c1998.
Photographs and text present the experiences and way of life of Tlingit, Athabascan, Yupik, and other Native American children in the villages, c
Book
©1983.
Twelve-year-old Esther Atoolik tells of the last winter her people spent on King Island, Alaska, in the early 1960's.
Book
2001.
Traces the life of Neeluk and his family through one year in the 1800s in the Arctic land that would later become the state of Alaska.
Book
c1992.
1st ed.
A ten-year-old Eskimo (Inupiat) boy who lives far north of the Arctic Circle describes his family's annual spring trip to their camp, where they
Book
c1994.
1st ed.
A young Eskimo girl witnesses the changing seasons in Alaska.
Book
©1970.
Although everyone thought Ootah too young to hunt, he brought home a walrus when the rest of the hunters returned empty-handed.
Regular print
c1984.
Examines over a dozen different types of snow and snowy conditions through the vocabulary of the Inuit people of Alaska. Discusses the physical p
Book
c1988.
Pica's mittens are always turning up in strange places, but when he finds them keeping the newborn puppies warm in their box, he decides to leave
Book
©1985.
1st ed.
Eskimos help a priest stranded on a freighter in the Bering Sea to reach their island village in time to celebrate Christmas.
Book
©2002.
Twelve-year-old Minuk's traditional Eskimo way of life is changed forever in 1892 with the arrival of Christian missionaries.
Regular print
©1986.
A charming story about a timid eskimo boy who takes a step closer to manhood with the aid of his wise grandfather and a dreamtime vision of a Woo
Book
c1990.
1st ed.
Sent out by his grandmother to find food, Amik consumes a series of animals of ever-increasing size and brings back more than he thinks.
Book