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Books with title Grandma Maxine Remembers

  • Grandma Maxine Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, Dec. 1, 2002)
    A Shoshone grandmother relates family and cultural history to her granddaughter as they share their daily tasks on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming, and shares a recipe, craft, and activities.
    K
  • Remember, Grandma?

    Laura Langston

    Hardcover (Viking Juvenile, May 11, 2004)
    Margaret's grandma is the special kind. She wears sneakers with yellow laces and laughs very loud. They go for walks, sing songs together, and gather apples to make Grandma's special mile-high apple pie. But lately Grandma gets mixed up. More and more she can't remember. She forgets the way home and sometimes she doesn't even know Margaret. "She still loves you," says Margaret's mother, "even if she can't remember your name." Warm and accessible, Remember, Grandma? is an important book that will strike a chord with many readers. For families who have a relative facing memory loss, it may trigger important conversations. And for all children with aging family members, it provides gentle reassurance about the love within families that endures even when memory does not.
    D
  • Grandma Maxine Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, April 1, 2002)
    A Shoshone grandmother relates family and cultural history to her granddaughter as they share their daily tasks on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming, and shares a recipe, craft, and activities.
    K
  • Grandma Remembers

    Ben Shecter

    Hardcover (HarperCollins Publishers, Sept. 1, 1989)
    None
  • Grandma Lois Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, Dec. 1, 2002)
    An African American grandmother relates family and cultural history to her grandson in their Queens, New York, apartment as she tells of growing up in segregated Birmingham, Alabama.
    L
  • Grandma Esther Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, Dec. 1, 2002)
    In Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York, two Jewish girls learn about their heritage from their grandmother, who was born in Lithuania, escaped during World War II, and lived for a while in Israel.
    M
  • Grandma Lois Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, April 1, 2002)
    An African American grandmother relates family and cultural history to her grandson in their Queens, New York, apartment as she tells of growing up in segregated Birmingham, Alabama.
    L
  • Grandma Esther Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, March 1, 2002)
    In Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York, two Jewish girls learn about their heritage from their grandmother, who was born in Lithuania, escaped during World War II, and lived for a while in Israel.
    K
  • Grandma Susan Remembers

    Peter Linenthal

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, Feb. 14, 2002)
    A grandmother from an old Maine family that came to America from England generations ago relates family and cultural life to her grandchildren as they enjoy various traditions of the New England seacoast.
    K
  • Grandma Remembers

    Ben Shecter

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, Sept. 1, 1989)
    A boy and his grandmother take a final tour of the house she is leaving and relive memories of the wonderful times experienced there.
  • Grandma Susan Remembers

    Ann Morris

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, Dec. 1, 2002)
    A grandmother from an old Maine family that came to America from England generations ago relates family and cultural life to her grandchildren as they enjoy various traditions of the New England seacoast.
    K
  • Remember, Grandma

    Laura Langston, Lindsey Gardiner

    Hardcover (Viking Juvenile, May 11, 2004)
    Margaret's grandma is the special kind. She wears sneakers with yellow laces and laughs very loud. They go for walks, sing songs together, and gather apples to make Grandma's special mile-high apple pie. But lately Grandma gets mixed up. More and more she can't remember. She forgets the way home and sometimes she doesn't even know Margaret. "She still loves you," says Margaret's mother, "even if she can't remember your name." Warm and accessible, Remember, Grandma? is an important book that will strike a chord with many readers. For families who have a relative facing memory loss, it may trigger important conversations. And for all children with aging family members, it provides gentle reassurance about the love within families that endures even when memory does not.