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Books with author Danielle Blood

  • Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox

    Danielle Daniel

    Paperback (Groundwood Books, April 3, 2018)
    In this introduction to the Anishinaabe tradition of totem animals, young children explain why they identify with different creatures such as a deer, beaver or moose. Delightful illustrations show the children wearing masks representing their chosen animal, while the few lines of text on each page work as a series of simple poems throughout the book.In a brief authorĀ’s note, Danielle Daniel explains the importance of totem animals in Anishinaabe culture and how they can also act as animal guides for young children seeking to understand themselves and others.
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  • The Unquiet Daughter

    Danielle Flood

    eBook (Piscataqua Press, Jan. 16, 2018)
    "Powerfulā€¦compellingā€¦heartbreakingā€¦" - Publishers WeeklyA journalist delves into the most difficult story of her career:Danielle Floodā€™s upbringing was unique. Born of the wartime love triangle that inspired the one in Graham Greene's The Quiet American, she survived a bizarre youth of privilege, estrangement and cruelty. As she yearns for her father's love and presence, Danielle's beautiful French and Vietnamese mother leaves her as a child in burlesque house dressing rooms in the American Midwest and as an adolescent in convent schools in Long Island and Dublin, and with strangers in New York City. Her mother lies to Danielle about her father for decades until, as an adult, Flood investigates her own origin, using her skills as a reporter to find clues in the United States, Britain, France and Vietnam.Will Flood's journey through the truth of what happened between her parents in early 1950's Saigon satisfy her life-long quest for who she is?Find out in The Unquiet Daughter.ā€œā€¦fascinating: exotic, atmospheric, jaw-dropping.ā€ ā€“ Minneapolis Star Tribune
  • 50 Month-by-Month Draw & Write Prompts: Engaging Reproducibles That Invite Young Learners To Draw & Then Write About Topics They LoveĀ…All Year Round!

    Danielle Blood, Danielle Flynn

    Paperback (Teaching Resources, June 1, 2002)
    Motivate your students to write with fun-filled reproducibles for every month! Each reproducible pairs a drawing prompt with quick writing prompts on favorite topics: autumn harvest, animals, 100th day, holidays, weather, classroom community, and more. As a pre-writing warm-up, drawing pictures sparks kidsā€™ interest, helps them generate ideas and details for writing, and makes their subjects lively and real. A great way to encourage reluctant writers! For use with Grades K-2.
  • Read-Aloud Passages & Strategies to Model Fluency: Grades 3Ā–4: More Than 20 Teacher Read-Alouds With Discussion Questions, Think-Alouds, and Tips That ... Fluency Development and Comprehension

    Danielle Blood

    Paperback (Scholastic Teaching Resources (Teaching, May 1, 2007)
    Help students build fluency and comprehension by modeling fluent reading with these engaging read-aloud passages and mini-lessons. Each passage includes reading tips and think-alouds to emphasize different aspects of fluency, as well as discussion questions to assess comprehension. A quick and easy way to integrate fluency into the curriculum! For use with Grades 3-4.
  • 50 Month-By-Month Draw & Write Prompts

    Danielle Blood

    Paperback (Scholastic Professional Books, June 15, 2002)
    Motivate your students to write with fun-filled reproducibles for every month! Each reproducible pairs a drawing prompt with quick writing prompts on favorite topics: autumn harvest, animals, 100th day, holidays, weather, classroom community, and more. As a pre-writing warm-up, drawing pictures sparks kidsā€™ interest, helps them generate ideas and details for writing, and makes their subjects lively and real. A great way to encourage reluctant writers! For use with Grades K-2.
  • Once in a Blue Moon

