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Perseverance and the American Dream
 
Perseverance and the American Dream

Perseverance and the American Dream

Student Reference Material

If you enjoy reading about characters who face seemingly insurmountable obstacles but somehow survive, the following list will appeal to you:

  • Bauer, Marion Dane. ON MY HONOR. Houghton Mifflin, 1986. The suffering and guilt a youngster must face after the death of his best friend.
  • Brooks, Bruce. THE MOVES MAKE THE MAN. Harper & Row, 1984. Black teenage boy who is striving to succeed in basketball and sorting out his emotions as well.
  • Byars, Betsy. CRACKER JACKSON. Viking, 1985. A young boy struggles with how to protect his babysitter from an abusive husband.
  • Byars, Betsy. THE PINBALLS. Harper & Row, 1977. Three foster children surviving in their fragile world.
  • Cleary, Beverly. DEAR MR. HENSHAW. Morrow, 1983. Young Leigh uses his correspondence with a famous author to explore his broken family and social issues.
  • Cleary, Beverly. STRIDER. Morrow, 1991. Sequel to the above. Cleaver, Vera and Bill. WHERE THE LILIES BLOOM. Lippincott, 1969. 14-year-old Mary Call takes responsibility for her orphaned Appalachian family and strives to keep them together.
  • Cohen, Barbara. THANK YOU, JACKIE ROBINSON. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1974. Story of friendship and inspiration woven around the world-famous baseball player.
  • Creech, Sharon. WALK TWO MOONS. HarperCollins, 1994. A young teen travels with her grandparents in an attempt to unravel the questions she has about her past.
  • Crutcher, Chris. STOTAN! Greenwillow, 1986. Through the guidance of an incredibly tough coach, a highschool swim team discovers the true meaning of "Stotan."
  • Cunningham, Julia. DROP DEAD. Pantheon, 1965. Realistic story of a young boy's struggles with dyslexia and trying to keep it hidden.
  • Fox, Paula. MONKEY ISLAND. Orchard, 1991. Poignant story of homelessness and friendship when Clay Garrity runs away from his social worker in New York City.
  • Fox, Paula. ONE-EYED CAT. Bradbury, 1984. Ned must face and resolve the problems he caused when he shot into the air with a gun he was restricted from using.
  • George, Jean Craighead. JULIE OF THE WOLVES. Harper & Row, 1972. Classic tale of an Eskimo female's survival in the Alaskan tundra.
  • George, Jean Craighead. JULIE. HarperCollins, 1994. Sequel to the above title.
  • George, Jean Craighead. ON THE FAR SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN. Dutton, 1990. Long-awaited sequel to the above title.
  • George, Jean Craighead. MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN. Dutton, 1959. Classic story of a young runaway's survival in the Blueridge Mountains.
  • Gilson, Jamie. HELLO, MY NAME IS SCRAMBLED EGGS. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1983. Vietnamese refugee Tuan's experiences as he stays with an American family until his home is available.
  • Hickman, Janet. Jericho. GREENWILLOW, 1994. Angela's resentment and repulsion are explored as she and her family take care of her disoriented, aging great-grandmother.
  • Hill, Kirkpatrick. TOUGHBOY AND SISTER. McElderry, 1990. Native American siblings are on their own in Canada's Yukon territory after their widowed father dies.
  • Hobbs, Will. BEARDANCE. Atheneum, 1993. Sequel to next title in which Cloyd risks his life to save two bear cubs.
  • Hobbs, Will. BEARSTONE. Atheneum, 1989. Exciting story of a Ute Indian teen who is sent from his group home to live with an old rancher for the summer.
  • Laird, Elizabeth. KISS THE DUST. Dutton, 1992. Kara and her family must flee their comfortable home in Iraq when they become involved in the Kurdish resistance movement.
  • Myers, Walter Dean. SCORPIONS. Harper & Row, 1988. One brother must head up the Harlem gang when his older brother is sent to prison in this survival story of peer pressure in the ghetto.
  • Naidoo, Beverley. JOURNEY TO JO'BURG. Lippincott, 1986. An African teenager confronts the horror of apartheid when she leaves her small village to go to Johannesburg, South Africa.
  • Nichol, Barbara. BEETHOVEN LIVES UPSTAIRS. Orchard, 1993. The eccentric musician's life as seen by the young man whose mother rents him an upstairs apartment. (Cassette, CD also available)
  • O'Dell, Scott. ISLAND OF THE BLUE DOLPHINS. Houghton Mifflin, 1960. Survival after a young girl is stranded on an island in the Northwest.
  • Paulsen, Gary. BRIAN'S WINTER. Delacorte, 1996. The "what if" version of Hatchet, written because many students wrote and wanted a different ending.
  • Paulsen, Gary. HATCHET. Bradbury, 1987. Brian is forced to survive after a plane crash in the Canadian wilderness.
  • Paulsen, Gary. THE RIVER. Delacorte, 1991. Sequel to the above title.
  • Pinkney, Andrea Davis. HOLD FAST TO DREAMS. Morrow, 1995. The Willis family's struggles with racial prejudice when their father is transferred to another job.
  • Ringgold, Faith. DINNER AT AUNT CONNIE'S HOUSE. Hyperion, 1993. During a dinner party, Aunt Connie, a great artist, introduces her family to 12 famous African American women through the speaking portraits she has created. Based on the artist's story quilt The Dinner Quilt.
  • Sperry, Armstrong. CALL IT COURAGE. Macmillan, 1968. The ultimate survival story, set in the South Seas.
  • Staples, Suzanne Fisher. HAVELI. Knopf, 1993. Sequel to the following title.
  • Staples, Suzanne Fisher. SHABANU: DAUGHTER OF THE WIND. Knopf, 1989. Riveting tale of a modern Pakistani girl whose family of nomadic camel herders arrange her marriage to an older man.
  • Temple, Frances. GRAB HANDS AND RUN. Orchard, 1993. The northward journey of a family from El Salvador who are fleeing government soldiers after their father disappears.
  • Temple, Frances. TONIGHT, BY SEA. Orchard, 1995. A young Haitian girl and a group of refugees desperately trying to escape to the United States.
  • Voigt, Cynthia. DICEY'S SONG. Atheneum, 1983. Dicey and her siblings face their mother's mental illness in this second book of the Tillerman family's survival. (series of six)
  • Voigt, Cynthia. HOMECOMING. Atheneum, 1981. Dicey must take her siblings to find their grandmother when they are all abandoned by their mother. (1st book in the series)
  • Woodson, Jacqueline. I HADN'T MEANT TO TELL YOU THIS. Delacorte, 1994. Sexual abuse in a racially segregated American town.
  • Yep, Laurence. DRAGON'S GATE. HarperCollins, 1993. A young boy joins his fellow Chinese laborers building the transcontinental railroad in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
  • ANGELA'S ASHES: A Secondary Unit