(Paperback)
By: Joseph Bruchac
ISBN: 9781581960228
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Readership/Audience: Children
Publication Date: Nov 2004
Publisher: Lerner Publishing Group
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Jake has left the reservation for Weltimore Academy and entered a different world. Everyone there loves lacrosse, but no one understands it the way Jake does, as an Iroquois.
(Paperback)
By: Joseph Bruchac
ISBN: 9780698115842
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Readership/Audience: Children
Publication Date: Aug 1997
Publisher: Putnam Publishing Group,U.S.
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Joseph Bruchac and Jonathan London collaborate to reveal the beauty of the natural world around us, while Thomas Locker's illustrations honor both Native American legends and the varied American landscape. Full color.
(Hardback)
By: Joseph Bruchac
ISBN: 9780735228863
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Readership/Audience: Children
Publication Date: Nov 2018
Publisher: Penguin Books Canada Ltd
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In 1932, 12-year-old Cal must stop being a hobo with his father and go to a Bureau of Indian Affairs boarding school, where he begins learning about his history and heritage as a Creek Indian in this tale of identity and friendship by the author of "Code Talker."
By: Joseph Bruchac
ISBN: 9780735228870
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Readership/Audience: Children
Publication Date: Aug 2019
Publisher: Penguin Putnam Inc
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A boy discovers his Native American heritage in this Depression-era tale of identity and friendship by the author of Code Talker.
(Paperback)
By: Joseph Bruchac
ISBN: 9780060580896
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Readership/Audience: Children
Publication Date: Sep 2009
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc
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The author of "Skeleton Man" pens a new spine-tingling tale. Maddie loves spooky stories, especially the Native American legends her grandmother used to tell. Suddenly, the most frightening legend of all--about the Whisperer in the Dark--becomes a bit too real.
(Paperback)
By: Joseph Bruchac
ISBN: 9781571312754
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Readership/Audience: General
Publication Date: Apr 2005
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
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Bruchac reveals the linkage between his Abenaki heritage and his long-held views about human dignity and social justice. Through these stories, he emphasizes ideas that are important to many native tales, including understandings of time, ownership of land, and "the circle as a way of seeing."
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