L Is for Land of Living Skies (Discover Canada Province by Province)
by Linda Aksomitis
Matteo Wants to See What's Next/ Matt�o Et La Surprise de Rebecca (Finding My World)
by Jo Meserve Mach and Vera Lynne Stroup-Rentier
Claire Wants a Boxing Name/Claire veut un nom de boxe (Finding My World)
by Vera Lynne Stroup-Rentier and Jo Meserve Mach
A is for Arctic, B for Bering Sea, C for Clyde River – and Z for Zangeza Bay – all to be explored above the 60th parallel.
Animals Illustrated: Caribou (Animals Illustrated)
by Dorothy Aglukark and David Aglukark
Animals Illustrated mixes fun-filled animal facts suitable for the youngest of readers with intricately detailed illustrations to create a unique and beautiful collection of children’s non-fiction books on Arctic animals. Each volume contains first-hand accounts from authors who live in the Arctic, along with interesting facts on the behaviours and biology of each animal. In this book, kids will learn how caribou raise their babies, where they live, what they eat, and other interesting informati...
Fiers d'Etre Innvialuits (Land Is Our Storybook, #5)
by James Pokiak and Mindy Willett
Adult and Baby Animals in the Sea (Nunavummi)
It Is Good to Live in Beautiful Arctic Bay (Community Connection)
by Lucy Qavavauq
Mi'kmaq (Canadian Aboriginal Art and Culture)
by Christine Webster
Cree History and Culture (Native American Library) (Native American Library (Library))
by Helen Dwyer and Mary A Stout
One of Rita Joe's most influential poems, "I Lost My Talk" tells the revered Mi'kmaw Elder's childhood story of losing her language while a resident of the residential school in Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia. An often quoted piece in this era of truth and reconciliation, Joe's powerful words explore and celebrate the survival of Mi'kmaw culture and language despite its attempted eradication. A necessary reminder of a dark chapter in Canada's history, this slim volume is a powerful reading experience...
What hunting tools do people use in the Arctic? This book features high-contrast images of both contemporary and traditional hunting tools used in the Arctic, such as an ulu, a kakivaak, and a boat.
What Is Your Name?
by Kukik Kusugak, Seth Naullaq Benjamin Arreak, Panigusiq Obed, and Dominic Tegeapak
To the Gitxsan of Northwestern British Columbia, Nox Ga’naaw is a storyteller, speaking truths of the universe. After Nox Ga’naaw, the frog mother, releases her eggs among the aquatic plants of a pond, the tiny tadpoles are left to fend for themselves. As they hatch, grow legs, and transform into their adult selves, they must avoid the mouths of hungry predators. Will the young frogs survive to spawn their own eggs, continuing a cycle 200 million years in the making? Book four of the Mothers of...
What are schools like in Spain? How tall are the buildings in New York? What do people eat in India? Take a journey through these colorful scrapbooks and learn all about the most interesting places around the world. Look out for coordinate boxes--they will help you explore these places online, too!
Follow a day in the life of a young, mixed heritage Ojibwe child and learn key words and phrases from the Ojibwe language in this enchantingly illustrated children’s book.The Ojibwe people are the largest Indigenous group of Turtle Island, now known as North America, and live around the present-day Great Lakes. After their land was taken by Europeans, many Ojibwe children were placed in boarding schools that forbid them to use their native language. Though this led to a decline in fluent speaker...