The Little People and the Water of Life by Ronda Snow, illustrated by Eloy Bida. A beautifully told and illustrated story of when the little people gave the Anishinabe people the gift of maple syrup.
View cart “Why This Place? Buy 3 Get 1 Free” has been added to your cart.
Little People and the Water of Life by Ronda Snow
$10.00
$3.50 Flat Rate Shipping
The Little People and the Water of Life by Ronda Snow, illustrated by Eloy Bida. A beautifully told and illustrated story of when the little people gave the Anishinabe people the gift of maple syrup.
Local Pick Up Available for Residents of 548 Zip Codes! Be sure to enter a local zip code as your "ship to" address & select the local pickup option on the check out screen. Each creative producer will contact you after your purchase to arrange for pick up.
Category: Books
Tags: 25, BBB, Books & Cards, For Kids, Native American
Description
Shipping
Vendor Info
Vendor Information
- Store Name: Black Bears and Blueberries Publishing
- Vendor: Black Bears and Blueberries Publishing
- Address: Bayfield, WI 54814
- No ratings found yet!
More Products
Rabbit & Otter Go Ricing
Rabbit & Otter Go Sugarbushing
Grasshopper Girl by Teresa Peterson
The Fire by Thomas Peacock
Takoza: Walks With the Blue Moon Girl by Tara Perron
Takoza: Walks With the Blue Moon Girl by Tara Perron, is an endearing, lyrical illustrated children’s story about a young Dakota girl, walks with the blue moon girl, and her Zunzi (grandmother). The grandmother teaches her, Takoza (granddaughter), through story while making star quilts, and planting and caring for a garden
The Tao of Nookomis by Thomas D Peacock
Product Enquiry
Product Enquiry
Related products
Rabbit & Otter Go Sugarbushing
The Wolf’s Trail by Thomas D. Peacock
The Wolf’s Trail, by Thomas D. Peacock, and published by Holy Cow! Press, this story tells of Zhi-Shay, an elder wolf, and a litter of young wolves living somewhere on the side of a hill overlooking the river that flows through Nagahchiwangong in Northern Minnesota. Zhi-Shay, who knows the whole story of the parallel relationship between wolves and the Ojibwe going all the way back to the beginning, sharing it with his nieces and nephews, and us. Replete with universal lessons, The Wolf’s Trail is the story of the Ojibwe, told by wolves, of what they were and have become, and the promise of their becoming.
“Forever Sky” by Thomas Peacock
Now/Here Poems by Crystal Gibbins
Winner of the 2017 Northeastern Minnesota Book Award in poetry and runner-up of the 2017 Edna Meudt Poetry Book Award from the Council for Wisconsin Writers, selected by Sean Thomas Dougherty.
An original new voice, Crystal Spring Gibbins' poetry collection, Now/Here, surprises with innovation while celebrating the natural landscape.
The Boy From Pickerel Lake by Steve Barse
Green Grass Grew All Around
This is an old traditional folksong made famous by Pete Seeger in the 1960s and is just as appealing to children today as it was back then. It is a cumulative story and folksong starting with a hole in the ground, a tree in the hole, a limb on the tree, a branch on the limb, a twig, a nest, an egg, a bird, an eyelash, a bug, a wing and finally a germ. Children enjoy the repeating chorus and trying to remember the correct order.
“Same Location, Multiple Perspectives—Photographs of water and woods in northern Wisconsin and Michigan” by Catherine Lange and Michael L. Ruth—with 24 poems by 13 regional poets
SEE WATERFALLS AND WOODS DIFFERENTLY. Michael L. Ruth says his multiple time-lapse and long-exposure images “are not your standard snapshot of a river.” Catherine Lange says her photos of still lifes in nature “create a sense of dreamlike perception.” Thirteen regional poets (from Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, and Ontario) contribute 24 poems—including several written to photos in the book.
