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Crictor (Reading Rainbow Book)

Crictor (Reading Rainbow Book) Amazon Price: $6.99
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By: HarperTrophy
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Subjects -> Children's Books -> Animals -> Pets -> Fiction

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Wonderful memories! 5 out of 5 stars.
7 of 7 people found this review helpful.

Oh, I LOVE this book! It is from the 50's, and SO well written! Instead of dumbing children down, it uses words that are more sophisticated. The story is hilarious! It uses pen and ink type drawings, which brought back so many pleasant memories! As a child, I didn't remember the story too well, but the pictures stayed in my mind, particularly the one of Crictor in what looks like a 10-foot long bed and wearing a 10-foot long armless sweater!!

This elderly lady receives a gift of a snake from her son in Africa. She is a teacher and brings Crictor to school, where he becomes a jump rope and slide for the kids. He also forms letters and numbers. He captures a burglar and the locals name a park after him!

One of my favorite books of all time!

Editorial Review:

`A highly diverting picture book about an agreeable pet boa constrictor that earns the affection and gratitude of a French village.' —BL. `Children will love it.' —H.

Notable Children's Books of 1940-1959 (ALA)
1959 Fanfare Honor List (The Horn Book)
A Reading Rainbow Selection
1958 Children's Spring Book Festival Prize (NY Herald Tribune)

Bracelet,The

Yoshiko Uchida

Bracelet,The Yoshiko Uchida Amazon Price: $6.99
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By: Putnam Juvenile
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

an importance lesson in memory 5 out of 5 stars.
16 of 16 people found this review helpful.

In the first illustration we see two typically Californian homes with cars in their driveways. One has a "For Sale" sign on its front steps. Emi, a second grader, sits and waits. Her father has been sent to a prison camp in Montana, and soon the FBI will take her, her sister, and her mother to a detention center and then to a detention camp in Utah. Emi and her family are Japanese Americans in California. It is 1942, and the United States is at war with Japan. Emi and 120,000 other Japanese Americans (80,000 of them citizens) were sent to detention centers due to their ethnic heritage by the U.S. government; their rights were abrogated. There is a knock at the door. Is it the FBI? No, it's her friend and neighbor Laurie. She gives Emi a gift, a bracelet, with which to remember her by. They hug. Emi and her family, allowed just a couple of suitcases, are sent with other from San Francisco to a racetrack which has been converted to a detention center. They see guards with guns and bayonets, and as they pass a boarded up grocery store, we see a sign in the drawing, saying that the store owners are "loyal Americans." When Emi loses the bracelet after arriving at the detention center, she learns that a person can remember people and families in the absence of physical items and personal effects. An afterword explains the historical events and the redress made by the US Federal government under Presidents Ford and Carter. Yoshiko is also the author of The Invisible Thread, her account of a childhood in detention.

Editorial Review:

The year is 1942 and America is at war with Japan. All Japanese-Americans are being sent to live in internment camps for the duration of the war, including seven-year-old Emi and her family. Before they go, Emi's friend, Laurie, gives her a gold heart bracelet to remember their friendship. But upon her arrival at the camp, Emi discovers she has lost the bracelet. How will she remember her friend now? Full color.

Journey To Topaz: A Story Of The Japanese-American Evacuation

Donald Carrick (Illustrator) Yoshiko Uchida

Journey To Topaz: A Story Of The Japanese-American Evacuation Donald Carrick (Illustrator) Yoshiko Uchida Amazon Price: $9.95
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By: Heyday Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 20 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Internment from a child's point of view 4 out of 5 stars.
13 of 13 people found this review helpful.

This was interesting to me since my mother was about Yuki's age when she went to "camp". My mother doesn't talk much about that time, maybe because some things you just want to forget. It helped me understand some of the fear and prejudice towards Japanese Americans during the war. I have mixed feelings about the internment. It was horrible how so many people lost their livelihoods, but on the other hand, in camp, they were sheltered from the hatred and hostility they may have experienced at home. This was wartime, so everyone was feeling some kind of unhappiness. I give this book 4 stars and 5 stars to Uchida's "Journey Home", the story which follows Yuki's family out of camp.

Journey to Topaz 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 5 people found this review helpful.

Journey to Topaz was a great book. I think that this book was a very gripping and touching story. It taught me a lot of lessons, i.e. don't always complain that I don't have everything that I want because there are people in the world that aren't as fortunate as me. I've also learned that people should be treated equally, even if we don't have the same skin colour or the same hight, we are still the same on the inside. Now I know how hard it is to let someone, that you love, go. I can imagine how Yuki felt when her dad left her and when she had to let of Pepper. I also like the way the author added in Japanese words to make the book more interesting. This book showed that not only the Jews were effected in World War II, but the Japanese were just as scared and threatened as the Jews. I would recommend this book to everyone that thinks that Japanese people are spiolt and get whatever they want. I would also recommend this book to people that think their parents aren't getting them everything they want. All I want to say is that this was an excellent book and it taught many teachings.

