Braille Book Review, Vol. 67, No. 1, Jan-Feb 1998 Braille Book Review January-February 1998 Volume 67, Number 1 _Braille Book Review_ is published bimonthly in large-print, braille, and computer diskette formats and distributed free to blind and physically handicapped individuals who participate in the Library of Congress free reading program. It lists braille magazines and books available through a network of cooperating libraries. The braille edition also lists recorded books, giving abbreviated annotations. News about library services is featured in both editions. The annotated list in this issue is limited to titles recently added to the national collection, which contains thousands of fiction and nonfiction titles, including classics, biographies, gothics, mysteries, and how-to and self-help guides. To learn more about the wide range of books in the national collection, readers may order catalogs and subject bibliographies from cooperating libraries. Librarians can check other resources for titles and answer requests for special materials. Readers can receive _Braille Book Review_ and other information through the Internet by accessing the the NLS home page at http://www.loc.gov/nls. To order books or for subscription changes, contact your local cooperating library. Correspondence regarding editorial matters should be sent to Publications and Media Section, National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20542. Library of Congress, Washington 1998 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 53-31800 ISSN 0006-873X Contents: In Brief Books for Adults Nonfiction Fiction Books for Children Nonfiction Fiction Braille Magazines ### _In Brief_ _Group calls for revision of Nemeth materials_ A needs assessment group has called for the revision of the current course and examination used to certify transcribers in the Nemeth (mathematics) braille code. The group, which met in September 1997, convened to review the course and the test for the purpose of increasing the number of competent certified Nemeth transcribers. Though the Library of Congress has been certifying transcribers in the math braille code since 1981, there are fewer than two hundred certified Nemeth transcribers in the country. Participants agreed that revising the course will make a difference. Participating in the meeting were Von Eulert, Braille Authority of North America (BANA) Nemeth Technical Committee Chair; Joanne Baldwin, National Braille Association (NBA); Elinor Savage, California Transcribers and Educators of the Visually Handicapped (CTEVH); Marcia Leibowitz, NLS Nemeth braille advisor; and Mary Lou Stark, acting head, NLS Braille Development Section. Changes to be effective immediately are that: * students will no longer have to use unpunched paper for the lessons and certification test, nor will they have to make maximum use of each braille line. * transcribers may divide words and present material according to ease of use by the reader. * a standard line length of forty cells will be required, regardless of the means of production (slate, brailler, or computer). * students will be permitted to use all computer programs for this course--direct input and translation--with the continued requirement that the final product be of high quality. * while the majority of lessons and all certification tests must be submitted in hardcopy braille, an occasional lesson may be submitted in ASCII or simulated braille (simbraille). The group also recommended dropping the require-ment for students who take the course locally to submit the last four lessons to NLS prior to taking the certification test. Instead, transcribers who request to take the certification test must include a letter from their instructor verifying the student's successful completion of the course. The revision process will begin with developing new certification tests. Once completed, four comparable tests will be composed to ensure overall effectiveness. Supplemental materials will then be developed to be used with the current instruction manual to (1) clarify confusing information; (2) provide basic instruction in textbook format to prepare materials in Nemeth code; (3) introduce material covered in code changes; (4) provide unit reviews for every three or four lessons; and (5) provide a self-test consisting of approximately fifteen pages of Nemeth braille. Materials will also include simbraille answers for the unit reviews and a self-test in the back of the supplement. Local instructors may receive copies of the supplemental materials as they are developed by contacting NLS. They may also be obtained from Marcia Leibowitz, 10960 Beach Boulevard, #269, Jacksonville, FL 32246; telephone (904) 645-0440. For a long-term solution, the group recommends that NLS write a new instruction manual incorporating many of the elements of the supplementary materials. An advisory committee will continue to function throughout the process of developing the supplemental materials and revising the instruction manual. _National Literary Braille Competency Test moves forward_ An NLS-commissioned group has completed studying the requirements for effectively teaching braille to children and adults. The analysis revealed that teachers need knowledge of (1) the basic rules of braille, (2) contractions, (3) commonly used composition signs and punctuation, (4) infrequently used composition signs and punctuation, and (5) formatting. It also showed that teachers must be skilled in reading and writing braille and using braille equipment The study included approximately seventy-five teachers--both blind and sighted--who work in itinerant, residential, and rehabilitation settings and represented a broad range of educational, geographical, and socioeconomic environments. The Human Resources Research Organization (HumRRO) was contracted to do the validation study of the national braille competency test for teachers in October 1996. NLS began administering the test, which was prepared at the request of several organizations of and for the blind, in 1994. Remaining steps in the first phase of the study include linking the identified knowledge and skills to tasks involved in teaching braille, validating the test content, recommending changes to the content and administration of the test, evaluating the revised test, and determining passing scores. Completion of the study is slated for 1999. Two hundred persons who have not previously taken the test are needed for the next phase in the process-- evaluating the reliability of test results based on the administration of four comparable examinations. Individuals