Tag Archives: Disabilities

Zac And Mia

Zac and Mia coverSeventeen year old leukemia patient Zac says that he accepts his odds. His world changes when he hears loud music from the hospital room next door. His neighbor, the fiery osteosarcoma patient Mia, refuses to accept the unfair reality that is her life. When the two are released from the hospital, they try to resume normalcy, but they are unable to erase their minds about the other. The writing, as told in dual narratives from Zac and Mia, tells a genuine tale about a friendship that builds between two strangers. ema
Title: Zac And Mia
Author: A.J. Betts
Publisher
: HMH Books for Young Readers
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: English
Original Title
: Zac And Mia
Original Publisher
: Text Publishing
Original Copyright
: 2013
ISBN
: 978-0544331648
Hardcover pages: 304
Age range: 14 up
Genre
: Contemporary Fiction
Book setting
: Australia
Author’s ethnicity
: Australian
Author’s residence
: Australia
Awards
: 2012 Australian Text Prize
Subjects
: Cancer, Disabilities, Family, Farming, Farms, Friendships, Hope, Hospitals, Relationships,Teens

Totto-Chan: The Little Girl At The Window

Totto-chan The Little Girl At The WindowJapan’s most popular television personality, Tetsuko Kuroyanagi, reflects upon her childhood growing up in Japan during World War II. “Totto-chan”, as the author is called in the novel, after she is expelled from her elementary in the first grade chooses to attend Tomoe Gakuen. Headmaster Sosaku Kobayashi’s elementary school, which has old train cars for classrooms, is considered unusual, but it is the perfect school for Totto-chan. The headmaster’s pedagogy is that children should be able to freely express their thoughts and choose what they would like to learn. Brilliantly written text will have readers laughing, crying, and cheering for Totto-chan. The book features softly beautiful illustrations by the late picture book illustrator Chihiro Iwasaki, a postscript from the author, an epilogue explaining where Totto-chan’s classmates are now, and notes which translate some words into Japanese characters. ema
Title: Totto-Chan: The Little Girl At The Window
Author: Tetsuko Kuroyanagi
Illustrator: Chihiro Iwasaki
Publisher
: Kodansha USA
Copyright: 2011
Original Language
: Japanese
Translator
: Dorothy Britton
Original Title: Madogiwa no Totto-chan
Original Publisher: Kodansha  Ltd.
Original Copyright: 1981
ISBN: 978-1-56836-391-2
Paperback pages: 229
Age range: 9 up
Genre: Historical Nonfiction, Memoir
Book setting: Japan during WWII
Author’s ethnicity: Japanese
Author’s residence: Japan
Illustrator’s ethnicity: Japanese
Illustrator’s residence: Died on August 8, 1974
Awards: Non-Fiction Prize
Subjects: Biography, Elementary schools, Nontraditional schools, Tomoe Gakuen, TV personalities

Bartolomé The Infantina’s Pet

 

imageMadrid is a harsh place for a dwarf named Bartolomé. He is seen as incapable and worthless due to his deformities. When Bartolomé moves to the city with his family, he is hidden in a back room so as to not be seen. One day while Jeronima, a 20 year old neighbor who has an intellectual disability, is carrying Bartolomé back from secret reading and writing lessons with a monk, Bartolomé tumbles out of the laundry basket and into the path of the royal carriage of the Infanta, the king’s daughter. The Infanta gets out of the carriage and gazes upon Bartolomé, perceiving him as a human dog and plans to make him into another one of her playthings. Now having lost his dignity, Bartolomé must be dressed up daily as a dog to please the Infanta. Andrés is the painter’s apprentice who is in charge of painting Bartolomé’s face. Kindly, he teaches Bartolomé how to make paint and even allows him to create his own work of art which is beautiful and meaningful. With the help of his family and members of the painters’ guild, a clever magic trick allows Bartolomé to be free from his degrading work and he becomes a painter’s apprentice himself. This story takes place during the 17th century and explores the intolerance of individuals with disabilities while a hopeful tone shines through. cc
Title: Bartolomé The Infanta’s Pet
Author: Rachel Van Kooij
Publisher
: Little Island
Copyright
: 2012
Original Language
: German
Translator
: Siobhán Parkinson
Original Title
: Kein Hundeleben für Bartolomé
Original Publisher
: Jungbrunnen Verlag
Original Copyright
: 2003
ISBN
: 978-1-908195-26-5
Paperback pages
: 208
Age range
: 12 up
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: Madrid, Spain
Author’s ethnicity
: Dutch
Author’s residence
: Austria
Subjects
: 17th century, Disabilities, Discrimination, Dwarfs, Families, Madrid, Spain

