Youth Books


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->Arts-->Music-->Bands and Ensembles-->Marching Bands-->Youth-->51
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Youth Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Youth
Breaking Point
Published in Paperback by Trafford Publishing (2006-04-10)
Author: Dorris S. Woods
List price: $21.25
New price: $15.12
Used price: $12.85

Average review score:

Insightful and well-written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-25
This is an outstanding book, for professionals and casual readers alike. Dr. Woods breaks down the taboo of teenage suicide with personal anecdotes and a truly engaging style. She shows us that this subject, which might make us cringe, is a very real part of our world, with impacts ranging from the quiet lives of individual families to headline-grabbing events such as the Columbine massacre. Rock music lyrics, a teenager's internal tug-of-war between pressure to achieve and desire not to disappoint, gender- all these aspects and others are brought into the open and discussed in a way that is both interesting and scientifically sound.
The entire book is solidly supported with references from medical and scientific journals, yet the author's writing style makes this book completely engaging and a truly absorbing read. It is an empowering book: it not only lists signs that can indicate a greater risk for teen suicide, but goes on to describe ways of addressing them- some original and logical "do's" and "don'ts". Overall, I loved this book because of the undeniable importance of the subject and the author's terrific writing style.

An essential book that parents and teachers should read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
A subject rarely talked about in public and even less in schools. Teenage suicide is a problem that we must actively deal with. Dr. Woods gives insight into the many ways that we as individuals can make a difference in another person's life and possibly prevent another person from taking their own life. Dr. Woods explores many cases of teenage suicide showing many different view points of triggers that can lead to suicide - signs to look out for and possible approaches to handle them. It is commonly believed that depression is the sign to look for in a person who is considering suicide. Often this is not the case as Dr. Woods illustrates.
The book does not cover all the reasons for suicide such as side effects of a medication, nor does it claim to be the definitive encyclopedia on the subject. More importantly it sheds a light on an epidemic that is prevalent in our society and should be discussed towards prevention and positive action.
This is an important book that parents and adults who work children with should read.

An essential book for parents and teachers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
A subject rarely talked about in public and even less in schools. Teenage suicide is a problem that we must actively deal with. Dr. Woods gives insight into the many ways that we as individuals can make a difference in another person's life and possibly prevent another person from taking their own life. Dr. Woods explores many cases of teenage suicide showing many different view points of triggers that can lead to suicide - signs to look out for and possible approaches to handle them. It is commonly believed that depression is the sign to look for in a person who is considering suicide. Often this is not the case as Dr. Woods illustrates.
The book does not cover all the reasons for suicide such as side effects of a medication, nor does it claim to be the definitive encyclopedia on the subject. More importantly it sheds a light on an epidemic that is prevalent in our society and should be discussed towards prevention and positive action.
This is an important book that parents and adults who work children with should read.

Youth
Bridge Crew: Growing Up in the Blue Ridge Mountains in the 1940's and 50's
Published in Paperback by Parkway Publishers (2006-08-31)
Author: Samuel E. Shumate
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.26
Used price: $11.24

Average review score:

A nostalgic reminiscence of days of yore.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-09
Written by high school teacher and principal Sam Shumate, The Bridge Crew is a memoir of growing up in a Blue Ridge mountain village in the 1940's and 50's. In an era before television, video games, personal computers, and personal automobiles, the kids met under a pedestrian walkway to plan activities to entertain themselves - from building huge spider webs on the bridge to oiling the tracks to watch the "Virginia Creeper" attempt to leave the Warrensville depot. True tales of mischief, with some hijinks that were deadly serious at the time yet can be regarded with humor after years of reflection, make The Bridge Crew a nostalgic reminiscence of days of yore.

A visit to the past with a passionate author
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-11
I love this book. First of all, it is by one of my former teachers at Northwest Ashe High School in the Blue Ridge Mountains. I grew up just a few miles from the author's home and the setting of this great book. My husband's family moved to Warrensville in the 60's when he was only a baby so he grew up with the colorful characters Mr. Shumate describes in such passionate and eloquent detail.

This is a must read for anyone who is from a small town and wants to drift back in time to a simpler life for "just a spell".

