Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.Du kan altid afmelde dig igen.
In this Boomer memoir, Driving Miss Daisy meets One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. With lilting eloquence, Summer Brenner captures the tumultuous fifties and sixties of a genteel Jewish family in Atlanta, with the South's oppressive segregation and anti-Semitism. The family drama is fraught: the brother is a schizophrenic, the mother a Gucci-clad Medusa, and the father a suicide. After extensive travels, Brenner frees herself in the Bay Area to become "more beatnik than debutante." Framed by historic events, this is the moving coming-of-age story of a generation.
In Richmond Tales, Lost Secrets of the Iron Triangle, Maisha Yates and Mario Reyes form an unlikely friendship. With the guidance of an elderly friend (Misty Horn), they travel back through Richmond history to Native (Ohlone) times, industrial Richmond in the early 20th century, Richmond in 1942 at the beginning of World War II and the Great Migration; and forward into a beautiful, greened Richmond of 2050. Seeing history through a social justice lens, they bring their experiences of the past forward, applying them to the present and envisioning how their new understanding might help make a better and more equitable Richmond in the future. GOALS: attract young people to reading through stories representative of themselvesconnect youth to place by revealing history through their eyesreinforce bridges among cultures and present a model of inclusivityinspire youth to find themselves in the continuum of historyoffer a forum in the classroom to discuss social justice themes and civil societyoffer a tool of empowerment that articulates hope and helps shape agencyaddress the crisis of literacy and by default, the school dropout rateoffer an interdisciplinary text appropriate for both Language Arts and Social StudiesThemes include connection to place, street violence, bullying, history from below, and restorative justice.
Novellas that espouse anti-war history and social relationships in an intertwine of various narrations, sensibilities and cataracts of consciousness.We are in the hands of a first-rate storyteller.
What if young teens could read an exciting novel describing the places they live and the problems they face? What if they learned history through their own eyes? Maybe, their neighborhoods are decrepit and their streets violent, but now they know it was once different. If a place changed in the past, can it change in the future, too? Ernesto from East Oakland and Jada from West Oakland have problems-big problems! Ernesto''s parents have been deported, and Jada''s dad is in prison. Now they are heading on a journey through time: back into Oakland''s past and forward into Oakland''s future. As they try to return to the present, their time, the things they see will change their lives forever. Packed with local sights and sounds and told in the language of The Town that they call home, Oakland Tales is the unforgettable coming-of-age story of two young people who discover that they are part of history and they can shape the future.GOALS: * attract young people to reading through stories representative of themselves;* connect youth to place by revealing history through their eyes;* reinforce bridges among cultures and present a model of inclusivity;* inspire youth to find themselves in the continuum of history;* offer a forum in the classroom and home to discuss social justice themes; * offer a tool of empowerment that articulates hope and helps shape agency; * address the crisis of literacy and by default, the school dropout rate; and* offer an interdisciplinary text appropriate for both Language Arts/Social Studies.Themes: connection to place, parent incarceration, street violence, parent deportation, history from below, and restorative justice,
In this empathetic tale of hope, understanding and the importance of family, young readers are introduced to the difficult issue of poverty and the many hardships of being homeless through an inspiring young heroine named Ivy. Blending a spoonful of Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist (Penguin Classics, 2010) with a dash of Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City (Black Swan, 2007) and a few pinches of the Adventures of Lassie, Ivy's tale will appeal to young readers as well as give adults material to discuss with them.
With her teen daughter Ruby, Kate Ryan moves to the secluded village of Zamora to have a quiet life alongside her poor neighbours, the Spanish farmers of northern New Mexico. However, when Kate invites the wrong drifter home, the delicate peace of her domain shatters. Troy is the bad smell that refuses to go away. Kate bribes him into leaving with a few hundred dollars and a ride to Santa Fe. In town, Troy hustles his way into another woman's life and returns to Zamora to prove he's not the man Kate thinks he is. He's much worse.
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.