The following titles have been carefully selected by educational professionals. New titles are added every year. Titles in bold are the new books added for this year. Grade categories are only a guide. Children may choose from any level according to their interests and abilities. Books noted with an * are out of print and unavailable as a reward choice. They may, however, be checked out from the CPMC Library if they are not available in your church, school or public libraries. Please note that a $15.00 fee will be charged for each book that is borrowed from the SRC library and not returned. This fee will be used to purchase replacement books.
Preschool through Grade Two
Abele's Weave by Omar Castaneda. Lee & Low Books, Inc., 1993. A girl and her grandmother take their weaves to the marketplace.
A Crocodile for Aminata: A Story from Burkina Faso by Carol Shenk Bornman. Trafford Publishing, 2004. The people in Animata’s village work together to build a dam and eliminate their long walks to get fresh water.
All Kinds of Children by Norma Simon. Albert Whitman & Co. 1999. Children all over the world have many things in common including their need for food, clothes, people to love them and a time to play.
All Things Bright & Beautiful by Cecil Frances Alexander. Ideals, 1992. A timeless message rings anew in appreciation of God's creation.
Amazing Grace by Mary Hoffman. Dial Books, 1991. What makes Grace so amazing? She'll surprise you.
Amelia’s Road by Linda J. Altman. Lee & Low, 1993. A young migrant girl finds a permanent home.
Angel Child, Dragon Child by Michele Maria Surat. Raintree Publishers, 1983. A Vietnamese girl is teased in her new American school by a boy who doesn't know her story. They find a magnificent way to be friends.
*The Animals’ Peace Day by Jan Wahl. New York, Crown: 1970 (Outstanding illustrations). The animals gather for a peace day and dinner, and in no time, they get entangled in a quarrel. When fighting ends, they say they will try again tomorrow.
Apples for Immigrants by Lois Thieszen Preheim. Blue River Publishing, 1999. The lessons of sharing with a new Mennonite immigrant group over 100 years ago prompt sharing again.
*Are You My Friend? by Janice Derby. Herald Press, 1993. A child notices how much people are alike aside from the way they look.
Beatrice ’ s Goat by Page McBrier. Atheneum, c2001. A young girl ’ s dream of attending school in her small Ugandan village is fulfilled after her family is given an income-producing goat. Based on a true story about the work of Heifer Project.
Bein ’ with You This Way by W. Nikola‑Lisa; ill. by Michael Bryant. Lee & Low Books, 1994. A lively rap poem about human differences and similarities.
Best of All by Max Lucado. In a village where everyone has been carved from wood, an uppity Miss Bess Stovall claims her maple “ ancestree ” is superior until the day a shunned willow fellow saves her life.
Bully Bill by Joy Birky. Herald Press, c2007. Bully Bill is like all bullies in the world: he thinks that because he can fight, he can get his own way. But when he meets another boy who makes friends by helping others, Bill becomes curious about how this happens. When Hal introduces Jesus and the Golden Rule to Bill, things begin to change for the better.
Castle on Viola Street by DyAnne Disalvo. Harper Collins, 2001. When a young boy hears about an organization that turns abandoned houses into homes, he discovers that his “ castle ” is on Viola Street.
Chinese Eyes by Marjorie Ann Waybill. Herald Press, 1974. Schoolmates tease a young girl about her eyes but she learns from her mother how great her eyes are.
The Color of Home by Mary Hoffman. Phyllis Fogelman Books, 2002. Hasson, feeling homesick after being forced to flee war‑torn Somalia, paints a picture at school that shows his old home in Africa as well as the reason his family had to leave.
*The Cornhusk Doll by Evelyn Minschull. Herald Press, 1987. A white pioneer girl tries to befriend the daughter of an Indian man injured in the family ’ s bear trap.
Cups Held Out by Judith Roth. Herald Press, 2006. A young girl and her father cross the border into Mexico, where the child encounters poverty for the first time. Together, she and her dad consider what they can do to help.
Do Unto Otters : A Book about Manners by Laurie Keller. Henry Holt, 2007. Mr. Rabbit worries about getting along with his new neighbors, who are otters, until he is reminded of the Golden Rule.
Doorway to the World by Ronald Kidd. Habitat for Humanity, 1996. Ben dreams he is flying on a door to many homes in different parts of the world and helping to build homes.
Effie ’ s Image by N. L. Sharp; ill. by Dorothia Rohner. Prairieland Press, 2005. Through the love and acceptance of children, an elderly woman finds new meaning for her life.
Enemy Pie by Derek Munson. Chronicle Books, 2000. Hoping that the enemy pie which his father makes will help him get rid of his enemy, a young boy finds that instead it helps him make a new friend.
Everybody Cooks Rice by Norah Dooley. Carolorhada Books, 1991. A girl goes to find her brother and ends up in different households, each cooking rice in different ways.
Faith the Cow by Susan Bame Hoover. Brethren Press, 1995. The story of how Heifer Project began.
Families are Different by Nina Pellegrini. Holiday House, 1991. Nico, an adopted Korean girl, realizes how different families can be and what makes each special.
*A Farm Boy ’ s Year by David McPhail. Atheneum, 1992. A boy ’ s life on a new England farm in the 1800's as glimpsed throughout the year.
Feathers and Fools: A Modern Fable by Mem Fox. Harcourt Brace, 1996. The mistrust of the swans and peacocks leads to a terrible fight but there is hope in the young who haven't learned to hate each other.
The First Strawberries: A Cherokee Story retold by Joseph Bruchac. Penguin Young Readers Group 1998. This legend explains the origins of strawberries, grown by the sun to help the first man and woman patch a quarrel.
*The Folks in the Valley ‑ A Pennsylvania Dutch ABC by Jim Aylesworth. Harper Collins, 1994. A Pennsylvania Dutch alphabet book about the people and activities of a Pennsylvania Dutch settlement in a rural valley.
Four Feet, Two Sandals by Karen Williams. eerdmans, c2007. Two young Afghani girls living in a refugee camp in Pakistan share a precious pair of sandals brought by relief workers.
The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein. Harper & Row, 1964. A boy and a tree are friends.
The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest by Lynne Cherry. Harcourt Brace, c1990. The many different animals that live in a great kapok tree in the Brazilian rain forest try to convince a man with an ax of the importance of not cutting down their home.
Growing Vegetable Soup by Lois Ehlert. Harcourt Brace, 1987. Father and child share the simple joy of planting, watering and watching seeds grow in the family garden.