I Have The Right To Be A Child

I Have A Right To Be A ChildInspired by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, I Have The Right To Be A Child is a picture book that makes young readers ponder about rights of  children. The simplistically beautiful acrylic illustrations perfectly accompany the book’s first person narration. This moving picture book explains the types of rights children around the world should be entitled to. It is important to note that at the end of the book, there is an explanation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. This explanation details the specific rights the states who sign the agreement must uphold. There is also a list of states who are party to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. There are only three members of the UN who are not party to the Convention. These three countries are Somalia, the United States, and South Sudan. I Have The Right To Be A Child is a perfect book to teach about peace and human rights. It illustrates the type of world we hope to live in and challenges readers to advocate for children’s rights. ema
Title: I Have The Right To Be A Child
Author: Alain Serres
Illustrator
: Aurélia Fronty
Publisher
: Groundwood Books House of Anansi Press
Copyright
: 2012
Original Language
: French
Translator
: Helen Minster
Original TitleS’ai le droit d’être un enfant
Original Publisher: Rue du Monde 
Original Copyright
: 2009
ISBN
: 978-1-55498-149-6
Hardcover pages
: 48
Age range: 4-7
Genre
: Non-Fiction Picture Book 
Book setting
: Around the World
Author’s ethnicity
: French
Author’s residence
: Paris
Illustrator’s ethnicity
: French
Illustrator’s residence
: France
Awards
: IRA Notable Books for a Global Society List, Selected for Children’s Literary Assembly, 2013 Notable Children’s Books, and USBBY Outstanding International Booklist
Subjects: Activism, Children’s Rights, Disabilities, Diversity, Education, Families, Friends, Gender, Human Rights, Peace, Race, United Nations, United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Nine Open Arms

Nine Open ArmsA family of nine – three sisters, four brothers, their ever-optimistic father, and their strong-tongued grandmother Oma Mei – move into a run-down, mysterious brick house outside a small village in the province of Limburg, the Netherlands, in 1937. The house stands as long as nine open arms. The first and third parts of the story are narrated by eleven-year-old Fing, who tells of their new school, her father’s money-making schemes, family relationships, “tragical tragedy”, and the mysterious button-chewer, Oompah Hatsi. The middle part, narrated by Oma Mei, is set in the 1860s, and tells the story of the lovers Charley Bottletop and Nienevee, the traveler girl. By the end of this unique Dutch import, all the secrets are revealed and they neatly and believably click into place. Some Dutch words have been left untranslated and are defined in a Slang Words and Character List. A Map and Translator’s Note are also included in this well-crafted, challenging, and quirky story about storytelling. mjw
Title: Nine Open Arms
Author: Benny Lindelauf
Illustrator
: Dasha Tolstikova
Publisher
: Enchanted Lion Books, New York
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: Dutch
Translator
: John Nieuwenhuizen
Original Title
: Negen Open Armen
Original Publisher
: Em. Querido’s Uitgeverij B.V.
Original Copyright
: 2004
ISBN
: 978-1-59270-146-9
Hardcover pages
: 264
Age range
: 9 up
Genre
: Historical fiction, Mystery
Book setting
: Limburg, The Netherlands
Author’s ethnicity
: Dutch
Author’s residence
: Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Translator’s ethnicity
: Dutch
Translator’s residence
: Australia
Awards
: 2015 Mildred L. Batchelder Award
Subjects
: Dwellings, Family life, Grandmothers, Mystery, Romanies, Single-parent families, Sisters

The Categorical Universe of Candice Phee

Categorical UniverseTwelve-year-old, special-needs student Candice, who lives in Queensland, Australia, is given a school assignment to write an alphabetical autobiography – one paragraph for each letter. But Candice is different and quirky and she loves the dictionary, so she decides to write a chapter for each letter. She knows herself and she has a lot to say. She tells about her struggling family, her friend Douglas Benson from Another Dimension, her teacher Miss Bamford, her religiously-confused pet fish, and her Rich Uncle Brian. She is on a mission to make everyone in her life happy and to understand her world. Candice is smart, optimistic, endearing, and self-diagnosed as weird. This first-person narrative is wonderfully funny and thought-provoking. mjw
Title: The Categorical Universe of Candice Phee
Author: Barry Jonsberg
Publisher
: Chronicle Books
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: English
Original Title
: My Life As The Alphabet
Original Publisher
: Allen and Unwin, Australia
Original Copyright
: 2013
ISBN
: 978-1-4521-3351-5
Hardcover pages
: 242
Age range
: 10-13
Genre
: Fiction
Book setting
: Albright, Queensland, Australia
Author’s ethnicity
: English
Author’s residence
: Darwin, Australia
Awards
: 2014 Children’s Book Council of Australia Honor Book, 2014 Prime Minister’s Literary Children’s Fiction Awards Shortlist
Subjects
: Australia, Autism, Families, Friendship, Parents