interested in participating should contact Dr. Deirdre Knapp, Project Manager, Human Resources Research Organization, 66 Canal Center Plaza, Suite 400, Alexandria, VA 22314; (703) 549-3611. For more information about the competency test or other programs offered by the Braille Development Section, write to the Braille Development Section, National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20542; call toll-free 800-424-8567; or e-mail msta@loc.gov. _The following information is reprinted from _Talking Book Topics January-March 1998._ _New Catalogs of Recorded Books Published_ Two new large-print catalogs listing books recorded by the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS) will soon be available to readers. _Cassette Books 1997_ describes cassette books for adults produced by NLS during the past year. _For Younger Readers 1996-1997_ lists recorded and braille children's books added to the NLS collection during the past two years. Both catalogs list books by subject categories and include forms for ordering selections from cooperating libraries. Later this year, _Cassette Books_ will also be produced on flexible disc, and _For Younger Readers_ will be produced on cassette. The catalogs are being sent directly to patrons who ordered them on their annual publication order forms. They can also be ordered from your cooperating library. Cassette versions of these catalogs will be available on loan at a later date. _Magazine Changes Begin_ NLS reminds patrons that many new magazine titles have been recently added to the program. The complete list appears in the Magazines section of this issue and includes information about the number of issues per year and format of each title. _Magazine of the Month for Young Adults Announced_ A new program offers young adult readers a sampling of magazines not otherwise available through the NLS program. Subscribers to Magazine of the Month for Young Adults receive a different flexible-disc magazine each month. This program is a result of recommendations from a committee that studied ways to improve the NLS magazine program. For a free subscription to Magazine of the Month for Young Adults, contact your local cooperating library. Although the selections are subject to change, readers may receive some of the following magazines this year. _Amazing Stories_ (science fiction, fantasy, and horror stories) _Backpacker: The Magazine of Wilderness Travel_ (outdoor sports and activities) _Careers and Colleges_ (careers, employment, and education information) _CD Review_ (features on performers, record labels, trends in audio equipment, and music reviews) _Funny Times_ (humorous tales, satire, and jokes) _Listen_ (promotes health and self-esteem) _Louis L'Amour Western Magazine_ (stories about the old West and Native Americans) _Quill and Scroll_ (articles on high school journalism and advertising) _The Source: The Magazine of Hip-Hop Music, Culture, and Politics_ (news, reviews, and opinions on rap and hip-hop music and culture) _'Teen_ (fashion, dating, and timely issues for teenage girls) _360 Degrees_ (topics such as racism, drugs and alcohol, and rap music) _YM: Young and Modern_ (beauty and fashion, personalities, and advice) _Magazine of the Month for Adults Continues_ Adult readers may sample magazines through the Magazine of the Month program. NLS offers readers a different flexible-disc magazine each month. For a free subscription to Magazine of the Month, contact your local cooperating library. Although the selections are subject to change, readers may receive some of the following magazines this year. _Emerge: Our Voice in Today's World_ (news and issues from an African American perspective) _Family Circle_ (decorating, food preparation, health and fitness, and time-saving tips) _Food and Wine_ (recipes and articles on culinary trends and topics) _Foreign Affairs_ (foreign policy and world affairs journal) _GQ: Gentlemen's Quarterly_ (fashion, travel, and dining for young men) _Health_ (articles on staying healthy and fit) _Inc. Technology_ (information on small-business management) _Natural History_ (reports on biological, natural, and earth sciences) _Organic Gardening_ (flower and vegetable gardening and environmental issues) _PC Magazine_ (trends in hardware and software for computer users) _Redbook_ (romance, family life, and beauty and fashion) _Today's Homeowner_ (home improvements, working with contractors, and yard care) ### _Books for Adults_ Books listed in this issue of _Braille Book Review_ were recently sent to cooperating libraries. The complete collection contains books by many authors on fiction and nonfiction subjects, including biographies, classics, gothics, mysteries, romances, and others. Contact your cooperating library to learn more about the wide range of books available in the collection. To order books, contact your cooperating library. Note: For the information of the reader, a notice may appear immediately following the book description to indicate occurrences of strong language, explicit descriptions of sex, or violence. The word "some" before any of these terms indicates an occasional or infrequent occurrence, as in "some strong language." ### _Nonfiction_ The Weaving, Spinning, and Dyeing Book. BR 10491. by Rachel Brown. 7 volumes. Describes different looms and their uses, items needed to set up and weave, and projects for each loom. Loom types include the inkle, Hopi belt, backstrap, Navajo, and treadle. Also includes instructions for spinning and dyeing yarn, tips on making a living as a weaver, a list of suppliers, and a glossary. 1983. BR 10491. ## The Five Books of Moses: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy; the Schocken Bible, Volume 1. BR 10508. translated by Everett Fox. 10 volumes. In this first volume of a new translation, Fox uses as his base the German translation done by Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig between 1925 and 1962. Guided by the principle that the Hebrew Bible was meant to be read aloud, Fox renders a poetic version with careful attention to rhythm and sound. Includes commentaries and notes. 1995. BR 10508. ## Cub Scout Leader Book. BR 10606. by Boy Scouts of America. 4 volumes. Qualifications and responsibilities for Cub Scout leaders. Describes the Cub Scout program and includes instructions on teaching Cub Scout basics and ideals. 1982. BR 10606. ## The Scott, Foresman _Robert's Rules_ _of Order_ Newly Revised. BR 10608. by Henry M. Robert. 6 volumes. First published in 1876, this manual of parliamentary procedure serves as the country's recognized guide to running and taking effective part in meetings. Revised and modernized. 