Henry and the Kite Dragon by Bruce Edward Hall; ill. by William Low. Philomel Books, 2004. In a story based on real events in New York ’ s Chinatown in the 1920's, children from Little Italy keep demolishing Grandfather Chin ’ s magnificent kites. After Henry Chu and his friends discover why, the children negotiate a satisfying resolution for their problem.
How Full Is Your Bucket? For Kids by Tom Rath and Mary Reckmeyer. Gallup Press, 2009. A little boy named Felix learns that being kind to others not only helps them, but helps him as well.
I Know A Lady by Charlotte Zolotow. Puffin, 1986. A child describes the many things she enjoys about her elderly neighbor.
*I Sing For The Animals by Paul Goble. Bradbury Press, 1991. Reflections on how all things in nature relate to their Creator.
*It's George by Miriam Cohen. Greenwillow, 1988. George's classmates make fun of him until they have a surprise.
It's Mine! a Fable by Leo Lionni. Alfred K. Knopf, 1985. It's better to share.
Jamaica's Find by Juanita Havill. Houghton Mifflin, 1987. A girl finds a stuffed dog in the park and decides to take it home.
*Just Like Us by Hiaroyn Oram. MorehouseÄBarlow, 1987. Billy lives on one side of a wall and the other side is forbidden. What is the surprise on the other side?
The Kindness Quilt by Nancy Wallace. M. Cavendish Children, c2006. Minna does a lot of thinking about her project to do something kind, make a picture about what she did, and share it with her classmates, but finally comes up with an idea that spreads to the whole school.
The Legend of the Valentine by Katherine Grace Bond; illustrated by Don Tate. Zonderkidz, 2001. On Valentine's Day during the sixties, Marcus, an African‑American boy in a newly integrated school, used St. Valentine as a role model to heal the hate in his classroom.
Let's Be Enemies by Janice May Udry. Harper Collins, 1961. Two friends experience the happiness but also unexpected difficulties that go with a friendship relationship.
*Let's Make A Garden by Tamara Awad Lobe. Herald Press, 1995. Children from many different cultures work together.
Listen to the Wind : The Story of Dr. Greg and the Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson. Dial, 2009. Tells the story of Dr. Greg Mortenson's promise to build a school in a remote Himalayan village after the villagers saved his life.
Make Someone Smile, and 40 More Ways To Be A Peaceful Person by Judy Lalli. Free Spirit Publishing, 1996. A collection of photographs (with words) of children modeling the skills of peacemaking and conflict resolution.
Migrant by Maxine Trottier. Groundwood Books, c2011. Anna belongs to a group of Mennonites who moved to Mexico in the 1920's, but still migrate to Canada annually to labor in the fields. She wonders what it would be like to be a tree with deep roots as opposed to a feather in the wind.
Milo and the Magic Stone by Mark Pfister. Scholastic, 1995. A story with two endings. One shows the consequences of the failure to care for the earth and others, the other ending shows the reward of giving and sharing.
*My Favorite Place by Susan Sargent & Donna Aaron Wirt. Abingdon Press, 1987. A blind child describes a trip to the seashore telling of the sounds, smells, tastes and other wonderful things to be found.
*Nicolas, Where have You Been? By Leo Lionni. Knopf 1987. A mouse is caught up in the claws of a huge bird and carried into the sky. How does he get the berries he was hoping to find?
*Not So Fast, Songolo by Niki Daly. Theneum, 1985. A young village boy helps his grandmother do errands in the big city and is surprised in the end.
Odd Velvet by Mary Whitcomb. Chronicle Books, 1998. Although she dresses differently from the other girls and does things which are unusual, Velvet eventually teaches her classmates that even an “ outsider ” has something to offer.
Old Turtle by Douglas Wood. Pfeifer Hamilton, 1991. A wise old turtle reminds all the earth creatures, plants, and people that God is in everything.
On Meadowview Street by Henry Cole. Greenwillow Books, 2007. Upon moving to a new house, a young girl and her parents encourage wildflowers to grow and birds and animals to stay in their yard, which soon has the whole suburban street living up to its name.
One Green Apple by Eve Bunting. Clarion, 2006. What does it feel like to be different and alone? We learn that each person has something unique to contribute to the good of all.
The Other Side by Jacqueline Woodson. GP Putnam's Sons, 2001. Two girls are forbidden to play with each other on the other side of the fence. They become friends anyway while sitting on the fence and talking.
A Pair of Red Clogs by Masako Matsuno. Purple House Press, 2002. (Reissue from 1981) A child ’ s delight in a new pair of shoes is the same all over the world, whether the shoes are patent leather sandals, deerskin moccasins, or wooden clogs.
Peace Begins With You by Katherine Scholer. Sierra Club Books/Little Brown, 1989. Poetic style of prose describes the many feeling and conditions of peace and the absence of peace.
The Peace Book by Todd Parr. Little Brown, 2004. Each page shows a different definition of peace.
Peter's Chair by Ezra Jack Keats. Harper Collins, 1967. There is a new baby in the family and Peter needs to make adjustments.
*Planting Seeds by Patricia Quinlan. Annick Press Ltd. 1988 parents explain that, like children, countries need to learn to cooperate instead of fight.
*Potatoes, Potatoes by Anita Lobel. Harper & Row, 1967. An old woman had a potato farm and two sons. One son joined the army of the East. The other son joined the army of the West. Find out what happened when the army met in front of the potato farm.
Praying with Our Feet by Lisa D. Weaver; ill. by Ingrid Hess. A group of friends go on a special walk to remind their neighbors that war does not bring peace in our world. They are praying with their feet, walking with the God of Peace .
The Quarreling Book by Charlotte Zolotow. Harper Collins, 1982. The reality of facing everyday encounters in story form.
The Rag Coat by Lauren Mills. Little Brown & Co., 1991. Minna wears her new coat to school, where she receives interesting responses.
Rainbow Fish and the Big Blue Whale by Marcus Pfister. North‑South Books, 1998. The fish with jagged fins wonders about the big blue whale. “ Look out! ” he warns. How do they find a way to make peace?
Raising Yoder's Barn by Jane Yolen; ill. by Bernie Fuchs. Little Brown, 2002. An Amish community comes together to help when a family is in need.
Rose For Abby by Donna Guthrie. Abingdon Press, 1988. Abby asks herself the question, "Why are people hungry, cold and living in the streets?" Then she knows what she must do and she does it.
Say Something by Peggy Moss; ill. by Lea Lyon. Tilbury House, 2004. A child who never says anything when other children are being teased or bullied finds herself in their position one day when jokes are made at her expense and no one speaks up.