Wanting Mor

wanting morJameela, a young Islamic girl who has a cleft lip, lives with her mother and father in a war-torn village in Afghanistan. When her beloved mother, Mor, dies suddenly, her father takes Jameela with him to Kabul to seek a new life. He turns to drugs and alcohol and marries a new wife who treats Jameela like a slave and urges him to abandon Jameela in Kabul’s busy marketplace. Through the kindness of strangers, Jameela is placed in an orphanage, where she goes to school, learns the power of an education, and has surgery on her deformed lip. This, together with her strong faith and memories of her mother, allows her to turn her life around. This touching story, rich in cultural content, is set in 2001 and is based on real incidents. The many Pushto and Arabic words in Jameela’s first-person narrative are explained in a helpful glossary. The author has a teaching guide and book talk/tutorial for this book on her website at http://www.rukhsanakhan.com mjw
Title: Wanting Mor
Author: Rukhsana Khan
Publisher
: Groundwood Books
Copyright
: 2010
Original Language
: English
ISBN
: 978-0-88899-862-0
Paperback pages
: 192
Age range
: 10-14
Genre
: Fiction
Book setting
: Kandahar, Kabul, Afghanistan
Author’s ethnicity
: Pakistani
Author’s residence
: Toronto, Canada
Awards
: 2009 Middle East Book Award, 2010 United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY) Outstanding International Books List
Subjects
: Afghanistan, City and town life, Disabilities, Girls, Muslims, Orphanages, Taliban

Hope Is A Girl Selling Fruit

hope is a girl selling fruitOn a train journey to Chennai in India to study art, a young woman notices a very poor girl. She wonders why the girl is alone, whether she is hungry, where she is going, and what her dreams are. When they arrive at the Chennai station, the young girl is met by another poor girl, with a partial limb, pushing a fruit cart around confidently. She makes her living selling fruit. The delicate, yet powerful paintings, in shades of reds, greens, and blacks, are in the Mithala tradition of folk art, which originated from women living in the rural communities in the state of Bihar. Amrita Das has gone beyond the traditions of Mithala to explore modern Indian women’s lives, mobility, class, and choices. This is a powerful picture book that is suitable for middle school and young adult readers, as it examines both what it means to be a young independent woman in the city, and what it means to be a member of a marginalized group in a mainstream society. mjw

Title: Hope Is A Girl Selling Fruit
Author: Amrita Das
Illustrator
: Amrita Das
Publisher
: Tara Books, India
Copyright
: 2013
Original Language
: Hindi
Translator
: Gina Wolf and Susheela Varadarajan
Original Publisher
: Tara Books, India
Original Copyright
: 2013
ISBN
: 978-93-83145-02-7
Hardcover pages
: 28
Age range
: 10 up
Genre
: Picture Book
Book setting
: Chennai, India
Author’s ethnicity
: Indian
Author’s residence
: Bihar, India
Illustrator’s ethnicity
: Indian
Illustrator’s residence
: Bihar, India
Awards:  2015 Outstanding International Books Grades 6-8
Subjects
: Folk art, Girls, India, Poor, Railroad travel, Social issues, Women

The Apple Tart Of Hope

The Apple Tart Of Hope Book CoverOscar Dunleavy, apple tart baker, is missing and presumed dead after taking his own life. Nobody seems suspicious of his disappearance except for Meg, his best friend, and Stevie, his little brother. Through interwoven narratives, we find out what truly happened to Oscar and what changed so drastically in his life that drove him to attempt suicide. Meg had moved from Ireland to New Zealand for six months, losing touch with Oscar. Oscar’s new neighbor, Paloma Killealy, moved into Meg’s house while she was away. A manipulative and pathological schemer, Paloma makes Oscar’s life miserable as she fakes a friendship with him all to allow her notion of “The Ratio,” to come to fruition. Meg and Stevie team up to determine what really happened to Oscar and learn about the power of never giving up hope. This sensational novel centers on the destruction of bullying and the power of true friendship. cc
Title: The Apple Tart Of Hope
Author: Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
Publisher: Orion Children’s Books, a division of Orion Publishing Group Ltd., London
Copyright: 2014
Original language: English
ISBN: 978-1-4440-0692-6
Hardcover pages: 199
Age range: 13 up
Genre: Fiction
Book setting: Ireland/New Zealand
Author’s ethnicity:  Irish
Author’s residence: Ireland
Subjects: Bullying, Deception, Disabilities, Families, Friends, Food, High school, Hope, Love

