles.
-
The People With Five Fingers: A Native Californian Creation Tale by John Bierhorst. Illustrated by Robert Andrew Parker. Marshall Cavendish, 2000.
(j398.2089 BIER) Ages 6-10
Helped by all the other animals, Coyote plants the seeds that
become the many peoples of the land.
Also:
The Deetkatoo: Native American
Stories About Little People;
Doctor Coyote: A Native American Aesop’s Fables; and
other titles.
-
Storm Maker’s Tipi by Paul Goble. Atheneum, 2001.
(j398.2089 GOBL) Ages 6-11
A Great Plains survival story that explains the origin of the Blackfoot tipi.
Included are directions for making a model. Also:
Buffalo Woman;
Crow Chief;
The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses;
Her Seven Brothers; and
other titles.
-
Two Bear Cubs: A Miwok Legend from California’s Yosemite Valley by Robert D. San Souci. Illustrated by Daniel San Souci. Yosemite Association, 1997.
(j398.2097 SANS) Ages 5-9
The lowly Measuring Worm rescues two bear cubs from a Yosemite mountain top.
Fiction
-
Alice Yazzie’s Year by Ramona Maher. Illustrated by Shonto Begay (Navajo).
Tricycle, 2003.
(jF MAHE) Ages 8-10
A poetic month by month account of the
events and feelings of an 11-year-old Navajo girl who lives on a reservation.
-
Bears Make Rock Soup And Other Stories by Lise Erdrich (Turtle Mountain Plains Ojibway). Illustrated by Lisa Fifield (Oneida). Children’s Book Press, 2002.
(jF ERDR) Ages 7-10
Fourteen short stories inspired by the paintings
show Native Americans and animals living in harmony and helping each other.
-
The Birchbark House by Louise Erdrich (Turtle Mountain Ojibway). Hyperion, 1999.
(jF ERDR) Ages 9+
The tender story of a seven-year-old Ojibwa girl, the sole survivor of
a smallpox epidemic in 1847, on an island in Lake Superior. Sequel:
The Game of Silence.
-
Crazy Horse’s Vision by Joseph Bruchac (Abenaki). Illustrated by S.D. Nelson (Standing Rock Sioux). Lee & Low, 2000.
(jF BRUC) Ages 8-12
A story from the childhood of Crazy Horse, a visionary and a warrior.
Also:
The Heart of a Chief;
The Journal of Jesse Smoke;
Skeleton Man; and
other titles.
-
The Good Rainbow Road by Simon J. Ortiz (Acoma Pueblo). Illustrated by Michael Lacapa (Apache/Hopi/Tewa). University of Arizona Press, 2004.
(jF ORTI) Ages 8+
Two brothers undertake a perilous journey to save their village from drought.
Told in Keres and English with a Spanish translation.
-
Home to Medicine Mountain by Chiori Santiago. Illustrated by Judith Lowry (Mountain Maidu/Hamawi Pit-River). Children’s Book Press, 1998.
(jF SANT) Ages 8-10
Two brothers hop trains to travel hundreds of miles across California
on their own, leaving their boarding school to spend the summer at home.
-
Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O’Dell. Houghton Mifflin, 1960.
(jF ODEL) Ages 10+
Based on historical fact, this classic novel tells how an
Indian girl of the Ghalas-at community survives for 18 years alone on an
island off the Southern California coast. Sequel:
Zia.
-
Minuk: Ashes in the Pathway by Kirkpatrick Hill. Pleasant Company, 2002.
(jF HILL) Ages 10-13
In 1890, a girl encounters American missionaries
who question her Yup’ik way of life. In the Girls of Many Lands series.
-
Morning Girl by Michael Dorris (Modoc). Hyperion, 1992.
(jF DORR) Ages 10+
The story of a Taino brother and sister living on a Bahamian
island right before the arrival of Columbus. Also:
Guests;
Sees Behind Trees;
The Window.
-
Rain Is Not My Indian Name by Cynthia Leitich Smith (Muscogee Creek). HarperCollins, 2001.