Seven Brave Women by Betsy Hearne. Greenwillow, 1997. A young girl tells a short story about the adventures of seven of her female ancestors including one who is a Mennonite.
Silent Music : A Story of Baghdad by James Rumford. Roaring Book Press, 2008. As bombs and missiles fall on Baghdad in 2003, a young boy uses the art of calligraphy to distance himself from the horror of war.
The Skin You Live In by Michael Tyler. Chicago Children ’ s Museum, 2005. A rhyming verse that looks at human diversity by focusing on skin.
Snow in Jerusalem by Deborah da Costa. Albert Whitman & Company 2001. Although they live in different quarters in Jerusalem, a Jewish boy and a Muslim boy are surprised to discover they have been caring for the same stray cat.
Somewhere Today: A Book of Peace by Shelley Moore Thomas. Albert Whitman & Co., 1998. This book gives examples of ways in which people bring about peace by doing things to help and care for one another and their world.
The Spelling Window by Dawn L. Watkins. Bob Jones University Press, 1993. Shelly doesn't like her deaf neighbor Seth's loud voice and exuberance the way her sister Kathy does, until a field trip and an emergency help her to better understand his feelings.
The Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Coles. Scholastic, 1995. The story of six year old Ruby's faith and courage in 1960 as the first black child to attend an all white elementary school in New Orleans.
The Story of Ferdinand by Monro Leaf. Viking Press, 1936. A bull would rather sit and smell the flowers than be a vicious bull for a matador in a bull fight.
*The Sun and the Wind: An Aesop Fable retold by Cornelia Lehn. Faith & Life Press, 1983. Who is stronger, the sun or the wind?
Tap‑tap by Karen Lynn Williams: Clarion, 1995. A young Haitian girl is finally old enough to help her mother carry baskets of fruit to market and is rewarded with a ride on a “t ap‑tap ” - a brightly painted truck/taxi.
This Is the Way We Go To School by Edith Baer. Scholastic, 1990. How do children around the world go to school? In many ways!
This Little Light of Mine ill. by E. B. Lewis. Simon and Schuster, 2005. An illustrated version of the traditional song about letting one's light shine. Illustrations show how one boy becomes a shining light in his own neighborhood.
Tomas and the Library Lady by Pat Mora. Random House, 1997. A young migrant worker boy is befriended by a small town librarian and discovers the joy of books the summer he is in the area.
*Trouble by Jane Kurtz. Harcourt Brace, 1997. The father of a young goatherd makes him a gebeta board in hopes of keeping him out of trouble, but he finds adventure anyway.
The Two of Them by Aliki. Greenwillow Books, 1979. The relationship between a grandfather and a granddaughter are described.
*Two Sides of the River by David Crippen. Abingdon Press, 1976. The author, who lives in Kenya, tells the story of two feuding Kenyan families who live on opposite sides of a river and must come to terms with the meaning of brotherhood.
Wake Up, Bertha Bear by Chad Mason. Down East Books, 2006. The animals of the forest hatch a plan to help a lost cub who has become separated from his mother.
Wangari's Trees of Peace : A True Story from Africa by Jeanette Winter. Harcourt, 2008. Tells the story of Wangari Maathai, a Nobel Prize-winning environmentalist who, shocked to see entire forests being cut down in her native country of Kenya, decides to take action, beginning with the planting of nine seedlings in her own backyard.
The War Between the Vowels and the Consonants by Priscilla Turner. Farrar Straus Giroux, 1996. In the hidden life of letters, enemies become friends and discover that the pen really is mightier than the sword.
We Can Get Along; A Child's Book of Choices by Lauren Murphy Payne. Free Spirit Publishing, 1997. The simple text describes how it feels when people get along well together and when they do not. It explains that one has control over how one reacts in both kinds of situations.
What Does Peace Feel Like? by V. Radunsky. Atheneum, 2004. Portrays what peace looks, sounds, tastes, smells, and feels like to children around the world.
What if the Zebras Lost Their Stripes by John Reitano. Paulist Press, 1998. Would zebras stop being friends and fight each other if they lost their stripes and became different from each other?
*What I Like by Catherine & Lawrence Anholt. Putnams. 1991. Children share likes and dislikes and discover they feel the same.
Where's Chimpy? by Bernice Rabe. Albert Whitman, 1988. A little girl and her father search for a lost stuffed monkey.
Whoever You Are by Mem Fox. Harcourt Brace, 1997. Although there are many differences between people throughout the world, there are similarities that join us together such as pain, joy and love.
Wilfrid Gordon McDonald Partridge by Mem Fox. Kane Miller, 1985. A young boy befriends residents in a nursing home and helps one find her memories.
*You Are Not My Best Friend Anymore by Charlotte Pomerantz. Dial Books, 1998. Best friends Molly and Ben share everything until their big fight. Then they find a way to work out their differences.
Grades Three through Five
14 Cows for America by Carmen Agra Deedy; illustrated by Thomas Gonzalez. Peachtree, 2009. Presents an illustrated tale of a gift of fourteen cows given by the Masai people of Kenya to the U.S. as a gesture of comfort and friendship in the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001.
Abby Takes a Stand by Patricia McKissack; ill. by Gordan C. James. Viking, 2005. A grandmother recalls for her grandchildren what happened in 1960 in Nashville, Tennessee , when at the age of ten she passed out flyers while her cousin and other adults held peaceful protests to end segregation.
An Angel for Salomon Singer by Cynthia Rylant. Orchard Books, 1992. A sensitive treatment of loneliness.
Baseball Saved Us by Ken Mochizuki. Lee & Low Books, NY 1993. A Japanese‑American boy in an internment camp during WW II learns to funnel his anger into a baseball game.
*The Bedford Adventure by Muriel leeson. Herald Press 1987. While on vacation in England, Pete Murray learns personal lessons from the long dead John Bunyan, the author of Pilgrim’ s Progress .
*The Big Book for Peace by various authors and illustrators. Dutton 1990. Filled with stories, pictures, poems and even a song, this is a book about many kinds of peace. Funny, fanciful, serious, and moving - it will be enjoyed by readers of all ages.
Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan by Mary Williams. Lee and Low Books, Inc. 2005. A young boy unites with thousands of other orphaned boys to walk to safety to a refugee camp in another country after war destroys their villages in southern Sudan. Based on actual events.
The Bracelet by Yoshiko Uchida. Philomel Books, NY, 1976. A Japanese‑American girl remembers her friends as she leaves home to live in an internment camp during WW II.
