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Books with title Seesaw Girl

  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Mou-Sien Tseng, Jean Tseng

    Paperback (Clarion Books, Sept. 14, 2009)
    Jade never ventures beyond the walls of her family's Inner Court; in seventeenth-century Korea, a girl of good family does not leave home until she marries. She is enthralled by her older brother's stories about trips to the market and to the ancestral grave sites in the mountains, about reading and painting, about his conversations with their father about business and politics and adventures only boys can have. Jade accepts her destiny, and yet she is endlessly curious about what lies beyond the walls. A lively story with a vividly realized historical setting, "Seesaw Girl" recounts Jade Blossom's daring attempts to enlarge her world.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Mou-Sien Tseng, Jean Tseng

    eBook (Clarion Books, Sept. 14, 2009)
    Jade never ventures beyond the walls of her family's Inner Court; in seventeenth-century Korea, a girl of good family does not leave home until she marries. She is enthralled by her older brother's stories about trips to the market and to the ancestral grave sites in the mountains, about reading and painting, about his conversations with their father about business and politics and adventures only boys can have. Jade accepts her destiny, and yet she is endlessly curious about what lies beyond the walls. A lively story with a vividly realized historical setting, "Seesaw Girl" recounts Jade Blossom's daring attempts to enlarge her world.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Mou-Sien Tseng, Jean Tseng

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, Aug. 23, 1999)
    Jade never ventures beyond the walls of her family's Inner Court; in seventeenth-century Korea, a girl of good family does not leave home until she marries. She is enthralled by her older brother's stories about trips to the market and to the ancestral grave sites in the mountains, about reading and painting, about his conversations with their father about business and politics and adventures only boys can have. Jade accepts her destiny, and yet she is endlessly curious about what lies beyond the walls. A lively story with a vividly realized historical setting, "Seesaw Girl" recounts Jade Blossom's daring attempts to enlarge her world.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Jean Tseng, Mou-Sien Tseng

    Paperback (Yearling, Feb. 13, 2001)
    Impatient with the constraints put on her as an aristocratic girl living in 17th-century Korea, 12-year-old Jade Blossom determines to see beyond her small world.Jade Blossom can never go beyond her family's inner court. All girls from good Korean families must learn to sew, do laundry, and work in the kitchen. This prepares them for their future lives in their husbands' inner court.Jade has other interests. She longs to take trips to the mountains and the marketplace. If only she could read and paint, but these are things only boys can do. Jade won't stop thinking about the world beyond the high walls of her home. Then one day she secretly sets off to do what no other girl her age has ever done before.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Jean Tseng, Mou-sien

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Feb. 13, 2001)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Mou-Sien Tseng, Jean Tseng

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, Aug. 23, 1999)
    Jade never ventures beyond the walls of her family's Inner Court; in seventeenth-century Korea, a girl of good family does not leave home until she marries. She is enthralled by her older brother's stories about trips to the market and to the ancestral grave sites in the mountains, about reading and painting, about his conversations with their father about business and politics and adventures only boys can have. Jade accepts her destiny, and yet she is endlessly curious about what lies beyond the walls. A lively story with a vividly realized historical setting, "Seesaw Girl" recounts Jade Blossom's daring attempts to enlarge her world.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Mou-Sien Tseng, Jean Tseng

    Paperback (Sandpiper, Sept. 14, 2009)
    Jade never ventures beyond the walls of her family's Inner Court; in seventeenth-century Korea, a girl of good family does not leave home until she marries. She is enthralled by her older brother's stories about trips to the market and to the ancestral grave sites in the mountains, about reading and painting, about his conversations with their father about business and politics and adventures only boys can have. Jade accepts her destiny, and yet she is endlessly curious about what lies beyond the walls. A lively story with a vividly realized historical setting, "Seesaw Girl" recounts Jade Blossom's daring attempts to enlarge her world.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park

    Paperback (Demco Media, Feb. 1, 2002)
    Impatient with the constraints put on her as an aristocratic girl living in Korea during the seventeenth century, twelve-year-old Jade Blossom determines to see beyond her small world.
    Q
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park, Jean Tseng, Mou-Sien Tseng

    Library Binding
    None
  • Seesaw Girl

    Linda Sue Park

    Paperback (Clarion Books, Sept. 14, 2009)
    None