(jF SMIT) Ages 10+
A teenager of mixed heritage becomes a photographer
and explores her own Native American roots. Also:
Indian Shoes.
-
The Talking Earth by Jean Craighead George. Harper, 1983.
(jF GEOR) Ages 10-13
A Seminole girl ventures into the Everglades
alone to explore her people’s legends and beliefs. Also:
Julie of the Wolves and its sequels.
-
Truth is a Bright Star: A Hopi Adventure by Joan Price. Tricycle, 2001.
(jF PRIC) Ages 10-12
A Hopi boy is sold to a fur trapper by Spanish soldiers in
1832, and a friendship grows between the two with time and travel.
Poetry & Songs
-
Dancing Teepees: Poems of American Indian Youth edited by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve (Lakota). Illustrated by Stephen Gammell. Holiday House, 1989.
(j897 DANC) Ages 9+
Poems from the oral tradition selected from throughout
North America. Also:
First Americans series.
-
Navajo: Visions and Voices Across the Mesa by Shonto Begay (Navajo). Scholastic, 1995.
(j811.54 BEGA) Ages 9+
Poems, short prose pieces, and beautiful paintings about his people by a noted author and artist.
-
Rising Voices: Writings of Young Native Americans by Arlene Hirschfelder & Beverly R. Singer (Tewa/Navajo). Scribner, 1992.
(j810.8 RISI) Ages 11+
More than 60 inspiring poems and essays from
across the North American continent.
-
Thirteen Moons on Turtle’s Back: A Native American Year of Moons by Joseph Bruchac (Abenaki) & Jonathan London. Illustrated by Thomas Locker. Philomel, 1992.
(j897 BRUC) Ages 9+
Seasons of the year are described through poems and
legends of many tribes. See also: j811.54 BRUC.
Also:
Pushing up the Sky: Seven
Native American Plays for Children.
-
Touching the Distance: Native American Riddle Poems by Brian Swann. Illustrated by Maria Rendon. Browndeer, 1998.
(j811.54 SWAN) Ages 7-10
A thought-provoking collection of riddles with answers provided in the illustrations.
Nonfiction
-
1621: A New Look at Thanksgiving by Catherine O’Neill Grace & Margaret M. Bruchac (Abenaki). Illustrated by Sisse Brimberg & Cotton Coulson. National Geographic, 2001.
(j394.2649 GRAC) Ages 8-11
The first Thanksgiving
through a Native American lens, as reenacted at Plimoth Plantation.
-
Atlas of the North American Indian by Carl Waldman. Revised edition. Illustrated by Molly Braun. Facts on File, 2000.
(j970.0049 WALD 2000) Ages 10+
A useful resource with maps, illustrations, multiple appendices,
and a detailed index. See also: adult call number 790.0049 W146a. Reference in many libraries.
-
California Native American Tribes by Mary Null Boulé. Illustrated by Daniel Liddell. Merryant, 1992-2000.
(j979.4004 BOUL) Ages 9+
An extensive resource of 27 volumes, each providing in-depth information on a
different California tribe.
-
Children of Native America Today by Yvonne Wakim Dennis (Cherokee) & Arlene Hirschfelder. Charlesbridge, 2003
(j306.0899 DENN) Ages 8-12
Young people from 25 different tribes are photographed
in everyday pursuits from grooming an Appaloosa horse (Nez Perce) to playing stickball (Choctaw).
-
Clambake: A Wampanoag Tradition by Russell M. Peters (Mashpee Wampanoag). Photos by John Madama. Lerner, 1992.
(j970.3 PETE) Ages 9+
Peters writes of a time-honored tribal custom. In the We Are Still Here series.
-
North American Indian by David Hamilton Murdoch. Photos by Lynton Gardiner. DK, 2005.
(j970.0049 MURD) Ages 8-12
A visual introduction revised to include a glossary,
places to visit, websites and so on. In the Eyewitness Books series.