1990. BR 10608. ## Sports, Everyone! Recreation and Sports for the Physically Challenged of All Ages. BR 10738. . read by 3 volumes. Includes directories of clubs, camps, and associations for people with various kinds of disabilities; descriptions of premier recreation and sports programs at American universities; tips on travel and tourism; regional contact listings for wheelchair basketball; and profiles of noteworthy disabled athletes. 1995.. Directory of sports and recreation for the disabled. BR 10738. ## I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What It Was: How to Discover What You Really Want and How to Get It. BR 10756. by Barbara Sher. 3 volumes. This sequel to _Wishcraft (BR 4309)_ offers practical advice and techniques for discovering one's true likes and aspirations and for overcoming common obstacles to finding and living the "good life." 1994. BR 10756. ## The Idylls. BR 10770. by Theocritus. 2 volumes. English translations of verse by Theocritus, a Greek born in Sicily around 300 B.C. His works range from bucolic idylls depicting the simple lives of country herdsmen, to mythological narratives, to accounts of urban affairs in the city of Alexandria. These poems helped inspire the development of later European literature. 1988. BR 10770. ## Baking with Julia: Based on the PBS Series Hosted by Julia Child. BR 10810. by Dorie Greenspan. 6 volumes. From the Master Chefs PBS series, a collection of more than 250 recipes from some of America's best bakers, written in everyday language and using family-size proportions. Bakers include Marion Cunningham, Mary Bergin, David Blom, Joe Ortiz, Nancy Silverton, and others. Bestseller 1996. BR 10810. ## A Handmade Wilderness. BR 10815. by Don Schueler. 2 volumes. In 1968, Schueler and his companion, Willie Brown, set out to homestead the "least worst land" they could find. Schueler recounts their twenty-five-year struggle to restore a despoiled eighty-acre tract in southern Mississippi and tells of Brown's death from AIDS in 1987. 1996. BR 10815. ## Crossing the Moon: A Journey through Infertility. BR 10824. by Paulette Bates Alden. 2 volumes. A writer reflects on her life and tells of the stages she went through to come to terms with her infertility. Alden waited until her late thirties to try to get pregnant, then realized it would not happen naturally and began a long series of medical tests and treatments. 1996. BR 10824. ## The Jazz Age. BR 10826. by F. Scott Fitzgerald. 1 volume. Five autobiographical essays depicting the exuberant, sybaritic years of the Jazz Age. Written during the Great Depression, the stories wistfully reflect on the excesses and abandon of the 1920s with a sense of disappointment, passing youth, and paradise lost. 1996. BR 10826. ## Fragments: Memories of a Childhood, 1939-1948. BR 10827. by Binjamin Wilkomirski. 1 volume. A man's memoir of his early boyhood experiences in Nazi death camps. Recounts his father's cruel death, his separation from family, the terror and suffering of his internment, and his deliverance to a Swiss orphanage. Violence. 1996. BR 10827. ## Sun under Wood: New Poems. BR 10828. by Robert Hass. 1 volume. In this collection of twenty poems by the 1995 U.S. poet laureate, Hass explores such themes as nature in "Dragonflies Mating," solitude in "Regalia for a Black Hat Dancer," language in "English: An Ode," and the fragility of human relationships in "Faint Music." Some strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1996. BR 10828. ## Anatomy of Restlessness: Selected Writings 1969-1989. BR 10840. by Bruce Chatwin. 2 volumes. Seventeen pieces--essays, short stories, book reviews, and writings on travel--by the noted journalist and author. Chatwin explores themes of nomadism and exile in "I Always Wanted to Go to Patagonia," "The Attractions of France," "Bedouins," and "The Nomadic Alternative." Some strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1996. BR 10840. ## Aftermath: The Remnants of War. BR 10841. by Donovan Webster. 2 volumes. Depicts the enduring, harmful remains of twentieth-century wars, including unexploded mines and artillery shells, radioactive soil and water, and bomb-ravaged landscapes. Assesses inventor Alfred Nobel's dynamite and other efficient explosives for their role in amplifying the devastation of modern warfare. 1996. BR 10841. ## The Children of Perestroika: Moscow Teenagers Talk about Their Lives and the Future. BR 10842. by Deborah Adelman. 3 volumes. Interviews conducted in 1989 with eleven Moscow teenagers from various educational and socioeconomic backgrounds. These youths discuss their concerns about the tremendous social, political, and economic upheaval brought on by Gorbachev's sweeping reforms. For senior high and older readers. 1992. BR 10842. ## Aftermath: Travels in a Post-War World. BR 10843. by Farley Mowat. 2 volumes. In 1953 a Canadian army veteran of World War II retraces the route of his old regiment through England, France, and Italy. Amid the bucolic tranquillity of the postwar countryside, he recalls the horror and carnage that he witnessed. He marvels at the resilience of the people who have reclaimed their lives. Violence. 1996. BR 10843. ## For Love of Country: Debating the Limits of Patriotism. BR 10855. by Martha C. Nussbaum. 2 volumes. Explores the philosophical debate over patriotism versus global view. The author's initial essay states that our responsibilities as "citizens of the world" supersede national allegiances. Fifteen scholars provide responses to her thesis. 1996. BR 10855. ## Light in My Darkness. BR 10856. by Helen Keller. 1 volume. Editor Ray Silverman revised and enlarged this edition of _My Religion (BR 4072)_. Keller describes the influence that the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg had on her life from the age of sixteen. Keller wrote some of the passages as early as 1903. The original work was published in 1927 and later revised in 1960. This edition includes an introduction by Norman Vincent Peale. 1994. BR 10856. ## The Good Society: The Humane Agenda. BR 10860. by John Kenneth Galbraith. 1 volume. Contending that big governments arise from the people's need for services, economist Galbraith explores the nature and elements of a "good society" that he finds practically achievable. He posits the essential human needs of personal liberty, basic well-being, social and ethnic equality, and individual opportunity, while offering a liberal blueprint for building a safer and better future. 