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Showing 1 - 12 of
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Bake Sale (Paperback)
Suzanne Kamata
bundle available
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R233
R192
Discovery Miles 1 920
Save R41 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Spy (Paperback)
Suzanne Kamata
bundle available
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R233
R192
Discovery Miles 1 920
Save R41 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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What happens when your child doesn't speak your native language?
How do you maintain cultural traditions while living outside your
native country? And how can you raise a child with two cultures
without fracturing his/her identity? From our house to your house -
to the White House - more and more mothers are facing questions
such as these. Whether through intercultural marriage,
international adoption or peripatetic lifestyles, families these
days are increasingly multicultural. In this collection, women
around the world, such as Xujun Eberlein, Violet Garcia-Mendoza,
Rose Kent, Sefi Atta, Christine Holhbaum, Saffia Farr, and others,
ponder the unique joys and challenges of raising children across
two or more cultures. Suzanne Kamata's short work has appeared in
over 100 publications. She is the author of a novel, LOSING KEI,
and a picture book, PLAYING FOR PAPA, both of which concern
bicultural families. She is also the editor of two previous
anthologies - THE BROKEN BRIDGE: Fiction from Expatriates in
Literary Japan and LOVE YOU TO PIECES: Creative Writers on Raising
a Child with Special Needs, and is currently fiction editor of
"Literary Mama." Born and raised in Michigan and most recently from
South Carolina, she now lives in rural Japan with her Japanese
husband and bicultural twins.
The first collection of literary writing on raising a child with
special needs, "Love You to Pieces" features families coping with
autism, deafness, muscular dystrophy, Down syndrome and more. Here,
poets, memoirists, and fiction writers paint beautiful, wrenchingly
honest portraits of caring for their children, laying bare the
moments of rage, disappointment, and guilt that can color their
relationships. Parent-child communication can be a challenge at the
best of times, but in this collection we witness the struggles and
triumphs of those who speak their own language-or don't speak at
all-and those who love them deeply.
"Anna and the French Kiss" meets "Stoner & Spaz" in a
contemporary young adult coming-of-age novel about a girl, her
struggles, and her art.
Aiko Cassidy is fourteen and lives with her sculptor mother in a
small Midwestern town. For most of her young life Aiko, who has
cerebral palsy, has been her mother's muse. But now, she no longer
wants to pose for the sculptures that have made her mother famous.
Aiko works hard on her own dream of becoming a great manga artist
with a secret identity. When Aiko's mother invites her to Paris for
a major exhibition of her work, Aiko at first resists. She'd much
rather go to Japan, Manga Capital of the World, where she might be
able to finally meet her father, the indigo farmer. When she gets
to France, however, a hot waiter with a passion for manga and an
interest in Aiko makes her wonder if being invisible is such a
great thing after all.
"Gadget Girl "began as a novella published in "Cicada." The story
won the SCBWI Magazine Merit Award in Fiction and was included in
an anthology of the best stories published in "Cicada" over the
past ten years.
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Indigo Girl (Paperback)
Suzanne Kamata
bundle available
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R382
R324
Discovery Miles 3 240
Save R58 (15%)
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