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-29
I am in awe of how the author paints a picture of life in this rural community. I read the book in one sitting, I laughed so hard in places that I thought I would hurt myself. Mr. Shumate is a captivating writer and I hope that we will see more from him.

Youth
Buffalo Creek Chronicles: Diary of a Cattle Ranch on the Southern Plains
Published in Paperback by Phoenix International (2002-10-01)
Authors: Gary Lantz, Don House, and Sue Selman
List price: $29.95
New price: $21.19
Used price: $12.49

Average review score:

Nostalgic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-12
This book took me back to a time and place I have only seen in my dreams. The descriptions and the family tales are truly exciting, interesting and the stuff western ledends are made of. What a wonderful family history and place. I plan on visiting in the near future.

The current generation of Selman's offer a retreat for birders, outdoors people and horse riders. I am looking forward to my late spring adventure along the Buffalo Creek.

A great book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-18
If you are at all interested in natural history, history, the prairie, Oklahoma, or families in general, this is a book you will greatly enjoy. It 's also a beautiful book with generous numbers of great black and white photos. Definitely a "must read."

Ranching On the Southern Plains
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-18
The Buffalo Creek Chronicles is a team effort, uniting the photographs and commentary of Don House, memoirs by Sue Selman and observations by Gary Lantz focusing on the personal, cultural and natural history of the Selman Ranch, some 16,000 acres of native prairie along Buffalo Creek in northwest Oklahoma.

The ranch dates back to when founder J.O. Selman herded longhorns up from Texas during the 1890s while he accumulated land of his own in the big, unfenced cattle country known as the Cherokee Strip.

J.O., or "Jimmy Few Clothes" as he was called due to the stark poverty that inspired him to join a trail drover crew at age 15, eventually amassed more than 60,000 acres between the North Canadian and Cimarron Rivers. Today Sue Selman's children represent the family's fourth generation to live and work on the ranch.

Lantz and House spent over a year exploring the ranch from every angle-on foot, through the window of a pickup truck, in the saddle, in a wagon pulled by a team of draft horses.

During that time they became acquainted with Selman family history, the sodbusters who lived in dugouts carved into dirt bluffs, pioneers who arrived here in covered wagons, epidemics that swept the countryside, plagues of grasshoppers, cowboys with a taste for whiskey, the last horseback bank robbery in Oklahoma, blizzards, dust storms, droughts. The authors found Indian artifacts and ancient buffalo bones half buried in the banks of Sleeping Bear Creek. They rode with the Selmans as they celebrated their family heritage during a two day longhorn cattle drive held on the ranch. The men dodged rattlesnakes, made the acquaintance of a few porcupines, helped guide hunters from as far away as Buffalo, New York and watched a remnant flock of lesser prairie chickens stage a spring courtship drama that once thundered from every suitable knoll stretching from the Cimarron River sandhills to the rainshadow of the Rockies.

A sampling of some of each can be found in this book, along with Sue Selman's recollections of growing up in the rough `n tumble Buffalo Creek cattle country during the 1950s, a time when little girls learned to rope as well as cope in what was traditionally a man's hard-edged, sunburned world.

This book is about cows, grass and a proud heritage and culture seeking new ways to survive. Fickle cattle markets have prompted Sue and her children to explore nontraditional land use practices, including fee hunting and nature tourism, to keep the family together and the ranch intact.

A special section devoted to Don House's black and white photographs seeks to portray the stark dignity of a landscape that oftentimes unnerves visitors due to the encircling bigness of it all. Capturing he Buffalo Creek country on film is an exercise in interpreting overpowering horizons, a landscape that must be dissected and examined in increments, then somehow visually and philosophically reconnected to grasp the sum of all the parts.

Don's camera examines not just the landscape, but also moments of time and space contained within that landscape. In addition to his contemporary photographs, he has judiciously selected and edited historical pictures that add faces and places to the personalities represented in the text.

