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Books with author Reynold Jay

  • Far North

    Jan Reynolds

    Paperback (Lee & Low Books, May 1, 2007)
    It's springtime in the Arctic, and Sara and Kari are excited about the yearly reindeer roundup. Their people, the Sami, are moving the reindeer herds to mountain pastures for grazing. Family and friends also come together to celebrate the end of the long dark winter.Sara and Kari help their father gather the family's herd together. Like other Sami people in northern Europe, Sara and Kari's family relies on reindeer for food, clothing, and shelter. Once the reindeer are rounded up, Sara and Kari join their neighbors and participate in springtime festivities such as games and reindeer races.
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  • Mongolia

    Jan Reynolds

    Paperback (Lee & Low Books, May 30, 2007)
    It is a special day for cousins Dawa and Olana. Dawa's father is going to find them two small horses in the family's herd. Like other young Mongolian boys, Dawa and Olana are learning to be skilled horsemen. Living as nomads on the grassy plains, Mongolians rely on horses to support their traditional way of life. Horses help with the daily work of rounding up the goats and cows that provide meat and milk for food, as well as skins for clothing and shelter. Dawa and Olana hope that with their new horses, they will learn to be great horsemen.
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  • Down Under: Vanishing Cultures

    Jan Reynolds

    Library Binding (Harcourt Childrens Books, April 1, 1992)
    Documents the daily lives and beliefs of the Tiwi--a northern Australian group of aborigines who continue to travel the same paths that their ancestors have walked for thousands of years without touching or disturbing the landscape.
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  • Far North

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Lee & Low Books, May 30, 2007)
    The award-winning Vanishing Cultures seven-book series, now available again in beautiful, updated editions. Features photographic accounts of children from indigenous cultures around the world—exploring their daily lives, relationships with their environments, and challenges in a changing world.
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  • Vanishing Cultures:: Himalaya by Jan Reynolds

    Jan Reynolds

    Paperback (Lee & Low Books (2007-04-01), March 15, 1656)
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  • Frozen Land

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Lee & Low Books, May 30, 2007)
    The award-winning Vanishing Cultures seven-book series, now available again in beautiful, updated editions. Features photographic accounts of children from indigenous cultures around the world—exploring their daily lives, relationships with their environments, and challenges in a changing world.
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  • Himalaya: Vanishing Cultures

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Harcourt Childrens Books, Sept. 1, 1991)
    Describes the customs and day-to-day life of a family living in the Himalaya Mountains.
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  • Himalaya

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Lee & Low Books, May 30, 2007)
    The award-winning Vanishing Cultures seven-book series, now available again in beautiful, updated editions. Features photographic accounts of children from indigenous cultures around the world—exploring their daily lives, relationships with their environments, and challenges in a changing world.
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  • Down Under

    Jan Reynold

    Paperback (Harcourt Childrens Books, April 1, 1992)
    Examines the vanishing culture of the Tiwi tribe, aborigines who live on a small island off the coast of Australia
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  • Far North

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Harcourt Childrens Books, April 1, 1992)
    An internationally acclaimed photojournalist reveals, through the voices of two young girls, an intimate view of the Sami people--a culture that has lived in perfect harmony with the land of Finmark until forced to face the effects of the Chernobyl disaster.
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  • Sahara

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Harcourt Childrens Books, Sept. 1, 1991)
    Describes the way of life of the Tuaregs, a nomadic culture that presently exists in the Sahara, the world's largest desert.
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  • Down Under

    Jan Reynolds

    Hardcover (Lee & Low Books, May 30, 2007)
    In this series of seven books, photojournalist Jan Reynolds documents the distinctive cultures and climates of indigenous peoples. Amprenula, a young Tiwi girl from an island off the Australian coast, gathers food with her mother. Amprenula lives closely with the land, just as her people have done for thousands of years, taking only what they need from the forest and the ocean around them. For the Tiwi and other Aborigines, the land is sacred. It connects them with their ancestors and the beginning of creation. As Amprenula combs through the forests and mangrove swamps, she is proud to travel along the same paths, sharing the same land, as her ancestors from centuries ago.
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