1996. BR 10860. ## Rosie's Bakery Chocolate-Packed, Jam-Filled, Butter-Rich, No-Holds-Barred Cookie Book. BR 10867. by Judy Rosenberg. 3 volumes. Approximately 150 cookie recipes that don't stint on the good stuff, like butter, nuts, and chocolate. Categories include chewy crunch, crispy chompy, bars, cakey, sandwiched together, and holiday cookies. Bestseller 1996. BR 10867. ## The Terrible Stories: Poems. BR 10869. by Lucille Clifton. 1 volume. Forty-six poems by noted African American poet. Clifton explores such topics as breast cancer in "Lumpectomy Eve," "Scar," and "1994"; life in the American South in "Old Man River," "Memphis," and "Slaveships"; the biblical King David in "Bathsheba," "The Prophet," and "David, Musing"; and the symbolism of the fox in "A Dream of Foxes" and "The Coming of Fox." 1996. BR 10869. ## The War of the Dots. BR 10878. by Robert B. Irwin. 1 volume. Recounts the struggle to achieve a uniform type for English-speaking blind readers. Discusses various raised-type systems, from embossed Roman letters used in the 1830s to the establishment of Standard English Braille in 1932. 1970. BR 10878. ## Natural Grace: Dialogues on Creation, Darkness, and the Soul in Spirtuality and Science. BR 10879. by Matthew Fox and Rupert Sheldrake. 2 volumes. A theologian and a scientist explore key spiritual concerns-- including creation, the soul, grace, prayer, and ritual--from their respective points of view. They challenge the mechanistic model of nature, preferring a more flexible approach that draws from various religions, philosophies, and cultural traditions. 1996. BR 10879. ## An American Requiem: God, My Father, and the War That Came between Us. BR 10880. by James Carroll. 2 volumes. Memoir by a former priest and Vietnam war resister of his conflict with his father, a general in the military, during the 1960s. Recounts the events, struggles of conscience, and decisions that would divide his family and alter their lives forever. 1996. BR 10880. ## One Hundred Questions and Answers about AIDS: A Guide for Young People. BR 10890. by Michael Thomas Ford. 2 volumes. Information about symptoms of HIV infection, methods of transmission, safe sexual practices, and HIV testing. Includes interviews with four young AIDS patients and a list of AIDS-related hotlines and organizations. Strong language and descriptions of sex. For junior and senior high readers. 1992. BR 10890. ## Finding Home: Writing on Nature and Culture from _Orion_ Magazine. BR 10906. edited by Peter Sauer. 2 volumes. Essays on human coexistence with the changing natural environment. Explores such issues as acid rain, global warming, destruction of the Amazon rain forest, and the debate between preservationists and developers. Presses the theme that society and nature exist in an inexorable, mutually dependent relationship. 1992. BR 10906. ## Inside Out. BR 10907. by Larry Crabb. 2 volumes. Dr. Crabb offers the promise that individuals really can trust God to help them overcome obstacles to realizing their God-given potential. Crabb further presents ways in which individuals can motivate themselves into taking an honest look at their potential. 1988. BR 10907. ## Swimming the Channel. BR 10911. by Sally Friedman. 2 volumes. Scenic artist and marathon swimmer tells of meeting and falling in love with her husband, Paul. Shortly after they married, Paul began helping her train for her goal swim--the English Channel. On the day she was to fly to England, Paul was hit by a truck and killed. Swimming helped her get through the long grieving process. 1996. BR 10911. ## Cowgirls. BR 10916. by Candace Savage. 1 volume. History of cowgirls of the American and Canadian West from the 1800s to the late twentieth century. These homesteaders, cattle dealers, rodeo performers, and ranch hands were lured westward by free land, independence, and equality. Savage profiles such pioneers as Annie Oakley and Lizzie Williams and film stars Dale Evans and Barbara Stanwyck. 1996. BR 10916. ## All I Really Need to Know I Learned from Watching _Star Trek_. BR 10920. by Dave Marinaccio. 1 volume. Collection of philosophical essays and humorous pearls of wisdom based on principles gleaned from the _Star Trek_ television series. The author demonstrates that insights from the show can be used in real life to entertain houseguests, refrain from gossip, confront conflict, and respect individuals and diverse cultures. Some strong language. 1994. BR 10920. ## Scrambled Eggs and Whiskey: Poems, 1991-1995. BR 10928. by Hayden Carruth. 1 volume. Poems, variously depicting passion, war, nature, political power, tragedy, and love in one's later years. One such work, "Auburn Poem," voices a father's poignant lament to his wife over their daughter's fatal cancer. Strong language. 1996. BR 10928. ## Supercomputers: Shaping the Future. BR 10939. by Charlene W. Billings. 1 volume. Billings details the workings of the world's fastest and most powerful computers. She explores the wide-ranging uses of supercomputers in such areas as weather, medicine, and agricultural research; industry and design; virtual reality; superconductors; and the modeling of new materials. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1995. BR 10939. ## Privacy: Individual Right v. Social Needs. BR 10948. by Ted Gottfried. 1 volume. Explores the legal and ethical foundations of a person's right to privacy. Examines the conflicts that occur between personal privacy and the public's right to know relative to the news media, law enforcement, and computers. Presents arguments on both sides of the debate. For junior and senior high readers. 1994. BR 10948. ## Gli Antipasti: Antipasti and Other Appetizers. BR 10951. by Anna Del Conte. 1 volume. Twenty-seven recipes for creating various Italian appetizers and hors d'oeuvres. Organized by category: salumi (cured meat products), crostini e bruschetta (toasted and grilled bread), insalate (salads), verdure ripiene (stuffed vegetables), and antipasti di pesce e carne (fish and meat antipasti). 1993. BR 10951. ## Muhammad. BR 10952. by Michael Cook. 1 volume. Life of the Arab merchant turned prophet and politician who established a religious state in western Arabia in the 620s. Cook discusses the history of monotheism; Koranic law; the concepts of the _hijra_, the _jihad_, and the _umma_; the importance of Mecca; and the origins of Islam. 1983. BR 10952. ## Where Did Christmas Come From?. BR 10955. by Al Remson. 1 volume. Remson looks at various Christmas traditions such as trees, yule logs, hanging stockings, caroling, Christmas dinners, and gift giving, and explains how they began. 