The mission of the Buffalo Creek Chronicles was to write the biography of a ranch that continues to defy all odds and exist under the founder's name, along with the people, the plants, the animals and the weather that comprise the character of this particular place on earth. The Buffalo Creek country can have a hard edge to it, and the people must acquire a special toughness to survive here. Yet at the same time this land can be beautiful and brimming with life. The writers hope this book will give readers a new appreciation for not only our rapidly disappearing native grasslands, but also the ranchers who do so much to preserve what little remains

Youth
Burned Child Seeks The Fire
Published in Hardcover by Beacon Press (1997-07-30)
Authors: Cordelia Edvardson and Joel Agee
List price: $18.00
New price: $4.90
Used price: $0.25
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

A book for adults, politicians, analysts.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
This is not a book for children. Rather it is a recollection of images and perceptions of the adult/child who survived the camps of World War Two to tell the tale. Cordelia Edvardson is a humanist who wants the world to abolish all that is inhumane most especially when it comes to children. She knows what its like to be taunted, terrified and have a tortured soul. A must for every policy maker, teacher, and whoever still believes in preserving a sane world.
glenys sugarman

WOW!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-09
This was just a great book. No books that I've read on this subject have been quite so compelling!

A powerful and moving memoir
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-15
The author mesmerizes you with the simplicity and eloquence of her writing. She moves you with her childhood, her courage in the camps and the power of her spirit in returning to choose life again.

Youth
Charlotte's Story: A Florida Keys Diary 1934 & 1935
Published in Paperback by Laurel & Herbert. (1999-03)
Author: Charlotte Arpin Niedhauk
List price: $17.95
New price: $366.67
Used price: $8.60

Average review score:

A page turner, a well as an important historical document.
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-19
Charlotte's Story, written by Charlotte Arpis Niedhauk, edited by Mary-Alice Herbert, and published by Laurel and Herbert, is a fascinating page turner as well as an important historical document of how a young couple managed to exist alone on an isolated Florida Key in 1934-5. Their survival reminds one of the manner in which people lived before the advent of electricity, supermarkets, running water, or any of the modern conveniences. Their "store" was the beach, where they would look for and find what they needed from raw materials cast forth by the ocean. Charlotte's resourceful husband Russ would make such objects as a dipper from a coconut shell with a handle carved from a madiera limb, a windproof ashtray from the bottom of a shell, fish and lobster traps, kitchen cabinets, and even a jewelry box from a coconut for Charlotte from their "lumber store," the beach. City-bred Charlotte learned to cope with mosquitoes, sandflies, and scorpians, and even how to scull a boat. Their island home was visited by a potpouri of strange, often frightening characters, who threatened theri lives and made off with their property. No one who reads the book will ever forget the couple's experience in the terrible hurricane of Sept. 3, 1935. According to a newspaper report, the barometric pressure was the lowest ever recorded in thehistory of world weather. Excerpts are given from Russ's diary, i.e."Violent wind squalls lasting from 20 to 25 minutes. Sometimes with wind bursts to 70 or 80 miles per hour....Charlotte is sitting on the floor in the open doorway. She saw the tide receed 50 feet before each squall, and then return with a rush. Each time a little higher. No waves visible. The wind has blown the tops off. Afraid for our boat at high tide...The roof of the old house is blowing off in chunks. I can't stop it." After the hurricane was over, the couple decided that being alone on an island had lost its attraction for them, and decided it was time to return to the homeland. At the beginning of their sojourn on Elliott Key, Charlotte seems a naive, somewhat helpless young female. It was a delight to see her grow into a resourceful, independent woman who was an equal partner to her husband. She wrote her story from notes and memorabilia almost a quarter of a century after they left Elliott Key. The first edition of Charlotte's Story was published in different form by Exposition Press in 1973. When the book went out fo print, the clamor for it was so great that Laurel and Herbert republished and reedited it in 1998. This is a book for everyone, Florida Keys residents, tourists, feminists and macho men alike; in other words for simply everyone who loves a good read.

Just an awesome book.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03
Simply a joy. I loved this book. The setting, the charactors, and the pace. The view of the lifestyle, history, and geography. It was a fun easy read that just couldnt be put down.

For Keys Fiction Readers
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-08
While seeking some new Keys Fiction I had the good fortune to have this gem of personal prose proposed by a good bookseller. Normally I like fiction, but I was desperate for a book to read beside the Gulf, and what a read it was. This is the Florida of legend, the roots of Hall, White and Corcoran can be found here. The difference is this is real. Islands with one owner, bootleggers, rum running, customs men, body dumping, good old boys and gals, boat "lighteners," conch lassoing, lime tree tending, chowder cooking and endless beach combing for demi-johns, mahogany, cedar, planks and boxes. All told in simple, straight-forward prose. What I am trying to put into words is that this is an enjoyable adventure in reality for those of us who like the fictional adventure of the contemporary Keys writers. Oh. and the wicked developers are not there yet, but the sense of their impending arrival is clearly here in the devil may care attitude many express who live in this wonderful piece of history.

