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Books with author David Anthony Lee

  • Girls Play Field Hockey

    David Anthony

    Paperback (PowerKids Press, Aug. 15, 2016)
    Playing field hockey can help girls grow stronger and more self-confident. However, before they can begin to play the game, they have to understand the game. This volume introduces readers to the basic rules of field hockey and the different levels this exciting sport is played at, from school teams to the Summer Olympics. Fun facts about field hockey and famous women whove played this sport are presented through engaging text and eye-catching features, including a graphic organizer and fact boxes. Colorful, action-packed photographs bring the excitement of field hockey to readers on each page.
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  • Yo, Little Brother . . .: Basic Rules of Survival for Young African American Males

    Anthony Davis

    Paperback (African American Images, Aug. 1, 1998)
    Advice to help guide the African-American male and increase his chance of success in today’s society.
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  • Picturing Chinatown: Art and Orientalism in San Francisco

    Anthony W. Lee

    Hardcover (University of California Press, Oct. 1, 2001)
    This visually and intellectually exciting book brings the history of San Francisco's Chinatown alive by taking a close look at images of the quarter created during its first hundred years, from 1850 to 1950. Picturing Chinatown contains more than 160 photographs and paintings, some well known and many never reproduced before, to illustrate how this famous district has acted on the photographic and painterly imagination. Bringing together art history and the social and political history of San Francisco, this vividly detailed study unravels the complex cultural encounter that occurred between the women and men living in Chinatown and the artists who walked its streets, observed its commerce, and visited its nightclubs. Artistic representations of San Francisco's Chinatown include the work of some of the city's most gifted artists, among them the photographers Laura Adams Armer, Arnold Genthe, Dorothea Lange, Eadweard Muybridge, and Carleton Watkins and the painters Edwin Deakin, Yun Gee, Theodore Wores, and the members of the Chinese Revolutionary Artists' Club. Looking at the work of these artists and many others, Anthony Lee shows how their experiences in the district helped encourage, and even structured, some of their most ambitious experiments with brush and lens. In addition to discussing important developments in modern art history, Lee highlights the social and political context behind these striking images. He demonstrates the value of seeing paintings and photographs as cultural documents, and in so doing, opens a fascinating new perspective on San Francisco's Chinatown.
  • Study Guide Student Workbook for The Flashback Four The Lincoln Project The Titanic Mission The Pompeii Disaster The Hamilton-Burr Disaster

    David Lee

    Paperback (Independently published, Dec. 7, 2018)
    The Student Workbooks are designed to get students thinking critically about the text they read and provide a guided study format to facilitate in improved learning and retention. Teachers and Homeschool Instructors may use the activities included to improve student learning and organization. Students will construct and identify the following areas of knowledge. Character IdentificationEventsLocationVocabularyMain IdeaConflictAnd more as appropriate to the text.
  • Study Guide Student Workbook for Farewell to Manzanar

    David Lee

    Paperback (Independently published, Sept. 19, 2018)
    The Student Workbooks are designed to get students thinking critically about the text they read and provide a guided study format to facilitate in improved learning and retention. Teachers and Homeschool Instructors may use the activities included to improve student learning and organization. Students will construct and identify the following areas of knowledge. Character Identification Events Location Vocabulary Main Idea Conflict And more as appropriate to the text.
  • Teacher’s Guide Classroom Worksheets Turning 15 on the Road to Freedom My Story of the 1965 Selma Voting Rights March

    David Lee

    Paperback (Independently published, Nov. 13, 2018)
    Classroom Worksheets and Activities is a series of books designed to provide teachers ready to use activities with students. The focus of this book is to provide student focused material. Information evaluating, labeling and discussing the text will not be presented in this series.This includes several labeled graphic organizers and advice on how to use them in the classroom. Several of these organizers can be used for assessment.
  • Who Were the Mound Builders?

    David Anthony

    Paperback (Rosen Classroom, Aug. 1, 2013)
    Who Were the Mound Builders? is aligned to the Common Core State Standards for English/Language Arts, addressing Literacy.RI.3.9 and Literacy.L.3.1c. Readers learn about the Native Americans who constructed mounds throughout the U.S., depicted in full-page color photographs accompanied by narrative nonfiction text. This book should be paired with “The Native American Mound Builders" (9781477726587) from the InfoMax Common Core Readers Program to provide the alternative point of view on the same topic.
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  • A Shoemaker's Story: Being Chiefly about French Canadian Immigrants, Enterprising Photographers, Rascal Yankees, and Chinese Cobblers in a Nineteenth-Century Factory Town