1996. BR 10955. ## "White Pine": Poems and Prose Poems. BR 10956. by Mary Oliver. 1 volume. Forty poems by the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet. Subjects pertaining to nature feature prominently in such poems as "Hummingbirds," "Blue Heron," "Deer in the Meadow," "I Found a Dead Fox," "In Blackwater Woods," "Williams Creek," "Beside the Waterfall," "At the Lake," "I Looked Up," and "White Pine." 1994. BR 10956. ## The Truth about Money. BR 10990. by Ric Edelman. 5 volumes. A guide to financial planning for the late 1990s, a time in which the "rules of money have changed" from earlier decades in terms of taxation, personal longevity, and other factors. Explains bonds, equities, insurance, real estate, and investment strategies for managing assets. Bestseller 1996. BR 10990. ## ### _Fiction_ The Return of Sherlock Holmes. BR 10568. by Arthur Conan Doyle. 4 volumes. Ten years after the fictional death of Sherlock Holmes, Doyle bows to public pressure and breathes new life into his creation. Using incidents from his own life, Doyle provides thirteen adventures for his amateur detective and Holmes's frequently baffled colleague, Dr. Watson. Includes a chronology of Doyle's work and an introduction by editor Richard Lancelyn Green. 1993. BR 10568. ## Blue Italian. BR 10722. by Rita Ciresi. 3 volumes. Hospital social worker Rosa Salvatore thinks her husband is fatigued from having an affair while teaching night school, working at the Legal Council, and studying for the bar exam. She learns that, instead, at thirty-one Gary has cancer. Rosa reflects on their flawed courtship and three-year marriage. Strong language and some explicit descriptions of sex. 1996. BR 10722. ## The Garlic Ballads. BR 10775. by Yan Mo. 3 volumes. A tale of oppression and revolt in rural China. When a glutted garlic market in 1987 forces farmers to let their crop rot in the fields, the farmers rise in revolt against the Communist government. The resulting official retribution brings together three prisoners who reveal the hardships they have suffered. Strong language and violence. 1995. BR 10775. ## A Separate Peace. BR 10776. by John Knowles. 2 volumes. The rivalry in the friendship of two roommates at a New Hampshire boarding school during the summer session of 1942 is dramatized by a crippling accident that leads to further tragedy. Some strong language. 1987. BR 10776. ## It Can't Happen Here. BR 10789. by Sinclair Lewis. 3 volumes. Inspired by events that were unfolding in Europe, this 1935 cautionary tale portrays America descending into totalitarianism. In 1936, the newly elected president determines that extreme measures are needed for dealing with the liberal press and with certain groups in society. His actions bring horrifying results. 1993. BR 10789. ## Selected Stories. BR 10819. by Alice Munro. 6 volumes. Twenty-eight short stories first published from 1961 through 1994 by the renowned Canadian writer. Lake Huron's small towns and farms provide the setting for stories that feature elaborate personalities in seemingly ordinary circumstances. Includes "Dance of the Happy Shades," "The Beggar Maid," "The Progress of Love," and "Vandals." 1996. BR 10819. ## The Whispering Wall. BR 10821. by Patricia Carlon. 2 volumes. Middle-aged widow Sarah Oatland is paralyzed and mute from a stroke. Although her doctor, home nurse, and greedy niece Gwenyth don't realize it, Sarah is awake and cognizant, and she can hear through the wall at her headboard. When Gwenyth rents out Sarah's lower rooms, Sarah is horrified to hear the tenants plotting a murder. 1969. BR 10821. ## Diana: The Goddess Who Hunts Alone. BR 10822. by Carlos Fuentes. 2 volumes. A fictionalized account of a Mexican writer's love affair with an American film actress in 1970, a time of social and political turmoil. Their passionate interlude ends tragically with the woman's suicide when her reputation is ruined by government slander. Strong language and descriptions of sex. 1995. BR 10822. ## Don't Call It Night. BR 10823. by Amos Oz. 2 volumes. A story set in a small Israeli town about the waning relationship of a stolid middle-aged engineer and his vibrant younger lover, a schoolteacher. After one of her students dies in a drug-related incident and the teacher becomes chief advocate for a drug rehab clinic, her new role tests the limits of the couple's bond. 1994. BR 10823. ## _The_ _White Deer_ and Other Stories Told by the Lenape. BR 10825. edited by John Bierhorst. 1 volume. Native American tales of the Lenape people, who were indigenous to New Jersey and its bordering states. The legends tell of magic dogs, lost children, and heroes. The title story depicts a white deer that can give game to hunters or can protect game by killing the hunters. For junior and senior high readers. 1995. BR 10825. ## Don't Think Twice. BR 10829. by Ruth Pennebaker. 2 volumes. In 1967, Anne Harper is shocked to be living in a home for unwed pregnant teenagers. She has always been studious and shy. At first Anne thinks of the baby as a tumor and her housemates as idiots, but her mood gradually changes. Strong language and some explicit descriptions of sex. For junior and senior high readers. 1996. BR 10829. ## Dance Real Slow. BR 10830. by Michael Grant Jaffe. 2 volumes. When his wife runs off to see the world, small-town lawyer Gordon Nash is left to care for their four-year-old son. Nash contends with the trials of fatherhood and develops a special relationship with his son. After two years, Nash's wife reappears and upsets the life that he has built. Strong language and descriptions of sex. 1996. BR 10830. ## The Diablo Grant. BR 10832. by James M. Reasoner. 2 volumes. In this sequel to _Stark's Justice (BR 9708)_, Juan Espina, the town drunk of a New Mexico territory settlement, claims historical rights to nearby ranch property and has an ancient land grant to prove it. The dispute goes before Judge Stark, who rules for Espina, thus unleashing chaos in the frontier town. 1994. BR 10832. ## Tales of Mystery and Imagination. BR 10839. by Edgar Allan Poe. 6 volumes. Forty-six popular tales including "The Tell-Tale Heart," "The Premature Burial," "The Black Cat," "The Pit and the Pendulum," "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," "The Fall of the House of Usher," "The Masque of the Red Death," "The Oblong Box," and "The Purloined Letter." Some violence. 1993. BR 10839. ## Pushing the Bear: A Novel of the Trail of Tears. BR 10845. by Diane Glancy. 2 volumes. A tale based on the 1838 forced migration of some thirteen thousand Cherokee from their southeastern homeland to Oklahoma. The story follows the journey of a young woman and her family as they face cruelty, cold, and hunger in their struggle to survive the torturous Trail of Tears. Violence. 