Browse all books

Books with author Lensey Namioka

  • Den of the White Fox

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Browndeer Press, April 1, 1997)
    Who is the White Fox? Is he merely the mysterious, charismatic leader of a doomed political rebellion? Or is he a powerful spirit, taking revenge on the occupying force that desecrated his shrine? And who-or what-shoves Zenta off a cliff on a dark and misty night? Two unemployed samurai in sixteenth-century feudal Japan find themselves engaged in an adventure charged with trickery and political intrigue.
    X
  • Valley of the Broken Cherry Trees

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Delacorte Pr, April 1, 1980)
    In Japan during the last quarter of the 16th century two unemployed samurai attempt to discover who is mutilating the cherry trees in the valley of Lord Ohmori.
    Q
  • April and the Dragon Lady

    Lensey Namioka

    Paperback (Browndeer Press Paperbacks, May 13, 1994)
    April Chen is happily planning to go away to college, and she has a great new boyfriend, Steve. But April, the only girl in the family, must take care of Grandma, and Grandma--the Dragon Lady--hates Steve and has other plans for April. Caught between two cultures, the teenager finally realizes she must find a way to define herself on her own terms. “Sparked by Namioka’s own experiences as an Asian American, April’s first-person narrative rings true with uncertainty, joy, and hope.”--School Library Journal
    Z+
  • White Serpent Castle

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Random House Childrens Books, Oct. 1, 1976)
    During the struggle for a warlord's territory, two unemployed samurai attempt to secure power for the rightful heir.
  • Village of the Vampire Cat: A Novel

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Doubleday, April 1, 1981)
    When a young ronin returns to the village of his former teacher, he and his companion find it being terrorized by a mysterious killer.
  • Who's Hu

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Random House Books for Young Readers, Aug. 29, 1988)
    Hu, Chinese-American by birth, not only faces the problems imposed by her skin color, but she also faces the problems of any other girl growing up in America
  • The Loyal Cat by Lensey Namioka

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Harcourt, March 15, 1892)
    None
  • Mismatch

    Lensey Namioka

    Library Binding (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, Feb. 14, 2006)
    Sue Hua just moved from racially diverse Seattle to a suburban white-bread town where she feels like the only Asian American for miles. Then she meets Andy, a handsome and passionate violin player who happens to be Asian American. Sue feels an instant attraction to Andy, and her white friends think they’re “made for each other”–after all, they both use chopsticks and eat a lot of rice, right? But there’s just one problem. Andy’s last name is Suzuki. And while that may mean nothing to the other students at Lakeview High, Sue knows that it presents a world of problems to her family.From the Hardcover edition.
  • Ties That Bind, Ties That Break

    Lensey Namioka

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-04-18, April 18, 2008)
    Set in China in 1900s the story of a young girl who defied tradition by refusing to have her feet bound and in doing so changed the course of her life forever.
    Y
  • Half and Half

    Lensey Namioka

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-05-22, May 22, 2008)
    None
    R
  • Ties That Bind, Ties That Break

    Lensey Namioka

    Hardcover (Thorndike Press, Nov. 2, 2003)
    Winner of the YALSA Best Book Award Not quite five years old in 1911 -- a time of revolution and transformation in China -- Third Sister Ailin rebels against the torturous tradition of foot binding. She feels no remorse when this causes the family of her intended husband to break the marriage agreement. But as she enters adolescence, Ailin realizes for the first time how powerless a girl of good family with no prospect of marriage is in Chinese society. For ages 12 and up.
    Y
  • White Serpent Castle

    Lensey Namioka

    Paperback (Dell Publishing, March 11, 1979)
    None