    Danielle Daniel

    Hardcover (Groundwood Books, Oct. 3, 2017)
    Inspired by the expression ā€œonce in a blue moon,ā€ Danielle Daniel has created a book of short poems, each one describing a rare or special experience that turns an ordinary day into a memorable one. She describes the thrill of seeing a double rainbow, the Northern Lights or a shooting star as well as quieter pleasures such as spotting a turtle basking in the sun or a family of ducks waddling across the road. In simple words and delightful naĆÆve images, Once in a Blue Moon celebrates the magical moments that can be found in the beauty and wonders of nature. With the same simple yet sophisticated design as Danielleā€™s award-winning picture book Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox, this book is a very accessible and inviting introduction to poetry for young readers.
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  • The Unquiet Daughter

    Danielle Flood

    Paperback (Piscataqua Press, Sept. 1, 2016)
    Danielle Flood, a journalist born of the wartime love triangle that inspired the one in Graham Greene's The Quiet American, searches for her father after surviving a bizarre youth of privilege, estrangement and cruelty. As she yearns for her father's love and presence, Danielle's beautiful French and Vietnamese mother leaves her in burlesque house dressing rooms in the American Midwest, in convent schools in Long Island and Dublin, and with strangers in New York City. Meanwhile she lies to Danielle about their past for decades in this sometime-humorous near-tragic love story between a daughter and a mother and more. In the end we learn if Flood's journey through the truth of what happened between her parents in early 1950's Saigon satisfies her life-long quest for who she is. "Powerful," "compelling," "heartbreaking," "a gripping story of self-doubt and self-discovery." --Publishers Weekly "Holy Moly, Mother of God...It's a knockout...Ferociously honest and gorgeously written, Flood's memoir is a fiercely tragic story of her search for her real father, her knotted relationship with her complicated mother-and her hard-won understanding of herself. About memory, love, loss and time, Flood's engrossing debut shines like mica and is as polished as platinum." - Caroline Leavitt, The New York Times bestselling author. ā€œThe similarities in The Unquiet Daughter between Floodā€™s parentsā€™ lives and the plot of Graham Greene's The Quiet American ā€œare tantalizingly close, far too close to be coincidental; as Flood writes in the Prologue: ā€˜I came from a love triangle much like the one Greene describes in his novel. I am the sequel he never wrote.ā€™ā€¦As sequels go, Danielle Floodā€™s life story could easily be a Graham Greene novel, full of dark twists and turns, betrayals, heartbreak and the saddest of all forms of unrequited loveā€¦moving and at times imbued with humourā€¦the tension is all too believable, but so is the joyā€¦forgiveness and healing are at the heart of the story and the authorā€™s ability to forgive is almost as powerful as the complex plot itself.ā€ - The Catholic World Report ā€œThe Unquiet Daughter by Danielle Flood is the true story of an exceptional woman. It takes the reader on an amazing journey. Exotic,mysterious, exciting,and romantic.Bravo Danielle Flood. It's a classic.ā€ - Oscar-nominated actor Elliott Gould "In Danielle Flood's clear eyed memoir of her early life with her exquisitely beautiful and deeply troubled mother, this truth echoes: the fact that a child could survive such emotional devastation and cruelty is a testament to her resilience and her valiant spirit." - Leslie Daniels, author, Cleaning Nabokov's House "...a compelling, poetic account of self-doubt, self-discovery and the power of love." - Fordham Magazine "Passionate and unflinchingly honest, this is a fascinating memoir...Danielle Flood is the child of an affair so much like the one described in the love triangle of Greene's novel, The Quiet American, that she is perfectly right to make her startling claim, 'I am a sequel he never wrote." --Michael Shelden, author, Graham Greene The Enemy Within.
  • Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox

    Danielle Daniel

    Hardcover (Groundwood Books, Aug. 11, 2015)
    In this introduction to the Anishinaabe tradition of totem animals, young children explain why they identify with different creatures such as a deer, beaver, or moose. Delightful illustrations show the children wearing masks representing their chosen animal, while the few lines of text on each page work as a series of simple poems throughout the book. In a brief authorā€™s note, Danielle Daniel explains the importance of totem animals in Anishinaabe culture and how they can also act as animal guides for young children seeking to understand themselves and others.
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  • Sometimes I Feel Like a Fox