The Bully of Barkham Street by Mary Stolz. Harper and Row, 1963. School bully Martin struggles with his reputation ‑ wanting to change but not knowing how.
The Butter Battle Book by Dr. Suess. Random House, 1984. Engaged in a long-running battle, the Yooks and the Zooks develop more and more sophisticated weaponry as they attempt to outdo each other.
The Butterfly by Patricia Polacco. Philomel, 2000. During the Nazi occupation of France, a French girl discovers that a young Jewish girl has been hiding in her cellar.
Cecil's Story by George Ella Lyon. Orchard Books, NY, 1991. A young farm boy faces his fears as his father goes to fight in the Civil War.
Chicken Sunday by Patricia Polacco. Philomel Books, 1992. A Jewish girl and two African‑American friends win over a shopkeeper and get a sunbonnet for the boys ’ grandmother.
Christmas Menorahs: How a Town Fought Hate by Janice Cohn. Albert Whitman & Co, 1995. Two families ‑ one Jewish, one Christian ‑ and a community resolve to stand together against hate filled actions in their community. The story is based on real events in Billings, Montana in 1993.
*Coals of Fire by Elizabeth Hershberger Bauman. Herald Press, 1954. Seventeen stories from various geographic locations and religions in which people overcome evil with good.
Crossing Bok Chitto: A Choctaw Tale of Friendship and Freedom by Tim Tingle. Cinco Puntos Press, c2006. In the 1800's, a Choctaw girl becomes friends with a slave boy from a plantation across the great river, and when she learns that his family is in trouble, she helps them cross to freedom.
Dad, Jackie, and Me by Myron Uhlberg. Peachtree, 2005. In Brooklyn, New York, in 1947, a boy learns about discrimination and tolerance as he and his deaf father share their enthusiasm over baseball and the Dodgers' first baseman, Jackie Robinson.
Dad, Why'd You Leave Me? by Dorothy Frost. Herald Press, 1992. When Ronnie's father dies, he is confused and lonely, and he slowly learns to cope.
*Desmond Tutu: Bishop of Peace by Carol Greene. Children ’ s Press, 1986. A picture story biography about a great South African anti-apartheid leader. Extra Credit by Andrew Clements. Atheneum, c2009. Three young middle-school-age children, Abby, Amira, and Sadeed, exchange letters back and forth between the prairies of Illinois and the mountains of Afghanistan and begin to bridge a gap across cultural and religious divides.
Fire on the Mountain by Jane Kurtz. Simon & Schuster, 1994. A clever young shepherd boy uses his wits to gain a fortune for himself and his sister from a boastful rich man.
Freedom Train by Dorothy Sterling. Scholastic, 1970. A biography of Harriet Tubman, who escaped from slavery, then led others along the same underground railroad.
The Goat Lady by Jane Bregoli. Tilbury House, 2004. Tells the story of an elderly French‑Canadian woman who lived in Massachusetts and raised goats to provide milk for people who needed it. Heifer Project benefitted from her generosity.
Gleam and Glow by Eve Bunting. Harcourt Press, 2001. When Viktor's family has to flee their home he puts his pet goldfish in their backyard pond hoping they will somehow survive until he can return to care for them.
Goin' Someplace Special by Patricia McKissack: Atheneum 2001. A young girl visits a “ special place ” where all are welcome, regardless of their skin color.
*The Great Shalom by Peter J. Dyck. Herald Press, 1990. Another one of Peter's delightful stories shared for young people growing in the Christian faith.
The Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes. Harcourt Brace, 1994. A story about friendships and hurtful teasing.
If the World Were a Village: A Book about the World's People by David J. Smith. Kids Can Press, 2002. Imagine the world as a village of just 100 people. This book tells us who we are, where we live, what languages we speak, and what religions we practice.
I'm Sorry Almira Ann , by Jane Kurtz. Henry Holt & Co., 1999. Eight year old Sarah's lively spirit helps make her family's long journey from Missouri to Oregon by covered wagon more bearable. But her impulsiveness also causes major trouble for her best friend. Sara finds a way to make it up to her.
The Jacket by Andrew Clements. Simon and Schuster, 2002. Sixth‑grader Phil comes to an awareness of his own racial prejudice after he sees Daniel, an African‑American boy, wearing his brother's one‑of‑a‑kind jacket and leaps to the conclusion that Daniel has stolen the coat.
Jake Drake, Bully Buster by Andrew Clements; illustrated by Amanda Harvey. Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2001. Jake faces the challenge of cooperating with the school bully on a class project.
*Jacob ’ s Little Giant by Barbara Smucker. Viking Kestrel 1987. A family becomes involved in an exciting experiment - raising geese to help save them from extinction.
Julia's Words by Judith L. Ross; illustrated by Brooke Rothshank. Herald Press, 2009. At summer camp, a girl learns to experience the world more fully through all of her senses as her deaf bunkmate, Julia, teaches her to communicate through sign language.
Just A Dream by Chris Van Allsburg. Houghton Mifflin, 1990. A young boy dreams about a future earth devastated by pollution and then understands the importance of caring for the earth now.
The Land I Lost; Adventures of a Boy in Vietnam by Huynh Quang Nhuong. Harper Collins, 1982. The true story of a Vietnamese boy describes the tragedy caused by conflict.
Leagues Apart: The Men and Times of the Negro Baseball League by Lawrence S. Ritter. Morrow Jr. Books, 1995. A story of the players in the league and the racism they faced.
*A Leap of Faith, True Stories for Young and Old by Peter J. Dyck. Herald Press, 1990. A collection of true stories that are written to inform, motivate and educate.
*Lenka of Emma Creek by Sophia Unruh. Faith & Life Press, 1989. Based on a true story of how a young girl discovered and helped a person treated unkindly by others.
The Liberation of Gabriel King by K.L. Going. Putnam ’ s, c2005. Gabriel, a white boy who is being bullied, and Frita, an African-American girl facing prejudice, decide to overcome their many fears together as they enter fifth grade in Georgia in 1976.
*The Lilly Cupboard, A Story of the Holocaust by Shulamith Levey Oppenheim. A trophy Picture Book, 1992. A young Jewish girl is sent into hiding during World War II to live with a non-Jewish farm couple.
The Long March: The Choctaw ’ s Gift to Irish Famine Relief by Marie-louis Fitzpatrick. Tricycle Press, 2001. In 1847, when Choona and his Choctaw tribe hear of the famine in Ireland, they reach out across the ocean to help them.
