Browse all books

Books with author William K. Durr

  • Song of Sampo Lake

    William Durbin

    Hardcover (Wendy Lamb Books, Oct. 8, 2002)
    For Matti Ojala and his family, Finnish immigrants in Minnesota, starting a new life in America is both a hardship and an opportunity. When their beloved Uncle Wilho is killed in a tragic mining accident, the family decides they must realize their dream of owning a homestead in the wilderness. This means constant hard work and new challenges for the entire family. But it also means that Matti, the “in-between” child, has his chance to shine. Whether he’s looking after his younger sisters, clerking in a general store, teaching English, or clearing the land with Father, Matti strives to prove himself to Father and escape his older brother’s shadow.
    H
  • Until the Last Spike, the Journal of Sean Sullivan, a Transcontinental Railroad Worker, Nebraska and Points West, 1867

    William Durbin

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Aug. 27, 2013)
    Acclaimed author William Durbin's exciting JOURNAL OF SEAN SULLIVAN is now in paperback with a dynamic repackaging!It's August 1867 and Sean has just arrived from Chicago, planning to work with his father on the Transcontinental Railroad. Sean must start at the bottom, as a water carrier, toting barrels of it to the thirsty men who are doing the backbreaking work on the line. At night, everyone is usually too tired to do anything but sleep, yet Sundays are free, and Sean discovers the rough and rowdy world of the towns that seem to sprout up from nowhere along the railroad's path over the prairie. But prejudices run rampant for both the Irish and Chinese workers -- especially when they start a deadly race to see who can lay track the fastest. Through Sean's eyes, the history of this era and the magnitude of his and his fellow workers' achievements come alive.
    W
  • The Darkest Evening

    William Durbin

    Paperback (Univ Of Minnesota Press, Feb. 7, 2011)
    In the 1930s, some 6,000 Finnish Americans traveled to Karelia, a province in Northwestern Russia, hoping to leave the Depression behind and to establish a workers’ paradise. Based on these true events, The Darkest Evening chronicles the story of Jake Maki, whose father, caught up in the socialist fervor washing over their Finnish mining community in Minnesota, moves their family to the Soviet Union. Instead of finding the utopia they were promised, Jake and his family encounter only disappointment and hardship. When Stalin’s secret police begin targeting Americans for arrest, his worst fears are confirmed, and Jake leads his family on a daring midwinter escape attempt on cross-country skis, fleeing toward the Finnish border.
  • El Lector

    William Durbin

    eBook (Pineapple Press, Jan. 1, 2014)
    Thirteen-year-old Bella wants to be a lector just like her grandfather, who sits on a special platform in the cigar factory, reading great novels, the newspaper, and union news to workers as they roll the cigars. Being a lector is an important role in their immigrant community. But the hard times of the Depression mean that Bella must go to work in the factory; her hope of getting the education a lector needs seems impossible. Meanwhile, the factory workers and owners clash. People lose jobs, innocent workers are arrested, and the Ku Klux Klan prowls the area. And then there are those amazing new radios showing up all over town. Could the radio take the place of the lector? Bella must decide her own future and help her people preserve their history. Bella's lively, warmhearted story captures the color and flavor of Ybor City as it explores an intriguing part of our American history.
  • Wintering

    William Durbin

    Paperback (Yearling, Dec. 12, 2000)
    Pierre, the 14-year-old hero of The Broken Blade, spends a winter with the North West Company in the wilderness of French Canada. The canoe-men build a camp beside an Ojibwa village, and Pierre learns the deep-winter survival skills and secrets of the fur traders and trappers. Surviving in close quarters with the repulsive bowman Beloit is a challenge, but friendship with an Ojibwa brave opens up a rich new world to Pierre.
  • The Journal of Otto Peltonen: A Finnish Immigrant

    William Durbin

    Hardcover (Scholastic, Nov. 1, 2003)
    Otto, a 16-year-old Finnish boy, comes to join his father in Minnesota expecting the fabled American "land of opportunity," and instead finds the squalor of a filthy mining town run by U.S. Steel.
    V
  • 101 Reasons WHY IT'S OKAY TO BE AN ANGRY BLACK MAN IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERIKKKa

    William Dunn

    language (, July 16, 2018)
    This Book validates the Angry Black Man. However it reveals the problems with being the Angry Black Man. Best for young men without a male figure for guidance. It will also helps women understand why the Angry Black Man exist and gives a solution.
  • Song of Sampo Lake

    William Durbin

    Paperback (Yearling, Feb. 10, 2004)
    For Matti Ojala and his family, Finnish immigrants in Minnesota, starting a new life in America is both a hardship and an opportunity. When their beloved Uncle Wilho is killed in a tragic mining accident, the family decides they must realize their dream of owning a homestead in the wilderness. This means constant hard work and new challenges for the entire family. But it also means that Matti, the “in-between” child, has his chance to shine. Whether he’s looking after his younger sisters, clerking in a general store, teaching English, or clearing the land with Father, Matti strives to prove himself to Father and escape his older brother’s shadow.From the Hardcover edition.
    L
  • The Journal of Otto Peltonen-A Finnish Immigrant

    William Durbin

    Paperback (Scholastic, Aug. 16, 2002)
    One of the many in the My Name Is America series. Factitious stories based on facts written from the view of a child. The hardships and joys of coming to and growing up in the early days of America.
    V
  • Rise of the Country Oliria: Mysteries in the Locket

    K.D. Williams

    language (K.D. Williams, Jan. 3, 2014)
    A secluded country, that has advanced technologies and refuses to let anyone enter their gates, has finally decided to choose 500 citizens as new Olirians. Billions around the world apply to this utopian island in hopes of having a better life. But it isn't much later that this utopia regrets their decision. Now the country must fight to protect their people, their peace and their royals using the advanced technology.Expect the unexpected.....
  • The Darkest Evening

    William Durbin

    Hardcover (Orchard, Nov. 1, 2004)
    A thrilling novel of a young boy's devastation when his father uproots him and moves their family to Russia, where a society of Finnish-Socialists attempt to found a workers' paradise.Jake's life is turned upside down when his father gets caught up in the Socialist fervor washing over their Finnish mining community in Minnesota. His father decides to move their family to a new, Finnish state inside the Soviet Union, a change that fills Jake with dread. Where his father dreams of creating a worker's paradise, Jake and his family find disappointment and hardship. The story culminates with a thrilling escape--on skis--from Russia to Finland.
    X
  • El Lector

    William Durbin

    Hardcover (Wendy Lamb Books, Feb. 14, 2006)
    Thirteen-year-old Bella wants to be a lector just like her grandfather. All day long he sits on a special platform in the cigar factory in Ybor City, Florida, reading books, newspapers, and current events to workers as they roll the cigars. Lectors have always been highly respected members of their Cuban American community.But now times are changing. When the factory workers clash with the owners, violence erupts and the lectors start losing their jobs. And then there’s the radio. Could this small device replace the lector? It’s up to Bella to determine her future and help her people preserve their history.
    T