Editorial Review:

After the Pearl Harbor attack an eleven-year-old Japanese-American girl and her family are forced to go to an aliens camp in Utah.

A Jar of Dreams

Yoshiko Uchida

A Jar of Dreams Yoshiko Uchida Amazon Price: $4.99
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By: Aladdin
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 11 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

jar of dreams 5 out of 5 stars.
11 of 12 people found this review helpful.

Jar of Dreams is about Rinko a Japanese american girl. she lives in California and kids at school and just people in general say racial slurs to her, which makes her resent wish she didn't looks so Japanese. her family is barley making their payments. her dad is a barber but really wishes to be a mechanich and her mom cleans other peoples house. then Rinko's mom decides to start her own landry business, and the competing landrymat trys to get even. thinkgs start to change when Rinko's aunt Waka from japan comes for the summer and changes everyones attitudes. Everyone is Rinkos family begins to stand up for themselves and decides to go for their dreams. Rinko's dad decides to start a mechanic shop, Rinkos brother goes back to college to become a engineer and Rinko's mom keeps up her laundry service. i really recomend reading this book

Editorial Review:

"An ingenious simplicity and grace mark the first-person telling of the story of eleven-year-old Rinko and her Japanese family in Berkeley, California. Times are hard for everyone in 1935, but being Japanese is for Rinko an added burden. . . . Compared with the many worldly-wise contemporary book heroines, Rinko in her guilelessness is genuine and refreshing, and her worries and concerns seem wholly natural, honest and convincing."--The Horn Book.

The Invisible Thread: An Autobiography

Yoshiko Uchida

The Invisible Thread: An Autobiography Yoshiko Uchida List Price: $5.99
By: HarperTrophy
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 17 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Not so invisible any more, thank goodness 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

In addition to her writings about the Japanese and Japanese-American culture, Yoshiko Uchida wrote several fiction books that drew from her experiences as a Japanese American during World War II. The Invisible Thread, written for young adults, is an autobiography that tells of her life before, during her family's internment in a camp in Utah.

Although her parents were Japanese citizens, Yoshi and her sister were born in the United States. They were as American in their speech and culture as the Swedish family next door to them. Yet, because of their appearance, they faced discrimination even before the war. The American government violated the Japanese Americans' constitutional rights when they removed them from their homes. The conditions under which they were forced to live were deplorable.

The author chose not to dwell on the horrors of that period of her life. Although she clearly describes their relocation and the stable and barracks they lived in, her emphasis is more on family life and the positive things they did to keep their lives as normal as possible. She does a fine job of describing her own confusion, her loyalty to her family and friends and her loyalty to the government that betrayed them.

This book is on our local school system's 2005 Summer Reading List. With the current backlash against Arab Americans, this is an important book for children to read. It is only through education and tolerance that we have a hope of avoiding past mistakes.

Editorial Review:

Growing up in California, Yoshi knew her family looked different from their neighbors. Still, she felt like an American. But everything changed when America went to war against Japan. Along with all the other Japanese-Americans on the West Coast, Yoshi's family were rounded up and imprisoned in a crowded. badly built camp in the desert because they"looked like the enemy." Yoshiko Uchida grew up to be an award-winning author. This memoir of her childhood gives a personal account of a shameful episode in American history.

Journey Home (Aladdin Books)

Yoshiko Uchida

Journey Home (Aladdin Books) Yoshiko Uchida Amazon Price: $5.99
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By: Aladdin
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 19 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

A Must Read! 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 5 people found this review helpful.

The book "Journey Home" by Yoshiko Uchida truly reflects the gowvernment and American society during World War 2. It shows that the American government wasn't as thoughtful or complex as it is today. They thought that since one group of Japenese was dangerous, then they all must be dangerous. They forced all of the Japenese out of their homes on the coast of the US and into internment camps. In these camps, their "apartments" were actually smelly, old horse stalls. In this book it shows the struggles of a poor Japenes-American girl and he family. Could you imagine being in this young girl's shoes? Not having hot water, having to wash your clothes in a barrel, not to mention the waiting in line just to wash your clothes. But this book woke me up and made me think abot being in her shoes, walking where she walked, and it was the greatest experience to read and imagine. This forshadowing and exilerating story will fly you to another place and show you what life was like for Japanese families during World War 2. It will take you on an adventure; without making you pay for an airplane ticket.:)

Editorial Review:

"This book fills a great need in describing the cruel treatment inflicted upon Japanese-Americans during World War II by their fellow Americans."--School Library Journal. Uchida is the author of the critically acclaimed Japanese-American tales The Best Bad Thing and The Happiest Ending. 10 illustrations.