The Lotus Seed by Sherry Garland. Harcourt Brace & Co., 1993. A grandmother recalls life in Vietnam and passes along her family's rich heritage to her grandchildren in America.
Martha Berry: A Woman of Courageous Spirit and Bold Dreams by Joyce Blackburn. Peachtree, 1992. A farsighted pioneer in education started a school for underprivileged children in a tiny log cabin in the mountains of Georgia.
Martin's Big Words: The Life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr . by Doreen Rappaport. Jump Sun, 2001. Provides information about King and his crusade for civil rights, as well as a sample of his own powerful words.
Martin Luther King: the Peaceful Warrior by Ed Clayton. Prentice Hall, 1967. The story of the life and ideas of this famous civil rights leader.
*Mayfield Crossing by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson. Putnam Publishing, 1993. This is a story about baseball, school, friendships, and overcoming racial differences.
*The Miracle Tree by Christobel Mattingly. Harcourt Brace 1986. A tender sad story, and yet hope is expressed in this peace book.
Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine. Philomel, c2010. Ten-year-old Caitlin, who has Asperger's Syndrome, struggles to understand emotions, show empathy, and make friends at school, while at home she seeks closure by working on a project with her father.
Molly's Pilgrim by Barbara Cohen. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1983. Molly brings her Pilgrim doll to school and the whole third grade learns that it takes all kinds of Pilgrims to make a Thanksgiving.
Mother Teresa, Sister to the Poor by Patricia Reilly Giff. Puffin Books, 1986. A profile of the saint of Calcutta who cared for the starving and homeless whom others had abandoned.
Mr. Lincoln ’ s Way by Patricia Polacco. Philomel, 2001. When Mr. Lincoln, “ the coolest principal in the whole world ” discovers that Eugene the school bully knows a lot about birds, he uses this interest to help Eugene overcome his intolerance.
Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters: An African Tale by John Steptoe. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1987. One sister is rewarded for her kindness to the people and animals she meets on her journey.
*My Hiroshima by Junko Morimoto. Viking 1987. The author remembers her childhood in Hiroshima, the time of her country during World War II, and surviving the nuclear attack.
My Name is Maria Isabel by Alma Flor Ada. Simon & Schuster, 1995. Maria Isabel, born in Puerto Rico and now living in the united States, wants badly to fit in at school, and the teacher ’ s writing assignment “ My Greatest Wish ” gives her that opportunity.
Nathan's Secret by N. Geraldine Plunkett. Brethren Press, 2000. Nathan's father's commitment to God does not allow him to fight in the Civil War. Although he is in hiding from conscriptors, he risks his life to save a wounded soldier.
Navajo Long Walk by Nancy M. Armstrong. Scholastic, 1994. A young Navajo boy, Kee, must travel 300 miles with his family by order of the US cavalry. He makes friends with the Captain ’ s son, but still hopes they will be able to return to their beloved land and way of life.
One Grain of Rice by Demi. Scholastic, 1997. A mathematical tale that has a young peasant girl reminding the Ruler of the benefits of caring for and feeding the people around him.
Peace Be With You by Cornelia Lehn. Faith and Life Press, 1980. But what of peace heroes? This book is filled with stories of heroes from biblical to present day “ warriors ” who have lived the Christian way of peace.
Peace Tales: World Folklore to Talk About by Margaret Read McDonald. Linnet Books, 1992. Stories of peace from around the world.
Peace, Locomotion by Jacqueline Woodson. Putnam's, 2009. When war directly affects the family, 12-year-old Lonnie ("Locomotion") begins to hope and pray for peace and to grapple with its meaning.
Peaceful Protest: the Life of Nelson Mandela by Yona Zeldis McDonough; illustrations by Malcah Zeldis. Walker, 2002. A biography of the black South African leader who became a civil rights activist, political prisoner, and president of South Africa.
A Penny and Two Fried Eggs by Geraldine Gross Harder. Herald Press, 1991. Exciting stories about Christopher Dock, Christian Krehbeil and others. They had dreams to become leaders in early America.
People by Peter Spier. Double Day, 1980. Delightful illustrations with words celebrating the many differences of people around the world.
A Picture Book of Anne Frank by David A. Adler. Holiday House, 1994. An introduction to Anne Frank's life story in pictures and an outline of events in her life.
Pink and Say by Patricia Polacco. Philomel Books, 1994. Two young boys - one black, one white - desert the army during the Civil War. Only one lives to tell of their friendship and dangerous journey.
Pink Paper Swans by Virginia Kroll. William B. Erdman's Publishing Co., 1994. A young girl learns Japanese paper folding from a woman whose arthritic hands prevent her from doing the work.
Playing War by Kathy Beckwith. Tilbury house, 2005. Four neighborhood boys enjoy dividing into soldiers and enemies to play war, but when Sameer, a new boy in the neighborhood tells of losing his family in a real war, they come to feel differently about the game.
The Poppy Seeds by Clyde Robert Bulla. Puffin Books, 1994. A young boy plants flowers which softens the heart of a grouchy old man who has the village's only spring water in his back yard.
The Pushcart War by Jean Merrill. Dell, 1987. A light hearted but perceptive satire on war. Pushcarts and giant trucks engage in the streets of New York.
The Queen's Smuggler by Dave and Neta Jackson, Bethany House, 1991. A thrilling adventure story involving William Tyndale, a Christian hero of the past.
A Quiet Strength by Amelia Mueller. Faith and Life Press, 1992. The true story of Susanna Ruth Krehbiel, a strong and brave woman.
The Quiltmaker's Gift by Jeff Brumbeau. Pfeifer‑Hamilton, 2000. A generous quiltmaker gives only to the poor, so how will the greedy king get one of her quilts? Through a change of heart, of course!
The Quiltmaker ’ s Journey by Jeff Brumbeau; ill. by Gail de Marcken. Orchard Books, 2004. Prequel to The Quiltmaker’ s Gift . The quiltmaker grows up wealthy and sheltered, but radically changes her life after she discovers the poverty and need outside her town and finds happiness through giving.
*Race for Land by Esther Loewen Vogt. Herald Press, 1992. Arriving from Russia, a Mennonite family participates in the Oklahoma Land Rush of 1893.
Remember: the Journey to School Integration by Toni Morrison. Houghton Mifflin, 2004. Photographs from the 1950s bring to life the experiences and emotions of the African‑American students who were at the center of school integration. The author imagines the thoughts and feelings of some of the people in the pictures to help us understand this time in history.
