Children's Books for Parents and Teachers - book reviews and suggestions for parents and teachers.
Native Americans

The following books, written by and about Native Americans, represent diverse literary genres as well as different Native American groups. This selection includes a combination of fiction and nonfiction — from trickster and creation tales to biographies and primary source journals. Among the nations represented are the Cherokee, Choctaw, Hopi, Navajo, Zuni, Lakota, Shoshone, Ojibwe, Patuxet, Pueblo, Blackfeet, Mandan, and more.

The legends and myths represent Native American voices from long ago, from a time when Native Americans had no written language. These stories in various retellings have been passed down for centuries giving testimony to the power of the art of storytelling in Native American culture. Contemporary voices tell about important Native Americans in history such as Squanto and Sacajawea and important traditions such as pottery making. As you share these books with your students, they will learn all about the history and culture of the first Americans.

An Indian Winter

In 1833 German prince Maximilian and Swiss artist Karl Bodmer traveled through the Missouri River Valley to study Native Americans. Their detailed journals and artwork are the basis for this account of their travels. Freedman describes the customs, social structure, and artifacts the two men encountered as well as their friendship with the Mandan and Hidatsa peoples. Bodmer’s detailed paintings and sketches appear on almost every page.


Kaya’s Hero: A Story of Giving

This episodic story, set in 1764, explores the tragedies and triumphs that befall Kaya, a Nez Perce girl. Kaya’s hero is a brave and strong woman named Swan Circling. When Swan Circling dies suddenly while performing a selfless act, her people give away her belongings to guide her spirit to rest. Before this, Swan Circling had requested that if she died, Kaya was to be granted her Native American name — the greatest gift one could receive. Kaya realizes that this sacred gift is a sign of honor and trust …


Morning Girl

In alternating chapters, warm, carefully chosen words show the reader how it feels to be Morning Girl, a 12-year-old Taino, and her younger brother, Star Boy. The powerful ending packs a wallop and will leave the reader thinking long after the last page has been turned.


Sacajawea: The Story of Bird Woman and the Lewis and Clark Expedition

Told from the perspectives of both Sacajawea and Clark, this novel brings to life the famous story of Sacajawea, a Shoshone woman, who embarked on a long journey with the explorers Lewis and Clark. This intimate glimpse of Sacajawea as translator, peacemaker, caretaker, and guide makes readers understand the important role she played in making the explorers’ journey possible. Excerpts from these explorers’ journals as well as traditional tales of the Shoshone introduce chapters and add depth and a touch of humor to the story.


Spider Spins a Story: Fourteen Legends from Native America

The spider, a character in many Native American stories, is numerous things — sometimes a teacher, other times an ally, but also a trickster. This collection of Native American legends is beautifully illustrated by five different Native American artists and endorsed by tribal authorities. Legends from several culture areas — including the Southwest, Southeast, Great Plains, Great Lakes, and California — are represented. These legends are great to read aloud to younger students, and older students will enjoy reading them on their own.


Squanto’s Journey: The Story of the First Thanksgiving

Although the story of the Pilgrims and the first Thanksgiving has been a staple in schools for decades, the Native American version of this event is far less familiar. Told in the first person from Squanto’s point of view, Bruchac’s book begins with the brutal hardships Squanto endured at the hands of the English. After being kidnapped and enslaved in Spain, he works desperately hard to sail back to New England, only to find that his family and many other Patuxet people have died from disease brought by the white …


The First Strawberries: A Cherokee Story

This Cherokee creation tale tells the story of a quarrel between the first man and woman. When the woman walks away from her husband’s harsh words, he follows, but is not able to catch up. The Sun sees how sorry the man is and tries to help by causing various berries to grow in her path. Only the sweetness of strawberries, however, has the power to stop her and allow her husband a chance to ask for forgiveness. This is how strawberries came to be, and now whenever Cherokee people …


The Legend of the Lady Slipper

In this retold Ojibwe tale, a little girl’s courage and determination save her village from a terrible disease and bring the delicate lady slipper flower to the forests of the Great Lakes. By listening closely to nature, the hissing snow, rumbling ice, and dancing northern lights, the little girl is able to bring healing herbs back from a neighboring village. The next spring she goes back to look for a pair of beaded ma-ki-sins she lost during her harrowing journey to retrieve the medicine. Instead, all along her route, wherever …


The Long March

In 1847 a group of Choctaw Indians collected $170 toward the relief of Ireland’s potato famine. This story is a fictionalized account of that little-known real event. Choona, now an old man, relates this story from his boyhood. Although 14-year-old Choona knew that his people had been forced to march from their homelands in Mississippi to Indian Territory, now the state of Oklahoma, the adults did not speak about this tragic event to their children. Then, during a tribal meeting, where the Choctaw meet to discuss sending relief to the …


When Clay Sings

In this Byrd Baylor prose-poem classic, Indian children in the Southwest make a game of collecting pieces of ancient pottery and trying to fit the pieces together. Their parents remind them to treat the clay with respect because “every piece of clay is a piece of someone’s life” and every piece “has its own small voice and sings in its own way.” As the children carefully touch the pieces of clay, they listen for the songs they sing and think about the hands that shaped them. And as they examine …