Boy On The Edge

boy on the edge18166941Teenage Henry, with a club foot, a terrible stutter, and dyslexia, is the target of unrelenting bullying.  After committing several violent acts at school and at home, he is sent to the Home of Lesser Brethren, a desolate farm for troubled boys, in the middle of the lava fields on the Icelandic coast.  The farm is run by the frightening and misguided Reverend Oswald and his loving wife. Henry finds some peace in tending the cows and sheep, but he is lonely and desperate for a friend.  Each time he trusts someone, he is betrayed.  The prologue explains that the story is a flashback written by Henry’s friend.  Not until the end, do we learn who the friend is.  This sophisticated and engrossing story of an outcast’s hope is a clear tribute to Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s The Little Prince.  The poetic language describes moments of tenderness and also unspeakable cruelty.  It will transport you to the cold, harsh, yet comforting Icelandic landscape.  mjw
Title: Boy On The Edge
Author: Fridrik Erlings
Publisher
: Candlewick
Copyright
: 2012
Original language
: Written in English but based on a book the author had previously written in Icelandic.
ISBN
: 978-0-7636-6680-4
Hardcover pages
: 240
Age range
: 14 and up
Genre
: Fiction – novel
Book setting
: Iceland
Author’s ethnicity
: Icelandic
Author’s residence
: Iceland
Subjects
: Clergy, Club Foot, Dyslexia, Foster Children, Iceland, Northern Europe, Stutter, Teenage Boys

The Spaghetti Detectives

The Spaghetti Detective Book Cover Rico is “a child proddity,” not prodigy, because his brain works like a “drum full of bingo balls.”  He is also directionally challenged.  His wondering about a single strand of spaghetti on the sidewalk outside his Berlin apartment leads him to Oscar, who is a true child prodigy.  Oscar has a high IQ, a lot of anxieties, and he always wears a blue motorcycle helmet to protect his brain. When Oscar is kidnapped, Rico sets out to find his friend and catch the serial kidnapper know as Mr. 2000. This short novel with compelling characters is thoughtful and fun. mjw
Title: The Spaghetti Detectives
Author: Andreas Steinhofel
Publisher
: Chicken House, an imprint of Scholastic Inc.
Copyright
: 2011
Original language
: German
Translator
: Chantal Wright
Original title
: Rico, Oskar und die Tieferschatten
Original publisher
: Carlsen Verlag Gmb H, Hamburg
Original copyright
: 2008
ISBN
: 978-0-545-28975-7
Hardcover pages
: 176
Age range
: 8-14
Genre
: Fiction
Book setting
: Berlin, Germany
Author’s residence
: Germany
Awards
: 2009 German Youth Literature Prize, 2011 Marsh Award for Translation shortlist
Subjects
: Apartment houses, Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, Berlin, Europe, Germany, Mystery and detective stories, Single parent families, Western Europe

A Time To Dance

A Time to Dance Book Cover Teenage Veda, who studies classical Indian dance Bharatanatyam, is injured in a car accident and her leg has to be amputated below the knee.  She is devastated, but an American doctor understands her love of dance and designs a special prosthetic limb for her.  Veda starts dancing all over again.  She meets Govinda, a student teacher, who shows her a new way to bring joy to her dancing and who becomes her love interest.  This enthralling story of Veda’s journey and of familial relationships in modern India is told in verse that captures the fascination of India. mjw
Title: A Time To Dance
Author: Padma Venkatraman
Publisher
: Nancy Paulsen Book, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group
Copyright
: 2014
Original language
: English
ISBN
: 978-0-399-25710-0
Hardcover pages
: 320
Age range
: 12 up
Genre
: Novel in Verse/Poetry
Book setting
: India
Author’s ethnicity
: Indian
Author’s residence
: United States
Awards:  2015 South Asia Book Award – Honor, Grades 6 and up
Subjects
: Amputees, Dance, India, Novels in verse, People with disabilities, Southern Asia