    Danielle Daniel

    eBook (Groundwood Books, Nov. 15, 2019)
    In this introduction to the Anishinaabe tradition of totem animals, young children explain why they identify with different creatures such as a deer, beaver or moose. Delightful illustrations show the children wearing masks representing their chosen animal, while the few lines of text on each page work as a series of simple poems throughout the book.In a brief authorā€™s note, Danielle Daniel explains the importance of totem animals in Anishinaabe culture and how they can also act as animal guides for young children seeking to understand themselves and others.
  • Achieving HR Excellence through Six Sigma

    Daniel Bloom

    Paperback (Routledge, Aug. 13, 2013)
    Although world-class firms like GE and Motorola have relied on Six Sigma to build their performance cultures, these processes are all too often left out of human resources (HR) functions. This lack of Six Sigma principles is even more surprising because preventing errors and improving productivity are so critical to the people management processes of hiring, retention, appraisal, and development.From the history and evolution of the Total Quality movement to initiatives for introducing a Six Sigma continuous process improvement strategy in your HR department, Achieving HR Excellence through Six Sigma introduces a new way to envision your role within the organization. It explains how this powerful methodology works and supplies a roadmap to help you find and eliminate waste in your HR processes.Describing exactly what HR excellence means, the book outlines dozens of proven approaches as well as a hierarchy of the exact steps required to achieve it. It illustrates the Six Sigma methodology from the creation of a project to its successful completion. At each stage, it describes the specific tools currently available and provides examples of organizations that have used Six Sigma within HR to improve their organizations.The text presents proven approaches that can help you solve and even eliminate people management problems altogether. Filled with real-world examples, it demonstrates how to implement six sigma into the transformational side of your organization. It also includes a listing of additional resources to help you along your Six Sigma journey.Explaining how to build a new business model for your HR organization, the book supplies the new perspective and broad view you will need to discover and recommend game-changing alternatives to traditional HR approaches in your organization.
  • Rosie Littles Cautionary Tales for Girls

    Danielle Wood

    language (MP Publishing Limited, Dec. 30, 2010)
    A series of contemporary fairy tales populated by wolves, witches, snakes, and an entirely new breed of heroine.In this Brothers Grimmā€“meetsā€“Bridget Jones collection of linked stories, Danielle Wood introduces readers to Rosie Little, a thoroughly modern Little Red Riding Hood who offers her sharp, rueful take on life, love, and everything in between.Rosie knows better than most that some men are wolves at heart, that the snake in the grass is to be avoided, and that fairy-tale endings are usually, after all, only fairy tales. And yet stout-hearted Rosie reassures us that there are ways out of the deep dark forests of our own making in these survival tales of teenagers deflowered at parties, a young journalist who misses the chance to write a front-page story because sheā€™s busy flirting with a married man, and two women who must cope with the loss of their babies.A brand-new take on the age-old fairy tale, Rosie Littleā€™s Cautionary Tales for Girls will appeal especially to readers like Rosie, with ā€œboots as stout as their hearts, and who are prepared to firmly lace them up (boots and hearts both) and step out into the wilds in search of what they desire.ā€
  • Rosie Little's Cautionary Tales for Girls

    Danielle Wood

    language (Allen & Unwin, June 14, 2010)
    These are not, I should say at the outset, tales written for the benefit of good and well-behaved girls who always stick to the path when they go to Grandma's. Skipping along in their gingham frills - basket of scones, jam and clotted cream upon their arms - what need can these girls have for caution? Rather, these are tales for girls who have boots as stout as their hearts, and who are prepared to firmly lace them up (boots and hearts both) and step out into the wilds in search of what they desire.Taking her cues from the Brothers Grimm and Scheherazade, Rosie - a thoroughly modern Little Red Riding Hood - tells us of love and desire, men and women, heartache and happiness. Beguiling, clever and funny, Rosie Little's Cautionary Tales for Girls is a sheer delight. ss, wit, simplicity and directness, Rosie offers her clear-eyed, slyly funny and rueful take on life, love and everything in between.