1996. BR 10845. ## Same Place, Same Things. BR 10847. by Tim Gautreaux. 2 volumes. Twelve tales about working-class people and Cajun culture in rural Louisiana. In "Returnings," set in 1967, a woman is startled when a Vietnamese aviator lands his helicopter on her farm. The hapless pilot, a trainee from an American military base, has lost his way. Obligingly, the Cajun woman guides him home to his airfield. 1996. BR 10847. ## "G" Is for Gumshoe: A Kinsey Millhone Mystery. BR 10854. by Sue Grafton. 2 volumes. Kinsey Millhone has just taken the job of locating Irene Gersh's mother, Agnes, who has not been heard from for six months. Then Kinsey learns there is a contract out on her own life. As she pursues Agnes, Kinsey works under the watchful and romantically interested eye of security expert Robert Dietz. Strong language. Bestseller 1990. BR 10854. ## A Difficult Truce. BR 10857. by Joan Wolf. 2 volumes. Niall MacCarthy, the earl of Clancarthy, is dead. He was the last survivor of the great chiefs of old Ireland, and the Catholics would have risen to follow him and become a nation again. Can his nineteen-year-old daughter Christina take his place as head of the clan? Dreams are dashed when enemies capture Christina. Her only hope lies in her marriage to Charles Standish, duke of Dacre. But she must not allow herself to fall in love with him. 1981. BR 10857. ## A Dog's Life. BR 10858. by Peter Mayle. 1 volume. The author presents the autobiography of the "mutt" Boy, who was abandoned at an early age by his mother, mistreated by his master, and eventually adopted by the Mayles family. Boy tells how he learned to please and manipulate "the management" and mixes a lighthearted account of his adventures with advice on dealing with the human species. Bestseller 1995. BR 10858. ## The Time of the Vampires. BR 10868. edited by P.N. Elrod and Martin H. Greenberg. 3 volumes. Eighteen stories of vampires down through history, from ancient Greece to the modern day. Some are tales of terror, while others seem poignant and even humorous. In the opening story, the undead spirit of a slain Athenian soldier returns to convince Socrates of death's horror and to guide him into the netherworld. Violence. 1996. BR 10868. ## The Red Pony. BR 10887. by John Steinbeck. 1 volume. In this story, originally written in 1933, Jody Tiflin is only ten years old when he receives the red pony as a gift. As Jody matures, his experiences with horses, an old ranchhand, and the birth of a colt teach him about the interconnections between life and death. 1994. BR 10887. ## Beyond Providence. BR 10889. by Steven Schnur. 2 volumes. Twelve-year-old Nathan Burns lives with his family on a struggling Hudson River sheep farm. Life is hard, and his brother Eric and Pa are always fighting. In fact, their fighting drove Mama away. When Eric leaves, too, Nathan's cousin Kitty comes to help out and brings love back into the family. For junior and senior high readers. 1996. BR 10889. ## Tales from _Watership Down_. BR 10905. by Richard Adams. 2 volumes. Twenty-four years after writing _Watership Down (BR 2514)_, Adams now offers nineteen short stories about the lives of the rabbits since they defeated General Woundwort. Many of the stories focus on the hero El-ahriarah, and all deal with the theme of the human enemy versus the animal. 1996. BR 10905. ## Wrestling Sturbridge. BR 10908. by Rich Wallace. 1 volume. In the small town of Sturbridge, Pennsylvania, high school wrestling is a big deal. Ben, a senior, wants to become state champion, but he will have to beat out at least one of his three higher-ranked best friends to do it. For junior and senior high readers. 1996. BR 10908. ## Trouble No More: Stories. BR 10917. by Anthony Grooms. 2 volumes. Twelve stories reflecting poignant episodes of life for African Americans during the civil rights era. In "Sweet Milton," Milton, confined to a mental institution, thinks he is the devil. In "Hollow and Far Away," an African American family experiences the terror of being stopped by white police. Some strong language and some violence. 1995. BR 10917. ## Mr. Ives' Christmas. BR 10918. by Oscar Hijuelos. 2 volumes. Abandoned as an infant, Edward Ives is adopted into a devout home, studies art, finds work in advertising, marries, and raises a family. When his teenage son is murdered on a city street, Ives faces a spiritual crisis that tests his faith in the meaning of life itself. Strong language. 1995. BR 10918. ## No One Noticed the Cat. BR 10919. by Anne McCaffrey. 1 volume. The venerable Mangan, regent of Esphania, dies, ceding the throne to Prince Jamas and bequeathing his wisdom to his cat, Niffy. When Jamas becomes the target of usurpers and falls deeply in love, Niffy protects him from harm and guides him on a true path. 1996. BR 10919. ## The Long Season of Rain. BR 10921. by Helen Kim. 2 volumes. Eleven-year-old Junehee Lee lives a secure life in Seoul with her mother and three sisters, as her father is often away on business travel. Then her world begins to change when her family adopts an orphan boy and Junehee comes to realize that she will someday marry and leave home. For junior and senior high readers. 1996. BR 10921. ## Eight Stories. BR 10963. by Dylan Thomas. 1 volume. Eight short stories by the noted Welsh writer and poet. Includes "The End of the River," "The School for Witches," "The Peaches," "Just like Little Dogs," "Old Garbo," "One Warm Saturday," "Plenty of Furniture," and "The Followers." 1954. BR 10963. ## The Cat Who Tailed a Thief. BR 10979. by Lilian Jackson Braun. 2 volumes. A rash of petty thievery, newcomers in Pickax, a wedding, and a couple of murders Down Below keep Qwilleran, who has bought a condo for the winter, and his cats, KoKo and Yum Yum, busy during the holiday season. Bestseller 1997. BR 10979. ## ### _Books for Children_ Books listed in this issue of _Braille Book Review_ were recently sent to cooperating libraries. The complete collection contains books by many authors on fiction and nonfiction subjects, including animals, geography, nature, mystery, sports, and others. Contact your cooperating library to learn more about the wide range of books available in the collection. To order books, contact your cooperating library. ### _Nonfiction_ How Now, Brown Cow?. BR 10046. by Alice Schertle. 