Book Descriptions
for Home to Medicine Mountain by Chiori Santiago and Judith Lowry
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
This picture book recounts one experience of the many endured by children who were made to attend a boarding school for Indian youth. This one took place during the 1930s in California. That was not the only place or time in which Indian children were separated from their families and made to attend U.S. government-operated schools hundreds of miles from their homes. The basis of this picture story rests in the actual life events of Lowry's father and uncle as boys, Stanley and Benny Len, who were completely cut off from their people, birth language, and value system. They were punished if they forgot to speak English, and the punishment was probably more harsh than the wooden ruler pictured here. When these boys learned that they had no way to get home for the summer and, instead, would have to stay at school and work, they used their ingenuity and courage to come up with a way to get home. A color photo of Lowry's father and uncle as men today concludes the story of how these two boys from the Mountain Maidu tribe actually did ride on the top of a railroad car all the way to Medicine Mountain in order to return home. The story for younger children only touches lightly on the surface of the Indian boarding school experience, an experience that inflicted deep pain and lifelong trauma on thousands and that is sometimes referred in other accounts as an attempt at genocide. (Ages 6-9)
CCBC Choices 1998. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 1998. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Documentation concise rédigée dans un style simple, à vocabulaire répétitif, sur un thème précis. L'auteur décrit la physiologie, les habitudes et les comportements des serpents. Les illustrations abondantes et bien choisies facilitent la compréhension du texte. Grosse typographie.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.