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Books in Where We Live Series series

  • City Homes

    Sian Smith

    Hardcover (Raintree, Aug. 15, 2013)
    This volume takes a simple look at city homes around the world, highlighting the diversity of homes that people live in. Homes featured include houses in Tokyo, US city apartments, UK terraced houses, and many more.
  • The California Coast: A Literary Field Guide

    Sara St. Antoine

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, March 10, 2005)
    Stretching from the Oregon border to the Baja peninsula, the California Coast ecoregion (ecoregions are geographical areas that share similar natural features and cultural history) is known for mild, Mediterranean-like weather. This book gathers stories, poems, and essays chosen because they feature the natural heritage of the region and because kids often are the protagonists. A book in the acclaimed Stories from Where We Live series, "The California Coast" includes pieces both historical and contemporary and many contributions from ethnic groups. Individual pieces tell of gold rush fortunes, Wells Fargo stagecoach "whips," and surfers who brave the sharks in the "Red Triangle." They recall a Native American woman who survived for eighteen years alone on an island and the "Pigeon Express" that carried mail to the Channel Islands in the days before radio. There are pieces about seals and sea otters, foxes amidst the dry chaparral, redwoods and the La Brea tar pits. The book includes information about the region’s habitats and a list of natural areas to visit. Divided into four sections—Adventures, Great Places, Reapers and Sowers, and Wild Lives—this book is a wonderfully imaginative way to get to know the natural life of the California Coast.
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  • The North Atlantic Coast

    Sara St. Antoine

    Hardcover (Milkweed Editions, Sept. 22, 2000)
    The first book in a series that will cover the eco-regions of North America tells about life along the shore from Nova Scotia to Delaware using stories, poems, and excerpts from journals and memoirs. Teacher's Guide available.
    Y
  • The Gulf Coast: A Literary Field Guide

    Paul Mirocha, Sara St. Antoine, Trudy Nicholson

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, June 26, 2006)
    Written especially for families (with children ages 9 and up), this collection of stories, poems, and essays explores what makes the Gulf Coast region distinct, both culturally and environmentally. Four sections cover adventures (scalloping and hurricanes, for example); great places (swamps, bayous, lakes, and beaches); reapers and sowers (from cotton farmers to berry pickers); and wild lives (focusing on alligators, egrets, manatees, and other creatures). Featuring Choctaw legends and songs from the cotton fields, this book evokes the literature, history, geography, ecology, and society of one of America’s treasured regions.
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  • The Great Lakes: A Literary Field Guide

    Sara St. Antoine

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, March 10, 2005)
    The Great Lakes—Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario—are one of the natural wonders of the world. Shaped by glaciers, the lakes and the lands around them have been home to native American nations, explorers, loggers, and farmers as well as visitors who enjoy fishing, boating, and hunting in a region known for cool summers, colorful autumns, and snowy winters. This beautifully-illustrated book conveys the region’s natural heritage through stories, poems, essays, and historical accounts. The book invites readers to meet an Ojibwe girl born in 1777 on the shores of Wisconsin’s Chequamegon Bay; spend a summer hunting for rare plants in rural Indiana or working on an organic farm; watch the Aurora Borealis from atop four hundred high dunes in Michigan. The book is filled with adventures, including crossing an ice bridge above Niagara Falls in the winter of 1899 and sailing on the schooner, "Rouse Simmons," bringing Christmas trees from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula to Chicago in 1912. Describing canoe trips, fishing expeditions, and encounters with moose, loons, and bears, the book features such well-known writers as Minnesota’s Sigurd Olson, Illinois’ Sandra Cisneros, Indiana’s Edwin Way Teale and Gene Stratton-Porter, and Ontario’s Margaret Atwood.
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  • Germany

    Donna Bailey

    Library Binding (Heinemann/Raintree, Jan. 1, 1992)
    Describes life in the south of Germany, close to the borders of Austria and Switzerland
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  • Netherlands

    Donna Bailey

    Library Binding (Heinemann/Raintree, Jan. 1, 1992)
    Describes life in the busy capital city of Amsterdam, Holland
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  • Stories from Where We Live -- The California Coast

    Sara St. Antoine

    Hardcover (Milkweed Editions, Oct. 1, 2001)
    A fascinating collection of stories, poems, and memoirs captures the history and culture of the California Coast, from Oregon south to the Baja peninsula, and is divided into four sections: Adventurers, Great Places, Reapers and Sowers, and Wild Lives. Teacher's Guide available.
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  • The South Atlantic Coast and Piedmont: A Literary Field Guide

    Sara St. Antoine, Trudy Nicholson

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, June 26, 2006)
    Children learning to fish in the tidewaters of Chesapeake Bay, a girl escaping Ocean City to see her first American oystercatcher, a family canoeing through Okefenokee Swamp, brothers catching a trophy bass together — these are some of the vivid stories, contemporary and historical, in this multilayered portrait of the South Atlantic Coast. Renowned writers and gifted observers limn the region’s seasons and moods, from autumn along the C&O Canal to kite flying on a spring day in South Carolina. Included are sections on common plants and animals, maps of the region, and a list of parks and nature centers for further study.
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  • City Homes

    Sian Smith

    Paperback (Heinemann, July 1, 2013)
    This book takes a simple look at city homes around the world, highlighting the diversity of homes that people live in. Homes featured include houses in Tokyo, US city apartments, UK terraced houses, and many more. Throughout the book, simple leveled text supports bright and engaging photographs, and the book also includes a picture glossary of difficult and important words, and notes for parents and teachers with advice on how to use the book.
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  • The North Atlantic Coast: A Literary Field Guide

    Sara St. Antoine, Trudy Nicholson, Paul Mirocha

    Paperback (Milkweed Editions, June 1, 2004)
    Gathering the stories of people whose lives have adapted to the unique features of the North Atlantic coast, the book moves from Wampanoag Indians to eighteenth-century seafarers to contemporary teens. Readers are invited to feel the throb and pulse of the surf as Helen Keller felt it, track an otter through a southern New Hampshire winter, harvest blueberries as the Micmac Indians once did, and join a young boy as he tries to save a lobster from the cooking pot. The lives of fishermen and women, of sailors lost in the fog, of a whale trapped in a pond in Newfoundland—all become richer and more memorable when woven into the fabric of literature. The book is divided, as are all books in the series, into four sections: Adventures, Great Places, Reapers and Sowers, and Wild Lives. The treasure trove of stories, poems, journal entries, and essays about the region is followed by a brief natural history, including a list of areas to visit to experience the wilder side of the North Atlantic Coast region.
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  • Rural Homes

    Sian Smith

    Paperback (Heinemann, July 1, 2013)
    This book takes a simple look at rural homes around the world, highlighting the diversity of homes that people live in. Homes featured include traditional ‘Western’ farmhouses, bamboo and grass houses in Indonesia, mud houses in Togo, and houses on stilts in Bangladesh. Throughout the book, simple leveled text supports bright and engaging photographs, and the book also includes a picture glossary of difficult and important words, and notes for parents and teachers with advice on how to use the book.
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