1 volume. The subject is cows in this collection of fifteen poems. Includes "Milking," "Clever Cows," "The Cow's Complaint," "Drivin' Cows," "Cows Coming Home," "Cows Live Here," "Taradiddle," and "Moo." PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1994. BR 10046. ## Junior Girl Scout Handbook. BR 10755. by Girl Scouts of the U.S.A.. 2 volumes. An introduction to the world of Scouting for Junior Girl Scouts ages eight to eleven. Explains the history, traditions, ceremonies, and recognitions of Girl Scouting. Covers a range of subjects that include safety and health, life skills, leadership, sports, and outdoor activities. For grades 3-6. 1994. BR 10755. ## Mummies, Dinosaurs, Moon Rocks: How We Know How Old Things Are. BR 10820. by James Jespersen and Jane Fitz-Randolph. 1 volume. Describes methods used to date objects, including Carbon 14 dating, dendrochronology, DNA analysis, and thermoluminescence. Shows how these methods yield information about extinct dinosaurs, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and various items left behind by Columbus. For grades 5-8. 1996. BR 10820. ## Keep 'em Laughing: Jokes to Amuse and Annoy Your Friends. BR 10914. by Louis Phillips. 1 volume. A collection of riddles and jokes, including knock-knocks and puns. For example: "What's the difference between a prison guard and a person with measles? One spots breakouts, while the other breaks out in spots." For grades 2-4. 1996. BR 10914. ## Snowbound: The Tragic Story of the Donner Party. BR 10929. by David Lavender. 1 volume. Tells how, in the mid 1840s, three Illinois men tried to move their families to California. Details problems, including snow storms, a misleading guidebook, and bad luck, that led to death for forty of the eighty-eight people on this covered-wagon journey. For grades 5-8. 1996. BR 10929. ## Cleopatra: Goddess of Egypt, Enemy of Rome. BR 10938. by Polly Schoyer Brooks. 1 volume. Life of the Egyptian ruler whose suicide in 30 B.C. ended the Ptolemaic dynasty. The author discusses Cleopatra's Macedonian heritage and descent from Alexander the Great; her relationships with Romans Julius Caesar and Mark Antony and the children borne with each; and her political and military savvy that enabled Egypt to remain independent of Rome. For grades 6-9. 1995. BR 10938. ## The Sierra Club Book of Weatherwisdom. BR 10949. by Vicki McVey. 1 volume. Tells how to become a better forecaster by reading the signs of weather. McVey discusses such topics as how the Earth's movements affect climates and seasons, how warm and cold fronts produce storms, what atmospheric pressure is and how to measure it, and even how animal behavior can be used to predict weather. For grades 5-8. 1991. BR 10949. ## The Fannie Farmer Junior Cookbook. BR 10991. by Joan Scobey. 2 volumes. In this revised edition of the cookbook designed to accommodate the taste of young people, the recipes have been updated to fit the more health conscious 1990s. Includes descriptions of equipment and ingredients, general cooking tips, and menu planning as well as over one hundred recipes. For grades 4-7 and older readers. 1942. BR 10991. ## ### _Fiction_ Max and Ruby's Midas: Another Greek Myth. BR 10041. by Rosemary Wells. 1 volume. Max loves to eat sweets, but his sister Ruby knows they are not good for Max. So she tells him a story about King Midas and how he was able to turn things he did not want into something else. Before long Max turns his mother into a cherry float and his father into lime Jell-O. PRINT/BRAILLE. For preschool-grade 2. 1995. BR 10041. ## Kashtanka. BR 10042. by Anton Chekhov. 1 volume. A chestnut-colored dog named Kashtanka gets lost on a snowy evening while walking with her master. She is taken in by a kind circus clown and taught to do tricks. But she still longs for her home. The story, by a famous Russian author, is more than one hundred years old. For grades 3-6. 1995. BR 10042. ## Mud. BR 10043. by Mary Lyn Ray. 1 volume. Mud! Gooey, gloppy, mucky, magnificent mud. One night it just happens. The earth comes unfrozen and winter squishes, squcks, sops, splats, slurps, and melts into mud. Happy mud. PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1996. BR 10043. ## Pip's Magic. BR 10044. by Ellen Stoll Walsh. 1 volume. Pip, a salamander, is afraid of the dark. His frog friends tell Pip he should ask Old Abra, the wizard, for some magic that will help him be brave. Pip thinks it is a wonderful idea, but finding Old Abra means going through the dark woods and a darker tunnel. PRINT/BRAILLE. For preschool-grade 2. 1994. BR 10044. ## The Snowy Day. BR 10045. by Ezra Jack Keats. 1 volume. Young Peter is thrilled to wake up to snow piled high. He spends the day crunching, sliding, building a snowman, making snow angels, and having a great time. For grades K-3. Caldecott award winner. 1962. BR 10045. ## The Great Ball Game: A Muskogee Story. BR 10047. by Joseph Bruchac. 1 volume. Retelling of a Native American folktale. In a game of stickball between the birds and the animals, the bat plays a very special role. PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1994. BR 10047. ## Bad Day at Riverbend. BR 10048. by Chris Van Allsburg. 1 volume. One day a terrible thing happens in the small western town of Riverbend. A driverless stagecoach arrives, and the horses are covered with shiny greasy scribble marks. As the sheriff investigates, he finds people, plants, and land all have the scribblings, and he is determined to find the culprit. PRINT/BRAILLE. For preschool-grade 2. 1995. BR 10048. ## Rifles for Watie. BR 10834. by Harold Keith. 3 volumes. A carefree boy learns the cruelty and savagery of war when he is sent as a Union scout to spy on a Cherokee Indian regiment and find the source of their rifles. To his astonishment, he makes good friends among the enemy and falls in love with a beautiful part-Cherokee girl. For grades 6-9. Newbery Medal. 1957. BR 10834. ## The Little Prince. BR 10846. by Antoine de Saint-Exupery. 1 volume. The narrator's plane is forced down in the African desert, where he meets the little prince from Asteroid B-612, who freely shares his experiences with the fascinated pilot. For grades 3-6. 1943. BR 10846. ## The Bridge to Cutter Gap: Christy Fiction Series, Book 1. BR 10848. by Catherine Marshall. 1 volume. Christy Huddleston, nineteen, travels to her first teaching job at remote Cutter Gap in the Smokey Mountains. Her trip ends with a fall from the rickety, icy bridge leading to the village. After recovering from her bruises, Christy nervously begins her new job. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10848. ## Understood Betsy. BR 10852. by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. 