-
The People Shall Continue by Simon Ortiz (Acoma Pueblo). Illustrated by Sharol Graves (Shawnee). Children’s Book Press, 1988.
(j970.1 ORTI 1988) Ages 9+
A sobering pictorial history of genocide and survival.
-
Pueblo Storyteller by Diane Hoyt-Goldsmith. Photos by Lawrence Migdale. Holiday House, 1991.
(j970.3 HOYT) Ages 8+
Colorful photographs of Cochiti Pueblo in New Mexico and the making of storyteller
figures, pottery, and drums.
Also:
Apache Rodeo;
Buffalo Days;
Cherokee Summer;
Lacrosse;
Potlatch;
Totem Pole.
-
Traditional Native American Arts and Activities by Arlette N. Braman. Illustrated by Bill Helin (Tsimshian/Tlingit). Wiley, 2000.
(j745.0879 BRAM) Ages 9+
Do-able projects from across North America, including how
to make Lenape grape dumplings and Tlingit button blankets.
-
We Rode the Wind: Recollections of Native American Life edited by Jane B. Katz. Runestone, 1995.
(j978.0049 WE 1995) Ages 10+
An overview of Plains Indian life from the biographical
writings of major 19th century tribal figures.
-
Weaving a California Tradition: A Native American Basketmaker by Linda Yamane (Rumsien Ohlone). Photos by Dugan Aguilar (Maidu/Pit River/Walker River Paiute). Lerner, 1996.
(j746.412 YAMA) Ages 9+
A Western Mono girl learns a traditional craft from her elders
in this colorful photo essay. In the We Are Still Here series.
Also:
The Snake That Lived in the Santa Cruz Mountains.
Biography
-
As Long As the Rivers Flow by Paula Gunn Allen (Laguna Pueblo/Sioux) & Patricia Clark Smith (Micmac). Scholastic, 1996.
(j970.0049 ALLE) Ages 9+
Brief biographies of nine Native Americans
from Weetamoo (Pocasset) to Michael Maranjo (Santa Clara Pueblo).
-
Extraordinary American Indians by Susan Avery & Linda Skinner. Childrens Press, 1992.
(j970.2 AVER) Ages 9+
Biographical sketches of individual Native Americans covering the last 200 years.
-
The Life and Death of Crazy Horse by Russell Freedman. Drawings by Amos Bad Heart Bull (Oglala Sioux). Holiday House, 1996.
(jB CRAZ) Ages 10+
A biography of the great 19th century Teton Lakota
warrior and leader. Also:
Indian Chiefs;
An Indian Winter.
-
Native American Doctor: The Story of Susan LaFlesche Picotte by Jeri Ferris. Carolrhoda, 1991.
(jB PICO) Ages 9+
The story of an Omaha girl who grew up to study medicine and serve her people.
-
Rattlesnake Mesa: Stories From a Native American Childhood by EdNah New Rider Weber (Pawnee). Photos by Richela Renkun. Lee & Low, 2004.
(jB WEBE) Ages 10+
An elder tells of her childhood years on the Crown Point Navajo
Reservation and the realities of life at the Phoenix Indian (boarding) School.
-
Sacagawea by Lise Erdrich (Turtle Mountain Plains Ojibway). Illustrated by Julie Buffalohead (Ponca). Carolrhoda, 2003.
(jB SACA) Ages 7-11
The life of the young Shoshone woman who served as a
guide and interpreter to the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806.
-
Sequoyah: The Cherokee Man Who Gave His People Writing by James Rumford. Translated by Anna Sixkiller Huckaby (Cherokee). Houghton Mifflin, 2004.
(jB SEQU) Ages 5-9
Written in both English and Cherokee, this biography
tells about the remarkable man who crafted the Cherokee alphabet
-
Wilma Mankiller by Linda Lowery Keep. Illustrated by Janice Lee Porter. Carolrhoda, 1996.
(jB MANK) Ages 7-10
The life of the first woman chief of the Cherokee
Nation, also an active spokesperson for Native Americans.
|