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Books published by publisher Filter Press, LLC

  • Mary Elitch Long: First Lady of Fun

    Debra B. Faulkner

    Paperback (Filter Press, May 1, 2008)
    Mary Elitch Long (1856-1936), was a successful business women and founder of Denver's famed Elitch Gardens. At the time, she was the only woman in the world running an amusement park, and was a role model in a time when women had fewer options. Mary and husband John Elitch Jr. purchased an apple orchard five miles north of Denver intending to grow fresh fruits and vegetables for their restaurant business. With Mary's love for children, flowers, animals, and the theater an ambitious dream was born. The apple orchard was transformed into Elitch's Zoological Gardens (Denver's first zoo), a wonderland of exotic animals, orchards, and gardens. Debra Faulkner brings the Mary Elitch Long story to the Now You Know Bio series from Filter Press.
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  • Kokopelli: Drum in Belly

    Gail E. Haley

    Paperback (Filter Press, Sept. 1, 2003)
    An ancient Native American tale is beautifully told and illustrated by Caldecott Medalist Gail E. Haley.
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  • Kokopelli: Casanova of the Cliff Dwellers: The Hunchbacked Flute Player

    John V. Young

    Paperback (Filter Pr Llc, Dec. 1, 1990)
    Everywhere that primitive man roamed the American Southwest, as well as many other places in the world, he left an enduring record of his passing fancies and urgencies in the form of pictures on rocks. This booklet features Kokopelli, Casanova of the Cliff Dwellers -- the hunchbacked flute player.
  • Gadsden's Silent Observers: An Introduction to The Natural History of Southern A

    III Keasey, Merritt S.

    Paperback (Filter Press, March 15, 1974)
    This book describes plants, animals, geology, soil, climate and terrain of Gadsen's historic purchase in Southern Arizona.
  • Field Mouse Goes to War/ Tusan Homichi Tuwvota: A Bilingual Hopi Tale

    Edward Kennard, Albert Yava, Fred Kabotie

    Paperback (Filter Pr Llc, June 1, 1977)
    This traditional Hopi tale recounts the courage and cleverness of a tiny field mouse striving to protect the village from a mighty hawk who is stealing the chickens. It was originally published in 1944 by the Bureau of Indian Afffairs. The drawings are by Hopi artist Fred Kabotie who was born at the turn of the twentieth century on the Second Mesa. Kabotie was commissioned by the Museum of the American Indian in New York to record authentic native dances and by the Fred Harvey Company to decorate the Indian Tower on the south Rim of the Grand Canyon. The book is in English and phonetic Hopi with a pronunciation guide.
  • They Talk Different Here

    Etienne Toussaint

    language (LC Press, LLC, Oct. 27, 2019)
    A stirring collection of poetry that will appeal to fans of The Sobbing School and A Fortune for Your Disaster.They Talk Different Here, Etienne Toussaint’s much anticipated second collection of poetry, explores the journey of sons and daughters of immigrants across the contemporary American urban landscape. Each poem strings together a complex and rich story of the interiority of oppressed communities. A dynamic representation of figures with diverse ages and experiences are placed in conversation across the page, reflecting a shared search for belonging in a nation of foreign tongues. With poetic narrative storytelling that is simultaneously personal and political, They Talk Different Here provides a searing polemic against narratives of poverty in an age of social unrest. Toussaint’s work is a clarion call for empathy and love. But most of all, it bears witness to the immigrant’s unwavering quest for freedom.
  • Justina Ford, Medical Pioneer

    Joyce B. Lohse

    Paperback (Filter Press, Jan. 15, 2004)
    A biography of Justina Ford, the first African American woman to practice medicine in Colorado. Dr. Ford cared for women of all races in Denver, Colorado, for over 50 years. Justina Ford--Medical Pioneer was honored by Colorado Independent Publishers Association as one of the top three books for older children for 2004. A new title in the Now You Bio series from Filter Press.
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  • Hard Face Moon

    Nancy Oswald

    Hardcover (Filter Press, Oct. 1, 2008)
    On November 29, 1864, a village of Cheyenne and Arapaho encamped along Sand Creek in the southeastern Colorado Territory was attacked by Colorado Territory militia under the command of Colonel John Chivington. An estimated 150 to 200 Native Americans were killed, nearly all of them elderly men, women, and children. Nancy Oswald, author of the acclaimed young adult novel Nothing Here But Stones, uses the horrific events at Sand Creek as a shattering climax for the story of Hides Inside, a young Cheyenne unable to speak and struggling to gain acceptance as he grows to manhood and seeks to become a warrior. "Hard Face Moon is a heartrending story of broken promises, close to the earth and sky and to the heart of the Cheyenne people. It is an important look at one of the most shameful events in the history of the American West." Mary Peace Finley Author of the Santa Fe Trail Trilogy: Soaring Eagle, White Grizzly, and Meadow Lark "Hard Face Moon is an exciting and enlightening read for ages 10 and up. Through the eyes of a 13- year-old Cheyenne boy and his friends, Nancy Oswald tells the sorrowful story of the Sand Creek Massacre." Patrick Mendoza, Storyteller/Singer Author of Song of Sorrow: the Massacre at Sand Creek
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  • Little Fox's Secret

    Mary Peace Finley, Martha Jane Spurlock

    Paperback (Filter Pr Llc, Feb. 1, 2000)
    Bent's Fort shall be destroyed! This I have seen. With these words, the Cheyenne elder Gray Owl predicts the end of the mighty trading post on the Arkansas River. Eleven-year-old Little Fox learns that Gray Owl's vision includes him. He must destroy Bent's Fort! Alone and unarmed, Little Fox is left outside the towering adobe walls to face an impossible mission. This first chapter book for young readers is both a thrilling adventure tale and a well-researched interpretation of the end of Bent's Fort in 1849.
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  • Prunes and Rupe

    Lydia Griffin, Judith Hunt

    Library Binding (Filter Press, Oct. 1, 2007)
    Prospector Rupert M. Sherwood and his burro, Prunes, are best friends. They go together like salt and pepper. When Rupe asks his neighbors to help look after Prunes, an unlikely friendship blossoms between people of the town and the remarkable prune-colored burro.Based on true events, Prunes and Rupe is a story of friendship, love, and flapjacks.
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  • Field Mouse Goes to War/Tusan Homichi Tuwvota : A Bilingual Hopi Tale

    Edward Kennard, Willard W. Beatty, Fred Kabotie

    Paperback (Filter Press, March 1, 1999)
    This traditional Hopi tale recounts the courage and cleverness of a tiny field mouse striving to protect the village from a mighty hawk who is stealing the chickens. It was originally published in 1944 by the Bureau of Indian Afffairs. The drawings are by Hopi artist Fred Kabotie who was born at the turn of the twentieth century on the Second Mesa. Kabotie was commissioned by the Museum of the American Indian in New York to record authentic native dances and by the Fred Harvey Company to decorate the Indian Tower on the south Rim of the Grand Canyon. The book is in English and phonetic Hopi with a pronunciation guide.
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  • Martha Maxwell, Natural History Pioneer

    James McVey

    Paperback (Filter Press, May 1, 2005)
    James McVey brings the story of the naturalist Martha Maxwell to the 'Now You Know Bio' series. Martha Maxwell grew up on the frontier in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and traveled west to Colorado on the Oregon Trail. She worked in mining camps and became famous as taxidermist and naturalist. James McVey presents an independent woman struggling to balance needs of family with demands of her careers as naturalist and businesswoman..
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