    Anthony W. Lee

    Hardcover (Princeton University Press, July 21, 2008)
    On a June morning in 1870, seventy-five Chinese immigrants stepped off a train in the New England factory town of North Adams, Massachusetts, imported as strikebreakers by the local shoe manufacturer. They threaded their way through a hostile mob and then--remarkably--their new employer lined them up along the south wall of his factory and had them photographed as the mob fell silent. So begins A Shoemaker's Story. Anthony Lee seeks to understand the social forces that brought this now-famous photograph into being, and the events and images it subsequently spawned. He traces the rise of photography as a profession and the hopes and experiences of immigrants trying to find their place in the years following the Civil War. He describes the industrialization of the once-traditional craft of shoemaking, and the often violent debates about race, labor, class, and citizenship that industrialization caused. Generously illustrated with many extraordinary photographs, A Shoemaker's Story brings 1870s America to vivid life. Lee's spellbinding narrative interweaves the perspectives of people from very different walks of life--the wealthy factory owner who dared to bring the strikebreakers to New England, the Chinese workers, the local shoemakers' union that did not want them there, the photographers themselves, and the ordinary men and women who viewed and interpreted their images. Combining painstaking research with world-class storytelling, Lee illuminates an important episode in the social history of the United States, and reveals the extent to which photographs can be sites of intense historical struggle.
  • Study Guide Student Workbook for Fever 1793

    David Lee

    Paperback (Independently published, Sept. 14, 2018)
    The Student Workbooks are designed to get students thinking critically about the text they read and provide a guided study format to facilitate in improved learning and retention. Teachers and Homeschool Instructors may use the activities included to improve student learning and organization. Students will construct and identify the following areas of knowledge. Character Identification Events Location Vocabulary Main Idea Conflict And more as appropriate to the text.
  • What's Diversity?

    David Anthony

    Paperback (Kidhaven Publishing, Jan. 15, 2019)
    Why are some people afraid of those who are different from them, and why do others believe diversity so important? As readers explore the answers to these and other questions about diversity, they're encouraged to form their own opinions about the world around them. The engaging main text provides new information to young people without talking down to them, and additional knowledge is gained through eye-catching fact boxes. Vibrant full-color photographs and a detailed graphic organizer encourage young people to appreciate diversity and respect everyone, no matter how different they may seem.
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  • Bluebonnets, Firewheels, and Brown-eyed Susans, or, Poems New and Used From the Bandera Rag and Bone Shop

    David Lee

    Paperback (Wings Press, Jan. 1, 2017)
    Few poets of Western America fill the “organic intellectual” role better than David Lee. His poetry is the real deal when it comes to recording hilariously insightful (and linguistically accurate) observations of rural culture—and America at large—while using a host of astute literary allusions and techniques. Imagine Robert Frost simultaneously channeling Will Rogers and Ezra Pound. Imagine Chaucer with a twang. Bluebonnets, Firewheels, and Brown-Eyed Susans is focused on the women of mid-20th century rural Texas: frontier survivors and the daughters of frontier survivors, indomitable women with tastes that run from Baptist preaching to bourbon-and-branchwater. No element of hypocrisy escapes the poet’s lethal attention. This is an authentic book of the mid 20th century based on actual characters, a paen to women who shaped and molded the poet’s life. It is in many ways a folkloric study of women in hard times: characters, survivors, intellects, harbingers, anonymous influencers. Utah’s first and longest serving Poet Laureate, Lee has received both the Mountains & Plains Booksellers Award in Poetry and the Western States Book Award in Poetry.
  • The Presidents of the United States on the Presidents of the United States: The Early Republic, George Washington to John Quincy Adams

    David Anthony Clark

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 21, 2018)
    The Presidents of the United States on the Presidents of the United States is a comprehensive historical resource for anyone interested in the early days of the US presidency. The first six presidents of the United States were remarkable men. George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, and John Quincy Adams in effect shaped the office into what it is today. Arguably, they were the most extraordinary men ever to lead the nation—and their influence endures. The six men were contemporaries, and five of them served in the Continental Congress. They knew each other well and frequently expressed their opinions on the presidency and each other through letters, speeches, public documents, autobiographies, and memoirs. Author and historian David Anthony Clark spent ten years assembling this comprehensive collection of presidential quotes. Each is presented without commentary, allowing readers to arrive at their own interpretation of its meaning and importance. Standing alone, each quote is notable. Viewed together, they reveal fascinating ongoing stories from the Revolutionary War through the nineteenth century—commentaries that illuminate the development of a nation’s political system as well as the thoughts of the men who helped found Western democracy.