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Books published by publisher Woodland Park Press LLC

  • When Someone Very Special Dies: Children Can Learn to Cope with Grief

    Marge Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, July 23, 1996)
    A practical format for allowing children to understand the concept of death and develop coping skills for life.
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  • The Boy Who Ran

    Michael Selden, Lyssa Browne, Woodland Park Press LLC

    Audiobook (Woodland Park Press LLC, March 25, 2016)
    He was the sole survivor when his village was massacred. The boy spends his days alone in the woods, feeling more of a kinship with animals than with the people who took him in but never really accepted him. The Boy Who Ran is a middle grade novel about a Native American orphan trying to find a place in the world. The story is set 6,000 years ago in the midarchaic period of North American history.
  • When a Family is in Trouble: Children Can Cope with Grief from Drug and Alcohol Addiction

    Marge Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, July 23, 1996)
    Provides basic information about drug and alcohol addictions and encourages healthy coping skills.
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  • When Mom and Dad Separate: Children Can Learn to Cope with Grief from Divorce

    Marge Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, July 23, 1996)
    Discusses basic concepts of marriage and divorce. Offers children a creative way to sort out the stressful feelings of grief caused by change.
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  • The Boy Who Ran

    Michael Selden, Paola Sbriccoil

    eBook (Woodland Park Press LLC, Nov. 24, 2013)
    IPPY Gold Medal Winner, Juvenile Fiction for 2014The sole survivor when his village was massacred, the boy spends his days alone in the woods, feeling more kinship with the animals than with the people who took him in but never really accepted him.THE BOY WHO RAN is a middle grade novel about a Native American orphan trying to find a place in the world. It's written like a parable, following the boy's struggle to be seen and treated like one of The People.Until now, he's been satisfied to live in his own world, not really paying attention to what the others did. He's had one overwhelming obsession: to run faster than anyone else and to do so in absolute silence as he moves through the forest, like a ghost.It's been seven years since he was found hungry and bleeding by a hunting party after escaping the massacre. The villagers think his mind is broken and as half animal--they don't know exactly what to do with him but are kind hearted and make sure he's fed and sheltered.The story is set six thousand years ago in the mid-archaic period in North American, and is intended for people age 10 and older.
  • When Something Terrible Happens: Children Can Learn to Cope with Grief

    Marge Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, Aug. 16, 1992)
    Creates ways for children to explore the fright, confusion, and insecurity caused by traumatic events in their lives.
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  • The Boy Who Ran

    Michael Selden

    Paperback (Woodland Park Press LLC, Nov. 13, 2013)
    2014 IPPY Gold Medal for Juvenile Fiction --Independent Publisher Book AwardsHe was the sole survivor when his village was massacred. The boy spends his days alone in the woods, feeling more of a kinship with animals than with the people who took him in but never really accepted him. THE BOY WHO RAN is a middle grade novel about a Native American orphan trying to find a place in the world. The story is set six thousand years ago in the mid-archaic period of North American history. This book is intended for people age 10 and older.
  • When Someone Has a Very Serious Illness: Children Can Learn to Cope with Loss and Change

    Marge Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, Aug. 16, 1992)
    An excellent resource for helping children learn the basic concepts of illness and various age-appropriate ways of coping with it.
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  • When a Parent Marries Again: Children Can Learn to Cope with Family Change

    Marge Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, March 15, 1993)
    Helps kids sort through unrealistic expectations, different values, divided loyalties, and family histories and helps reduce fear and stress surrounding remarriage.
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  • The Wiz of the West

    Michael McGill, S. Clayton Rhodes

    Paperback (Woodland Press, LLC, May 24, 2013)
    You know the story, you know the movie. But have you ever stopped to wonder what might have happened if that Kansas twister had brought Dorothy Gale not to Oz, but to the Old West? Follow the adventures of Dotty and her friends the Scared Crow, Lionel and the tinhorn as they pit their wits against Hawknose Halley and her dog brigade and buzzards. Ole Hawknose is none too happy about someone dropping a house on her little sister, the Widder Schwartz, and she'll do anything to get her hands on her sis's ruby red ramblers, which Dotty now wears. Ozwald P. Harroway, the Wiz of the West, may be Dotty's only hope to return home, but he's in Green Glen, a long ways from Castle Butte. Along her dangerous quest, Dotty learns friendship is some pretty potent magic. She also finds there's no place like home, home on the range!
  • When Someone Has a Very Serious Illness: Children Can Learn to Cope with Loss and Change

    Marge Eaton Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press (MN), July 23, 1996)
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  • Growing Up...And Grieving: Coping with Loss and Change

    Marge Eaton Heegaard

    Paperback (Woodland Press, Feb. 7, 2016)
    Life in middle school is defined by change. This book begins with changes in everyday life before focusing on grief from the death of a loved one. Creativity is encouraged to help them understand and express feelings needed to cope with grief. This book fills a need too often neglected for middle school students.
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