*Rosa Parks, My Story by Rosa Parks. Deal, 1992. Rosa ’s courage and extraordinary life show many accomplishments.
Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr. Putnam, 1977. Sadako is a Japanese heroine who died at age twelve of leukemia as a result of radioactivity after an atom bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima.
Sara, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan, Harper Collins, 1985. Sara answers an ad in the newspaper and moves from Maine to a prairie home. Happiness comes with hope and a loving family.
Selina and the Bear Paw Quilt by Barbara Smucker. Crown Publishers, 1996. Selina's family's Mennonite religion forbids them to go to war so they must leave their home in Pennsylvania and flee to Canada.
Shalom At Last by Peter J. Dyck. Herald Press, 1992. Sequel to Great Shalom in which the forest animals make a real peace with Mr. Farmer and a happy ending results.
Shiloh by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. Dell, 1992. A heartwarming story about a lost beagle and his search for a good home.
Shiloh Season by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. Simon and Schuster, 1996. A sequel to Shiloh. The boy uses his dog Shiloh to begin a friendship with Jeb, who had mistreated Shiloh.
Saving Shiloh by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. Simon and Schuster, 1999. The last in the trilogy. The boy and Shiloh help Jeb by compassionate caring, and receive help from Jeb in return.
Smoky Night by Eve Bunting. Harcourt Brace, 1994. When riots break out in the streets of their neighborhood in Los Angeles, a young boy and his mother learn the value of getting along with others no matter what their nationality.
Spy for the Night Rider by David and NEA Jackson. Bethany House Publisher, 1992. A biography of Martin Luther written through the eyes of a young person.
Starting School with an Enemy by Eliza Carbons. Cloonfad Press, 2005. (available directly from publisher: http://www.cloonfadpress.com) Worried about finding friends when she moves to a new school, ten‑year‑old Sarah gets off to a bad start by making an enemy of a boy, but with help works out a solution to the conflict.
Storytime Jamboree by Peter J. Dyck. Herald Press, 1994. Bible stories portrayed by animals: of peace, fairness and living out faith.
Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt by Deborah Hopkinson. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1993. A young slave girl stitches a quilt with a map pattern which guides her to freedom in the north.
The Table Where Rich People Sit by Byrd Baylor. Macmillan Publishing, 1994. Mountain Girl's parents help her understand that although they do not have lots of money they are rich in the things that matter, like seeing sunsets everyday and hearing coyotes.
Talking Walls by Margy Burns Knight. Tilbury House Publishers, 1992. An illustrated description of walls around the world, from the Great Wall of China to the Berlin Wall, and information about their significance.
*Ted Studebaker: A Man Who Loved Peace by Joy Hofacker Moore. Herald Press 1987. The true story of a young conscientious objector from Ohio who went to Vietnam during the Vietnam War, not as a soldier, but as an agricultural worker.
A Toad For Tuesday by Russel Erickson. Beech Tree Books, 1974. An owl plans to keep and eat a toad he caught for a special birthday meal, but then a wonderful thing happens.
Treasure Hunt: A Shenendoah Valley Mystery by Eunice Geil Smith. Herald Press, 2006. An old diary hidden in the cellar leads Maggie to learn more about her family ’ s actions in the Civil War and decision to be peaceful Mennonites.
Uncle Jed's Barbershop by Marjorie King Mitchel. Simon & Schuster, 1993. Despite some serious obstacles and setbacks, Sara Jean's Uncle Jed, the only black barber in the county, pursues his dream of opening his own barbershop.
Uncle Willie and the Soup Kitchen by Dyanne DiSalvo‑Ryan. Morrow Junior Books, 1991. A boy spends a day with Uncle Willie at the soup kitchen where he works preparing food for the hungry.
Walking With Jesus ‑ Stories About Real People Who Return Good For Evil by Mary Clemens Meyer. Herald Press, 1992. A collection of twenty short stories.
The Wall by Eve Bunting. Clarion Books, 1990. A boy and his father visit the Vietnam War Memorial to find the boy's grandfather's name.
The War: Reds and Blues by Anais Vaugelade. Carolrhoda Books, Inc, 2001. Prince Favian does not want to fight his father ’ s war so is sent into exile where he devises a clever plan to trick the Reds and Blues into stopping their war.
The White Feather by Ruth Eitzen. Herald Press, 1995. Based on a true story experience near Cincinnati, Ohio in the early 1800's, this is the story of a Quaker family who lived their peace convictions by treating the Indians as friends and equals.
The World According to Humphrey by Betty G. Birney. Putnam's, 2004. Told from the point of view of Humphrey, the classroom pet hamster, this story could lead to a discussion of how we all make a contribution to learning if we see the needs of those around us. Humphrey's views underscore the importance of knowing the full story before making judgments, and his presence makes a positive difference in the lives of the people he meets.
The Wump World by Bill Peet. Houghton Mifflin, c1970. The Wump World is an unspoiled place until huge monsters bring hordes of tiny creatures from the planet Pollutus.
The Yellow Star by Carmen Agra. Peachtree Publishers, 2000. The story of how King Christian of Denmark led his people in civil disobedience by wearing the yellow star so that the occupying Nazi army could not tell who was a Jew and who was not.
Grades Six through Eight
Anything but Typical by Nora Raleigh Baskin. Simon & Schuster, 2009. Jason, a twelve-year-old autistic boy who wants to become a writer, relates what his life is like as he tries to make sense of his world.
* Assassins in the Cathedral by Dave and NEA Jackson. Bethany House, 1999. A young Ugandan Christian boy learns the strength of loving enemies through tragedy in his family and the love of his church leaders during the terrible reign of Idi Amin.
Belle Teal by Ann M. Martin. Scholastic, 2001. A young white girl witnesses the integration of her public school in the early 1960's and realizes the importance of reaching out to others, even when it is difficult.
*The Betrayer's Fortune by Dave and NEA Jackson. Bethany House Publishers, 1994. In Antwerp, Belgium in 1543 after his mother is arrested as a heretic, 15 year old Adrien Wens flees with the Anabaptist preacher Menno Simons and must decide whether or not to turn Simons in to save his mother from death.
Blizzard's Wake by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. Atheneum, 2002. A survival story is combined with a teenage girl's struggle to overcome hatred and learn to forgive.
Blue Jasmine by Kashmira Sheth. Hyperion, 2004. When twelve year old Seema moves to Iowa City with her parents and younger sister, she leaves friends and family behind in her native India but gradually begins to feel at home in her new country.