Youth
The Chemy Called Al: A Novel
Published in Paperback by Free Spirit Pub (1996-02)
Authors: Wendy Isdell and Pamela Espeland
List price: $6.95
New price: $8.50
Used price: $1.45

Average review score:

Awesome book! New edition's available though...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-22
Hey, I still think this is got to be one of the most awesome books written by a kid. The first edition is out of print but there's a second edition. Check out the writer's website: http://www.wendyisdell.com .

This story is extremely educational, at the same time adve..
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1997-12-01
ntorous. The book being a great classroom utensil can teach wonders about science and math. I recommend this story to children who want to learn!

Fun and Intriguing
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-02-14
I read THE CHEMY CALLED AL and found it very intriguing on many different levels. I found its references to alchemy and to chemistry both accurate and surprisingly allegorical--the protagonist's journey itself is a journey into deep theoretical parts of the universe and the inner self. I purchased the book for my child, but found myself reading it for myself.

Youth
Chesapeake Boyhood: Memoirs of a Farm Boy (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf)
Published in Paperback by The Johns Hopkins University Press (1997-02-25)
Author: William H. Turner
List price: $19.95
New price: $11.95
Used price: $3.83

Average review score:

Earthy author
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-17
Dr. Turner writes with dry wit and intimate understanding of the beauty, complexity, and mystery of the Eastern Shore of VA.

Chesapeake Boyhood: Memoirs of a Farm Boy
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-01
Loved the book, couldn't wait for the next chapter. Easy to read. Turner has another book East of the Chesapeake and it is a must also. After you read the first one it's nice to check out his museum. In his books he has such an interest in people, he finds something interesting in anyone he seems to meet. Very enjoyable writer.

Chesapeake Boyhood
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-03
With the recent purchase of a 1926 farmhouse on Hoopers Island on Maryland's Eastern Shore, I wanted to learn more about life on the Bay. My family and I hoped this book would shed light on perhaps a gentler time, with a return to "the basics." William Turner has written a wonderful account of his life growing up on the Chesapeake Bay in the 40's and '50s. The stories are entertaining, with laughs, as well as gasps, as well as tears. My sons, ages 10 and 6, beg me to retell his stories on our drives to our new Eastern Shore retreat home. From bear sightings to pig butchering to duck hunting adventures to sinking boats in the dead of winter, William Turner paints vivid images in our minds of life on the Chesapeake Bay during a time of neighborly help and family closeness. He is an artist, and shares his sketches in this book as well, which further brings home the true meaning of his stories. This is a treasure!

Youth
Child of the Kulaks
Published in Paperback by International Specialized Book Services (1998-05)
Author: Alex Saranin
List price: $18.95
Used price: $189.50

Average review score:

An honest and heartbreaking recollection
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-06
Alex was an amazing man. I was privileged to meet and get to know him during the last year of his life. His wisdom, his honesty and his heart will never be forgotten my me or, I dare say, anyone who knew him. He gave me an autographed copy of his book and I have read it several times. This is not just a story, it's a remarkable man opening his heart, to share his experience, even though it hurt. He was never afraid of that pain, but faced it with courage, hope and a powerful love of life and the world and the people around him.

I heartily recommend this book, do read it.


Do Svidaniya, Rest in peace, Child of the Kulaks.

people which sadly decompose
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-01
this book is sort of sad but it is also very suspicious and breathtaking i think that it is really good but its sad how many people die. two brothers go to china then to australian from russia.one dies but the other then returns to russia for a visit sixty years later!!!!

A lost childhood
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-29
Alex Saranin's story is a vivid description of the first lost generation of Soviet Russia, millions of children lost their parents into the civil war, collectivization and other soviet human mills and it's aftermath. The great suffering endured by them and the waste of lives and souls is great evidence of these terrible whirling years into which a whole generation was engulfed.

