Stone River crossing / Tim Tingle.
Material type: TextPublisher: New York : Tu Books, an imprint of Lee & Low Books Inc., [2019]Copyright date: ©2019Edition: First editionDescription: 325 pages : map ; 20 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781620148235
- 1620148234
- Choctaw Indians -- Juvenile fiction
- Slavery -- Juvenile fiction
- Friendship -- Juvenile fiction
- Rivers -- Juvenile fiction
- Child slaves -- Juvenile fiction
- Fugitive slaves -- Juvenile fiction
- Indians of North America -- Mississippi -- Juvenile fiction
- Mississippi -- History -- 19th century -- Juvenile fiction
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children's Book | Dr. James Carlson Library | Children's Fiction | Tingle Tim | Available | 33111009379062 | ||||
Children's Book | Main Library | Children's Fiction | Tingle Tim | Available | 33111009702214 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
From the award-winning author of How I Became a Ghost , a tale of unlikely friendship and miracles. When Martha Tom helps Lil Mo and his family escape from the plantation across the river, it's just the beginning of a Choctaw adventure of a lifetime.
Martha Tom knows better than to cross the Bok Chitto River to pick blackberries. The Bok Chitto is the only border between her town in the Choctaw Nation and the slave-owning plantation in Mississippi territory. The slave owners could catch her, too. What was she thinking? But crossing the river brings a surprise friendship with Lil Mo, a boy who is enslaved on the other side. Then Lil Mo discovers that his mother is about to be sold and the rest of his family left behind. But Martha Tom has the answer: cross the Bok Chitto and become free.
Crossing to freedom with his family seems impossible with slave catchers roaming, but then there is a miracle--a magical night where things become unseen and souls walk on water. By morning, Lil Mo discovers he has entered a completely new world of tradition, community, and ... a little magic. But as Lil Mo's family adjusts to their new life, danger waits just around the corner.
In an expansion of his award-winning picture book Crossing Bok Chitto , acclaimed Choctaw storyteller Tim Tingle offers a story that reminds readers that the strongest bridge between cultures is friendship.
"Martha Tom knows better than to cross the Bok Chitto River to pick blackberries. The Bok Chitto is the only border between her town in the Choctaw Nation and the slave-owning plantation in Mississippi territory. The slave owners could catch her, too. What was she thinking? But crossing the river brings a surprise friendship with Lil Mo, a boy who is enslaved on the other side. When Lil Mo discovers that his mother is about to be sold and the rest of his family left behind. But Martha Tom has the answer: cross the Bok Chitto and become free. Crossing to freedom with his family seems impossible with slave catchers roaming, but then there is a miracle -- a magical night where things become unseen and souls walk on water. By morning, Lil Mo discovers he has entered a completely new world of tradition, community, and... a little magic. But as Lil Mo's family adjusts to their new life, danger waits just around the corner. In an expansion of his award-winning picture book Crossing Bok Chitto, acclaimed Choctaw storyteller Tim Tingle offers a story that reminds readers that the strongest bridge between cultures is friendship." -- Provided by publisher.