Breaking Through by Francisco Jimenez. Houghton Mifflin, 2001. In this sequel to The Circuit, we learn about the prejudice and challenges a migrant family faces as they try to improve their lives and get an education.
The Bronze Bow by Elizabeth George Speare. Houghton Mifflin, 1961. This novel traces Daniel Bar Jamin's contact with Jesus and how it transforms his life.
*The Christmas Surprise by Ruth Nulton Moore. Herald Press 1989.Indians burn her home, kill her parents and take her brother captive. Kate is taken by her Uncle Josh to the Moravian town of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, here she experiences the love of peace and friendship for all people.
The Circuit by Francisco Jimenez. Houghton Mifflin, 1999. Tells of a migrant family's experiences moving through labor camps and facing poverty, and discusses how they endure through faith, hope, and back‑breaking work.
Color Me Dark by Patricia McKissack. Scholastic, 2000. Like many other African Americans, Nellie Lee's family moves north in search of a better life, hoping so escape the racism of the rural south and take advantage of opportunities in the city.
Crash by Jerry Spinelli. Knopf Books for Young Readers. 1996. “ Crash ” has always been comfortable with his aggressive behavior, until his relationship with an unusual Quaker boy and his grandfather's stroke make him consider the meaning of friendship.
*Dakota Sons by Audree Distd. Harper & Row, 1972. The story of a boy who finds out what friendship really means in the setting of American Indian life.
Darby by Jonathon Scott Fuqua. Candlewick Press, 2002. Darby stirs up strong emotions in her small South Carolina town when she writes a story for the local newspaper promoting racial equality.
*The Day Pearl Harbor Was Bombed - A Photo History of WW II by George Sullivan. Scholastic Books, 1991. A documentary containing historical photos and information about the Second World War.
Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan. Scholastic, 2000. Esperanza and her mother are forced to leave their life of wealth and privilege in Mexico to go work in the labor camps of Southern California, where they must adapt to the harsh circumstances facing Mexican farm workers.
The Fighting Ground by Avi. Harper & Row, 1984. The reader follows one day in the life of Jonathan, a Revolutionary War 13 year old, as his view of war changes.
Finding Anna Bee by Cindy Snider. Herald Press, c2007. Anna Bee and her new friends at Camp Amani Ya Juu discover a mysterious bridge to the past where their adventures teach them first-hand about Christian faith heroes - and about themselves, each other, and the way of peace.
Fish by L. S. Matthews. Delacorte, 2004. Like the guide who looks out for Tiger's family as he leads them to safety, Tiger, a young child, protects a fish rescued before the family flees a war-torn country.
*The Fragile Flag by Jane Langton. Harper Collins, 1984. Georgie knew she had to march from her home in Massachusetts to Washington, DC with her fragile flag and her letter to the president. A serious, funny crisis-jammed story.
*Friends and Enemies by Louann Gaeddert. Antheneum Books, 2000. In 1941 in Kansas, as America enters WW II, 14 year old William finds himself alienated from his friend Jim, a Mennonite who does not believe in fighting for any reason and refuses to support the war effort in any way.
Gideon's People by Carolyn Meyer. Gulliver Books, 1996. Two boys, one Jewish and the other Amish, face youthful rebellion against their traditional heritage and find similarities between the two religions.
Grab Hands and Run by Frances Temple. Orchard Books, 1993. A boy, his younger sister and their mother make the dangerous journey north to Canada from El Salvador after the boy's father disappears and is presumed murdered by government soldiers.
Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson. Delacorte, 2004. Sixteen-year-old Hattie Brooks, who inherits her uncle's homesteading claim in Montana in 1917 while the U. S. is at war, encounters anti-German bias that endangers her new friends.
Henry's Red Sea by Barbara Smucker. Herald Press, 1955. A contemporary Mennonite history story of people fleeing homes and villages in Russia for new beginnings. The story of Mennonite Central Committee, Peter and Elfrieda Dyck, and the miracle of deliverance to freedom.
How Many Days to America? by Eve Bunting. Houghton Mifflin, 1990. A modern Thanksgiving story in which a boatload of Caribbean refugees wonder if they will make it to America and how they feel when they arrive.
*Jim Thorpe, 20th Century Jock by Robert Lipsyte. Harper Collins, 1993. A biography of an outstanding Native American athlete.
Journey to Jo'burg by Beverly Naidoo. Harper & Row, 1986. Thirteen year old Naledi and her nine year old brother, Tiro, travel by themselves through more than 300 kilometers of South African countryside to save their baby sister.
The Land I Lost; Adventures of a Boy in Vietnam by Huynh Quang Nhuong. Harper Collins, 1982. The true story of a Vietnamese boy describes the tragedy caused by conflict.
Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy by Gary D. Schmidt. Clarion, c2004. In 1911, Turner Buckminster hates his new home of Phippsburg, Maine. Things improve when he meets Lizzie Bright Griffin, a girl from a nearby poor island community founded by former slaves, which the town fathers - and Turner ’ s - want to change into a tourist spot.
*A Long Way From Home by Maureen Crane Wartski. Westminster, 1982. A Holocaust survivor recounts her liberation from a Nazi concentration camp, her search for surviving family members and her struggle to reach America.
Maniac McGee by Jerry Spinelli. Little Brown & Co. 1990. After his parents died his life changed and he became a legend. Kids still talk about how fast he could run and his fame at untangling a knot.
*My Hiroshima by Junko Morimoto. Puffin Books, 1992. Graphic illustrations and story of a young girl in Hiroshima at the time the atomic bomb was dropped.
*Neve Shalom/Wahat Al-Salam Oasis of Peace by Laurie Dolphin. Scholastic, 1993. In this village and school, Arabs and Jews of Israeli citizenship choose to work and live together in peace.
Number the Stars by Lois Lowry. Dell, 1992. Somehow Anymore must find strength and courage to save her best friend's life in 1943 as Nazi soldiers march through towns and the war progresses. Life in Copenhagen, Denmark is experienced with food shortages and many changes.
*Oasis of Peace by Laurie and Ben Dolphin. Scholastic 1993. Two Israeli boys, one Jewish and one Muslim meet at school and learn about each other ’ s cultures and ways of life. They confront their fears and develop a bond of respect and friendship.
Off to War: Voices of Soldiers' Children by Deborah Ellis. Groundwood Books, c2008. A collection of essays in which the children of Canadian and American soldiers who have been sent to war in Iraq share their feelings on their fathers' experiences and the impact they have had on their family.
On Fire For Christ by Dave and NEA Jackson. Herald Press, 1989. A collection of stories about Anabaptist martyrs.
