We can learn about ways to stop bullying from teens in the civil rights movement

April 5, 2012
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We can learn about ways to stop bullying from teens in the civil rights movement

My daughter Amanda – her fifth graders call her Ms Angel — recently told me about issues with name calling on the school playground and she wondered aloud how to turn this into a lesson that would make her class recognize they have a voice and they can stop bullying. “They need to be empowered to stand up…

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A Classic for a New Generation: A Review of Nicholasa Mohr’s Nilda

April 2, 2012
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A Classic for a New Generation: A Review of Nicholasa Mohr’s Nilda

For several decades, Arte Público Press and its children’s imprint Piñata Books has published new work by Latino and Latin American authors in English and Spanish and brought classic titles back into print. When Nicholasa Mohr’s young adult novel Nilda first appeared in 1973, it received accolades from the New York Times and the American…

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Belonging to the Land–a review of Far From Home by Na’ima B Robert

March 29, 2012
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Belonging to the Land–a review of Far From Home by Na’ima B Robert

I grew up in the Southwestern Desert of the United States, the Chihuahua Desert, the driest desert of North America. I once wrote an essay about how the land shapes the people there—only survivors are left, I wrote, but we have grace for people who fail because all desert people know what it means to…

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Outstanding International Books 2011

March 22, 2012
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Outstanding International Books 2011

Celebrating the best of children’s international books of 2011! Outstanding International Books is a project of the United States chapter of the International Board on Books for the Young. These books reflect excellence in worldwide writing for young readers. The 2012 Outstanding International Books List* is now available as a Google Map! http://g.co/maps/45vyr  Cover art…

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About

The Pirate Tree is a collective of children's and young adult writers interested in children's literature and social justice issues. For editorial or administrative issues, or to contact any of the authors whose email addresses are unlisted, please contact J.L. Powers at the address below. If you have a book you'd like to recommend for a review or an interview subject, guest writer, or topic that you'd like to suggest, please contact J.L. Powers.

Ann: aangel [at] aol [dot] com
Nancy: wflood [at]hotmail [dot] com
Varian: vcj [at] varianjohnson [dot] com
E.M.: emkokie [at] gmail [dot] com
Lyn: lynml [at] me [dot] com
Peter: pmarino300 [at] yahoo [dot] com
J.L.: jlpowers [at] evaporites [dot] com

Mission Statement

The writers at The Pirate Tree seek to expose and discuss literature and writers for children and teenagers that delve into themes of social justice and social conscience. The title, “The Pirate Tree,” comes from a picture book that Lyn Miller-Lachmann once wrote about two children whose grandfathers fought on opposite sides of a war. The children were prohibited from going into each others’ yards, but they figured out a way to meet and play pirates together by climbing a tree with limbs and branches above both their yards. Like the story suggested, we are interested in books and writers that question and rebel against the status quo, argue for peace and reconciliation, take the side of the marginalized and powerless, and use creative solutions to overcome obstacles.

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