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Books on Indians???


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You might enjoy doing some of the projects from More Than Moccasins (Carlson). Not many I can think of involving Native Americans AND pilgrims (early 1600s)... These are 17th/18th centuries, but no pilgrims:

Om-Kas-Toe (by Thomasa) 

- The Birchbark House (Erdrich)

- Children of the Long House (Bruhac) -- and others by this author

 

General info books for early elementary:

- North American Indians (Gorsine)

- Meet the North American Indians (Payne)
 

Picture books (sometimes in the art style of the particular Native American tribe):
- picture books by Paul Goble
- picture books of legends of different tribes by Terri Cohlene, Gerald McDermott, and others
Last Leaf, First Snowflake -- beautiful, poetic picture book

 

The readers can easily be read-alouds if they are above your DC's solo reading level:

 

Readers -- grade 1 level

- Small Wolf (Benchley)

- Sacajawea (Milton)

- Sitting Bull (Penner)

- The Warrior Maiden (Schecter) -- Hopi girl

 

Readers -- grade 2 level
- Squanto (Bulla)
- Pocahontas (Bulla)
- Tikta'liktak (Houston) -- legend of an Inuit-Alaskan man stranded on an ice floe

 

Readers -- grade 3-4 level -- biography series byTroll publishers:
- Sequoyah: Cherokee Hero (Oppenheim)
- Osceola: Seminole Warrior (Oppenheim)
- Black Hawk: Frontier Warrior (Oppenheim)
- Tecumseh: Shawnee War Chief (Fleischer)
- Sitting Bull: Warrior of the Sioux (Fleischer)

- Sacajawea: Wilderness Guide (Jassem)

- Squanto: The Pilgrim Adventure (Jassem)

- Chief Joseph, Leader of Destiny (Jassem)

- Pocahontas: Girl of Jamestown (Jassem)

Reader -- grade 4 level:
- Om-Kas-Toe (Thomasa) -- Blackfoot boy tames a horse for his tribe
- Naya Nuki: The Shoshone Girl Who Ran (Thomasa) -- true story of a friend of Sacajawea who escaped her Indian captors and journeyed 1000 to reach

- Sequoyah and Cherokee Alphabet (Cwiklik) -- biography

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Holling C. Holling has an out of print book called The Book of Indians which we love. It tells the story of a different fictional boy and girl from four different regions of North America. It's not what I would call comprehensive as it doesn't mention specific tribe names, but it does a good job of showing what life might have been like for the tribes in those different areas.

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Holling C. Holling has an out of print book called The Book of Indians which we love. It tells the story of a different fictional boy and girl from four different regions of North America. It's not what I would call comprehensive as it doesn't mention specific tribe names, but it does a good job of showing what life might have been like for the tribes in those different areas.

 

 

I agree.  My kids love this book.

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