Year---Number of bks---About Amer Ind---By Native writer and/illustrator
2002--------3,150--------------------64-----------------------6---------------
2003--------3,200--------------------95----------------------11--------------
2004--------2,800--------------------33-----------------------7--------------
2005--------2,800--------------------34-----------------------4--------------
2006--------3,000--------------------41----------------------14-------------
2007--------3,000--------------------44-----------------------6--------------
2008--------3,000--------------------40-----------------------9--------------
2009--------3,000--------------------33----------------------12-------------
As CCBC is careful to note:
These statistics represent only quantity, not quality or authenticity. A significant number—well over half—of the books about each broad racial/ethnic grouping are formulaic books offering profiles of various countries around the world. Additionally, the number of books created by authors and illustrators of color does not represent the actual number of individual book creators, as some individuals created two or more books.What are the 33 books about American Indians? And who are the 12 authors/illustrators (keeping in mind that the number is not 12 different authors or illustrators)? I'll need to do some research to find out what books they received. Reading their website, I see one of the books they received is Joseph Bruchac's Night Wings. I haven't read it yet.
12 Native Writers published in 2009sounds too high
ReplyDeleteIf you find out who the 12 are please do share.
Doret,
ReplyDeleteI'll write to CCBC and ask if they can provide a list.
Using the Comprehensive Children's Literature Database, I searched using "Indians of North America" and got 13 hits:
Black Angels by Linda Beatrice Brown
Rabbit and the Fingerbone Necklace, by Deborah Duvall
Look Both Ways, by Jacquelyn Mitchard
Minnow and Rose: An Oregon Trail Story, by Judy Young
Remember Me, mikwid hamin: Tomah Joseph's gift to Franklin Roosevelt, by Donald Soctomah and Jean Flahive
Lifting the Sky, by Mackie D'Arge
Mudville, by Kurtis Scaletta
The Great Death, by John SMelcer
Crows and Cards: A Novel, by Joseph Helgerson
The Crimson Cap, by Ellen Howard
The Book of Dreams, by O.R. Melling
Night Wings, by Joseph Bruchac
The Runaway Skeleton, by Kathleen M. Muldoon
Of that list, I recognize three books. First is REMEMBER ME: TOMAH JOSEPH'S GIFT TO FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT. I like that book but haven't written about it yet or done any research on it. It's in my to-do pile. Soctomah is Passamaquoddy.
The second is John Smelcer's THE GREAT DEATH. I've written about him before. The clouds around him are so dark that I doubt that I'll read his book. (This has to do with the ways he is constructing his identity, and, the ways he has gone about his research.)
Third is Joseph Bruchac's NIGHT WINGS. I haven't read it.
The other nine books and authors, I do not know...
Black Angels is set at the end of the Civil War - Three kids who find themselves alone stick together
ReplyDeleteThey end up living with Betty Strong Foot a half Indian half Black woman for a while.
Many people loved Black Angels. It didn't work for me. I had mixed feelings about Betty Strong Foot.
I loved Mudville but I don't rememeber any American Indian characters.