Youth
A Childhood in the Milky Way: Becoming a Poet in Ohio (Ohio History and Culture)
Published in Paperback by University of Akron Press (1999-04)
Author: David B. Hopes
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.95
Used price: $0.53
Collectible price: $15.95

Average review score:

One Hell of a Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-29
Since I have been a friend of the author, it provided some clues for me as to the origins of his unique personality, but likewise obscured (or referred obliquely) to some of his more curious and no doubt equally fundamental traits. Perhaps contrary to his central premise, the book demonstrates that artists are either born to insight, aloofness, solitude, singularity, uniqueness (take your pick) or, at least, become that way before they are aware of it. Hopes seems to have been a poet from his earliest memory, and it has influenced everything since; I would not credit or fault Akron, Ohio, nor would I invoke the holy spirit. No doubt that spirit (in whatever denomination) exists in all artists. As a result, I viewed the book as a special insight on what it means to Hopes to have been a poet growing up in a fairly unartistic community. I am glad to say Hopes did not bemoan any difficulties he must have experienced as a child in Akron, but instead shows us how his insights developed and were nurtured and tuned.

A mystic and a poet in his boyhood.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-22
Hopes slices through his particular, peculiar boyhood down to a quirky, abyssal holiness in Akron, of all places, in the shadows of the rubber industry and a mile high glacier. He transforms Goodyear Heights Metropolitan Park into his "Maytree," a real madeup place where the Mother of Turtles lived and his sister became the Red Dancer, defiance herself rising and wheeling in the bitter rain. Here are the beginnings of a poet and a fierce worshipper of the things of a world most of us do not see, a glimpse of which he brings forth for us here. His prose is slick and quick as a slim-jim. He opens doors to places most of us never knew were there.

This is the beautifully written memoir of a poet.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-23
This book is a moving, remarkably eloquent memoir, an extended autobiographical essay that describes the author, the poet David Hopes. It is so beautifully written that it is almost a kind of poem. Highly recommended!

Youth
Children and Youth Assisted by Medical Technology in Educational Settings: Guidelines for Care
Published in Spiral-bound by Brookes Publishing Company (1997-06)
Author:
List price: $54.95
New price: $36.29
Used price: $24.98

Average review score:

Guidelines for care in educational settings
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-21
This is a spiral bound notebook consisting of 394 pages including an extensive glossary and index. There are roughly sixty pages of checklists that are perfect for photocopying and utilizing on a daily basis.

The formats for these charts are adapted from Children's Hospital Chronic Illness Program. Charts are organized with the student's name, person trained and position in the top left corner. The columns allow for six dates to be entered under the following headings, Name and Procedure, Preparation, Identifies Supplies and Procedure. Located within these sections are numbered specifics anywhere from five to twenty. Many of the lists are two pages with the final line for the parent or guardian to sign and date.

My main purpose in borrowing Children and Youth Assisted by Medical Technology in Education Settings: Guidelines for Care was to learn the correct terminology for the variations used in tube feeding along with the precautions and tools needed. There are diagrams that show the placements of the tubes as well as the pump, feeding bag, syringe and clamp.

Also listed are points to remember, observations and possible problems that require immediate attention and those that are non emergencies. There are step by step guides on how to change tubes, along with the clean up of the area and how to dispose of tools and waste. The pages with explanations have these listed in italic font.

The details and diagrams help to grasp the enormity of this decision while explaining how the education system handles students with special health care needs. This book is the manual to help prepare all those involved in the daily lives of the children and also adults who must utilize these pieces of equipment.

An Important and Useful Tool
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-30
This book is a valuable resource not only for those health care professionals working in schools today, but also for special education teachers who work with children with medical needs in the schools. This boook is a must as more and more students with more involved special needs are being integrated into general education settings. I use this book as one of my texts in the graduate special education class I teach at the university and my students have remarked that it is a resource they will refer to often. The forms are valuable tools that can be used to address the needs of medically fragile children. I hope that the book is being considered for revision since it was first written in 1997.

Outstanding resource for school healh professionals
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-29
The Guidelines for Care Manual provides professional school nurses with theory and clinical data, examples, procedures, guide sheets, training for delegation and monitoring procedures performed by school personnel, diagams and much more. A MUST for working with special needs students.


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->Arts-->Music-->Bands and Ensembles-->Marching Bands-->Youth-->51
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