Petey by Ben Mikaelsen. Hyperion, 1998. Through his friendship with Petey, whose cerebral palsy was misdiagnosed in his youth and who has spent his lifetime in institutions, a young teen learns that everyone deserves respect and dignity.
Plant a Seed of Peace by Rebecca Seiling. Herald Press, c2007. Forty-three illustrated stories of peacemakers from today and the past that tell of people whose lives point to something beyond themselves - a transforming faith in God.
Project Mulberry by Linda Sue Park. Clarion, 2005. Julia, a Korean‑American, and her friend Patrick learn about tolerance, friendship, and patience while working together on a project about silkworms.
The Ramsey Scallop by Frances Temple. Orchard Books, 1994. A betrothed young girl and young man in the early 14th century are sent by the village priest on a mission for the village. They learn each other's strengths and how to work together.
Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor. Dial Books 1991. During the 1930's the Logan family children struggle to understand and do not accept the disparities they face in their school and everyday lives compared to the white school and community.
Rules by Cynthia Lord. Scholastic 2006. Frustrated by life with an autistic brother, Catherine longs for a normal existence, but her world is further complicated by a friendship with a young paraplegic.
Runaway to Freedom, a Story of the Underground Railroad by Barbara Smucker. Harper Collins, 1979. Two young slave girls escape from a plantation and wind a hazardous route toward freedom.
Running On Eggs by Anna Levine. Front Street/Cricket Books, 1999. When Karen and Yasmine become friends while members of a mixed Arab and Jewish track team, their family and friends disapprove. But the girls hold on to their friendship and the others learn from it.
Sara's Summer by Naomi R. Stucky. Herald Press, 1990. A gentle story of everyday life in a Hutterite Colony.
The Second Bend in the River by Ann Rinaldi. Scholastic Press, 1997. An historical romantic novel about a friendship between a white pioneer girl and a powerful Indian chief.
Shades of Gray by Carolyn Reeder. Macmillan, 1989. Fiercely loyal to the Confederate cause, twelve year old Will has lost all his immediate family in the Civil War and goes to live with his aunt and her family. There he learns that although Uncle Jed refused to fight, he is not a coward or a traitor.
The Shepherd's Grand-daughter by Anne Laurel Carter. Groundwood Books, 2008. Amani, whose lifelong dream is to be a shepherd like her beloved grandfather, Seedo, is devastated to discover that the Israelis are going to build a settlement on the family homestead in Palestine. But while her uncle and brother prepare to take a militant stance, help comes from unexpected quarters.
So B. It by Sarah Weeks. Laura Geringer Books, c2004. After spending her life with her mentally disabled mother and being helped by their next-door neighbor's loving attention, twelve-year-old Heidi sets out on a corss-country trip to find out who she is.
Sounder by William H. Armstrong. Harper & Row, 1969. This classic story tells what it is like to be poor, cold, and starving while your father is in jail.
Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli. Stargirl, a teen with a colorful personality, suddenly finds herself shunned for her refusal to conform.
The Storyteller's Beads by Jane Kurtz. Harcourt Brace, 1998. Two Ethiopian girls face hardships and overcome prejudices in order to survive as they flee famine and war.
The Story of My Life; An Afghan Girl on the Other Side of the Sky by Farah Ahmedi. Farah, the victim of a land mine accident when she was a child, tells about her childhood in Afghanistan, a country trapped in war throughout her entire life. She discusses the challenges she has faced as a result of losing her leg, and in trying to adapt to living in the United States.
Summer of My German Soldier by Bette Greene. Dial Press, 1973. The story of an unlikely friendship between a twelve year old Jewish girl and an escaped German POW from an Arkansas camp during the 1940's.
Taste of Salt: A Story of Modern Haiti by Frances Temple. Orchard Books, 1992. Djo, a seventeen year old boy, tells his life story from a hospital bed after being beaten by government thugs. Jeremie listens and also tells her story. They both worked for Father (and later President) Aristide.
Thin Wood Walls by Davide Patneaude. Houghton Mifflin, c2004. When the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor, Joe Hanada and his family face growing prejudice, eventually being torn away from their home and sent to a relocation camp in California, even as his older brother joins the U.S. Army to fight in the war.
Three Cups of Tea : Young Reader's Edition by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin. Dial, 2009. Adapts for young readers Greg Mortenson's book in which he recounts the experiences he had while trying to help impoverished villages in Pakistan's Himalaya build schools for their children.
To Life by Ruth Minsky Sender. Puffin, 1990. A Holocaust survivor recounts her liberation from a Nazi Concentration camp, her search for surviving family members and her struggle to reach America.
*Tree Tall and the White Skins by Shirlee Evans. Herald Press, 1985. An Indian boy in frontier Oregon has his first encounter with white people and from one family learns to know Jesus and the Jesus way.
Under the Same Sky by Cynthia DeFelice. Farrar Straus & Girous, 2003. While trying to earn money, a teen‑aged boy becomes involved with the Mexicans who work on his family's farm. A thought provoking book on the role and rights of migrant workers in the U.S.
The Voice that Challenged a Nation: Marian Anderson and the Struggle for Equal Rights by Russell Freedman. Clarion Books 2004. Tells the life story of singer Marian Anderson, describing her famous 1939 Lincoln Memorial performance.
The War Game by Michael Foreman. Arcade Publishing, 1993. Some soldiers form friendships with "the enemy"
World War I.
Waiting for the Rain : A Novel of South Africa by Sheila Gordon. Orchard Books, 1987. The story covers nine years in the lives of two friends - one black and one white - and the conflicts imposed on them by their cultures.
The Well: David's Story by Mildred Taylor. Dial Books, 1995. When the wells run dry an African American family shares their well with all neighbors, including whites, who are not happy about the situation.
*Winnie Mandela, the Soul of South Africa by Milton Meltzer. Viking, 1986. Winnie Mandela has endured hardship and banishment to challenge her nation's racist policies.
The Witness by Karen Hesse. Scholastic Press, 2001. In a series of poems, people in a small Vermont town tell their story of how the KKK came and went.
Words By Heart by Ouida Sebestyan. Bantam Books, 1981. A young black girl learns that winning a scripture memory contest may not overcome racial prejudices.
Zlata's Diary, A Child's Life in Sarajevo by Zlata Filpovic. Viking, 1994. A teenage girl chronicles her life while there is a war in her country and city.
Books which are out of print (*) can sometimes be found at garage sales and thrift and/or consignment stores, or used book stores. They are also sometimes available for purchase on-line.