Flat Stanley

Jeff Brown, Tomi Ungerer

Flat Stanley Jeff Brown, Tomi Ungerer Amazon Price: $16.10
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By: HarperCollins
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 72 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

Poor Stanley. He's a perfectly normal boy until one morning he wakes up flat. After his parents peel the incriminating bulletin board off of him, Stanley must adjust to life as a pancake. He is a boy who takes this kind of thing in stride, though, and soon he's enjoying the advantages of squashedness. Sliding under closed doors is fun, and it's gratifying to be of use to his mother when she drops her ring through a narrow metal grating. Expensive plane fare to California? No problem. Svelte Stanley folds comfortably into a brown paper envelope. There's even room left over in there for an egg-salad sandwich. But Stanley's true moment of glory comes when a gang of thieves begins stealing paintings from the Famous Museum of Art. The case seems hopeless--until our two-dimensional hero saves the day. Here is one boy who doesn't let his profile-challenged body stop him from living life fully--that is, until his brother finds a way to help him become well rounded again. Jeff Brown's matter-of-fact tone and Tomi Ungerer's witty and engaging drawings tickle the funny bone, making this 1964 classic a perennial favorite. (Ages 4 to 8) --Emilie Coulter

The Dancing Kettle

Yoshiko Uchida

The Dancing Kettle Yoshiko Uchida List Price: $8.95
By: Creative Arts Book Company
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Very Good! 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 5 people found this review helpful.

THis book is perfect for young children. All of the folk tales are wonderful, including the one about how the crane came to be. All of the children at the daycare loved it, especially about the wise man and how he grew the beard. Great folk tales. A good book for kids 2-5!

Editorial Review:

Here are fourteen authentic folk stories, retold with humor and charm, which will delight children and those who read and tell stories to them.

The Best Bad Thing (Aladdin Historical Fiction)

Yoshiko Uchida

The Best Bad Thing (Aladdin Historical Fiction) Yoshiko Uchida Amazon Price: $8.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 12 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Fantastic Book 4 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

If you like realistic stories and something which you can compare to yourself, you would love the Best Bad Thing. Once you read a chapter you will not want to stop. Why I loved this book is because I could relate to it. This book has some very funny humor in it.
Now it is hard to sum up the story without giving it away, but I can give you a brief review.
This story is about a girl named Rinko who is going to have to go to Mrs. Hata's for the summer. Why will she have to go? Because Mr. Hata has died (Mrs. Hata's husband). Everybody thinks that Mrs. Hata is crazy. Rinko does not want to go, she thinks it is bad, but then something makes this one of the best summers ever.
One last thing. In this story there are many suprises. So if you would like to read a great, humorous, realistic, and suprising story, you should read: The Best Bad Thing.

Editorial Review:

At first dismayed at having to spend the last month of her summer vacation helping out in the household of recently widowed Mrs. Hata, Rinko discovers there are pleasant surprises for her, but then bad things start to happen. Sequel to A Jar of Dreams

Cats As Cats Can

Tomi Ungerer

Cats As Cats Can Tomi Ungerer List Price: $10.95
By: Roberts Rinehart Publishers
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Amusing Cats 4 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

This book is full of imaginative, mostly abstract drawings, of cats, most of them funny and a little strange and off-beat. The drawings, for the most part in colour, do not include any words, the artworks speak for themselves. My young daughter and son thought they were funny, as I did. At the end of this large sized volume are a few words by the author describing some of the antics of cats he has responsibility for, notice I did not say he actually owns them, I'm not sure anyone truly owns a cat!

Editorial Review:

It's true, the world is divided between those who love cats and those who hate them. The former group can add Cats As Cats Can by prolific cartoonist, author, and illustrator Tomí Ungerer to the top of their feline-loving list of books. Cats As Cats Can is a collection of Ungerer's sketches, paintings, and cartoons, all in full color--it's 144 pages of pure cat. Pieces range from the silly to the surprised, from abstract strokes of ink to collages with postage stamps and envelopes. The excerpt from his 1983 Far Out Isn't Far Enough, a remembrance of his two beloved Burmese cats, is a fitting end to this lovely book. Ungerer writes, "cats are one of my favorite subjects. At rest or in motion, these languorous, slinky, sinuous and sensuous, wily and selfish creates have been a constant source of inspiration throughout my life."

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