My Kokum called today / Iris Loewen.
Material type: TextPublication details: Winnipeg, MB : Pemmican Publications Inc., 1993Description: [41] p. : col. ill. ; 24 cmISBN: 0921827369Subject(s): Grandmothers -- Children's literature | Cree -- Social life and customs -- Manitoba -- Children's literature | Canadian literature (English) -- First Nations authors | Cree -- Family life -- Children's literature | Cree -- Children's literature | Grandparent and child -- Children's literatureSummary: When her Kokum (grandmother) calls from the Reserve, a young First Nations girl living in the city knows she can expect a special experience. This time it's a dance. She learns that women, especially grandmothers, are the ties that hold together the many First Nations dispersed in rural and urban communities.Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children's Literature | BCACCS Resource Centre Regular | G20 L64 M95 1993 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | T 242 |
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G20 L55 P46 2009 People of the land : legends of the four host First Nations / | G20 L55 T45 1993 This land is my land / | G20 L58 D39 1995 The day Sun was stolen / | G20 L64 M95 1993 My Kokum called today / | G20 L69 G38 2005 The gathering tree / | G20 L69 G38 2005 The gathering tree / | G20 L69 G38 2005 The gathering tree / |
Iris Loewen is the author of My Mom Is So Unusual, also published by Pemmican. A librarian and teacher, she helped set up the highly regarded library of the Saskatchewan Indian Cultural College in Saskatoon and taught in Bella Coola, British Columbia. She is now Head Librarian for the Ermineskin Schools in Hobbema, Alberta.
Gloria Miller is an illustrator, silversmith and teacher of art. Books she has illustrated include The Sahtuotine Long Ago and two series of First Nation language readers published by the Northwest Territories Department of Education and by the Saskatchewan Indian Cultural College. She now lives in Langley, British Columbia.
When her Kokum (grandmother) calls from the Reserve, a young First Nations girl living in the city knows she can expect a special experience. This time it's a dance. She learns that women, especially grandmothers, are the ties that hold together the many First Nations dispersed in rural and urban communities.
All Juvenile.
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