1 volume. Originally published in 1917. When her doting aunt Frances can no longer take care of her, Elizabeth Ann learns that she is to be shipped off to those Vermont cousins who make children do "chores." There she discovers who really understands her. For grades 5-8. 1987. BR 10852. ## The War of Jenkins' Ear. BR 10859. by Michael Morpurgo. 1 volume. Autumn 1952. Toby Jenkins is not looking forward to another year at Redlands Preparatory School in Sussex, England. But beginning with dinner the first night, Toby and his schoolmates know things will be different because of the new boy, Simon Christopher, who before long claims to be Jesus. For grades 6-9. 1995. BR 10859. ## Flying Lessons. BR 10863. by Nava Semel. 1 volume. Young Hadara lives with her widowed citrus-grower father in a village in Israel. She becomes friends with their new neighbor, shoemaker Maurice Havivel, who says he used to be in a circus. Telling her that anything is possible if you practice, Maurice inspires Hadara to believe she can fly like a bird. For grades 5-8 and older readers. 1995. BR 10863. ## Bridge to Terabithia. BR 10864. by Katherine Paterson. 1 volume. Jess finds his biggest rival and best friend in Leslie, a girl who moves to his rural Virginia community from the city. Together they create Terabithia, a secret kingdom in the woods where they reign supreme--until tragedy strikes. For grades 5-8. Newbery Medal. 1977. BR 10864. ## Kirsten's Surprise: A Christmas Story. BR 10873. by Janet Shaw. 1 volume. Christmas is just a few weeks away, and Kirsten, a young pioneer girl, longs for Papa to get their trunks from town so she can have her doll Sari. But there are many things to be done on the farm before Papa can go. The day finally arrives, but the trip almost ends in tragedy. Sequel to _Kirsten Learns a Lesson (BR 10872)_. For grades 2-4. 1986. BR 10873. ## Happy Birthday, Kirsten! A Springtime Story. BR 10874. by Janet Shaw. 1 volume. Young pioneer Kirsten, her extended family, and the local teacher take shelter in a root cellar when a tornado threatens. While they are there, Miss Winston tells the cousins about her friendship quilt. After the disaster passes, the girls begin their own quilting projects--and their friends catch on! Sequel to _Kirsten's Surprise (BR 10873)_. For grades 2-4. 1987. BR 10874. ## Kirsten Saves the Day: A Summer Story. BR 10875. by Janet Shaw. 1 volume. When Kirsten and Peter's puppy gets stung by a bee, they discover the nearby hive full of honey. Kirsten's pioneer family can use the honey to trade for goods. But her decision to harvest the honey herself leads to trouble. Sequel to _Happy Birthday, Kirsten! (BR 10874)_. For grades 2-4. 1988. BR 10875. ## Changes for Kirsten: A Winter Story. BR 10876. by Janet Shaw. 1 volume. Kirsten and Lars are out setting traps when they find a wounded baby raccoon. Kirsten takes it to their frontier home to nurse, but the raccoon gets loose and causes a fire that destroys their house. Later, good fortune comes to the Larsons when the children make a discovery in the woods. Sequel to _Kirsten Saves the Day (BR 10875)_. For grades 2-4. 1988. BR 10876. ## Meet Addy: An American Girl. BR 10881. by Connie Porter. 1 volume. Nine-year-old Addy lives on a North Carolina plantation. In the summer of 1864, when her father and brother are sold and taken away, Addy and her mother leave Addy's baby sister with relatives and begin a dangerous trip to freedom, hoping eventually to reunite the family. Prequel to _Addy Learns a Lesson (BR 10882)_. For grades 2-4. 1993. BR 10881. ## Addy Learns a Lesson: A School Story. BR 10882. by Connie Porter. 1 volume. When Addy Walker and her mother arrive in Philadelphia to begin life as free people, Sarah Moore and her mother meet them. The Moores help Mrs. Walker find a job, and Sarah takes Addy to school. But will Addy snub Sarah in order to be friends with the rich girls? Sequel to _Meet Addy (BR 10881)_. For grades 2-4. 1993. BR 10882. ## Addy's Surprise: A Christmas Story. BR 10883. by Connie Porter. 1 volume. Their first Christmas as free people is approaching, and Addy Walker and her mother are busy helping Mrs. Ford finish her holiday orders. The Walkers have been saving to buy a lamp, but when a boatload of freedmen arrive, Addy and her mother decide to help them instead. Sequel to _Addy Learns a Lesson (BR 10882)_. For grades 2-4. 1993. BR 10883. ## Happy Birthday, Addy! A Springtime Story. BR 10884. by Connie Porter. 1 volume. Addy, Momma, and Poppa are now living as free people in a Philadelphia house, and it is like being a family again--except that Sam and baby Esther are still missing. Addy makes friends with the landlord's mother, M'dear, who encourages Addy to select a special day for her birthday. Sequel to _Addy's Surprise (BR 10883)_. For grades 2-4. 1994. BR 10884. ## Addy Saves the Day: A Summer Story. BR 10885. by Connie Porter. 1 volume. Addy, a former slave now living in post-Civil War Philadelphia, helps with a church fair to benefit families separated by the war. The children plan to make spool puppets and put on a show, but Harriet, Addy's desk partner, thinks that is silly. Then tragedy strikes, and the girls must work together. Sequel to _Happy Birthday, Addy! (BR 10884)_. For grades 2-4. 1994. BR 10885. ## Changes for Addy: A Winter Story. BR 10886. by Connie Porter. 1 volume. Addy hopes her family, separated by slavery and the Civil War, can be together for Christmas. She is working extra hard so Poppa can make another trip to look for her aunt and uncle and baby Esther. Addy also worries about her friend Sarah, who has dropped out of school. Sequel to _Addy Saves the Day (BR 10885)_. For grades 2-4. 1994. BR 10886. ## In Trouble with Teacher. BR 10888. by Patricia Brennan Demuth. 1 volume. Third-grader Montgomery is having a horrible day. He knows he is going to flunk his spelling test and his new teacher will get mad at him. He wishes Mrs. Wix was like his nice second grade teacher, Miss Pink, who loved his great stories and didn't care that Montgomery had problems with spelling and reading. For grades 2-4. 1995. BR 10888. ## Happy Birthday, Felicity! A Springtime Story. BR 10894. by Valerie Tripp. 1 volume. When Felicity's grandfather arrives in colonial Williamsburg for a visit, he brings her a birthday surprise--her grandmother's guitar. Felicity promises not to take it out of the house, but is overcome by her longing to have Miss Manderly tune the guitar and teach her to play it. Sequel to _Felicity's Surprise (BR 10893)_. For grades 2-4. 1992. BR 10894. ## Felicity Saves the Day: A Summer Story. BR 10895. by Valerie Tripp. 1 volume. Felicity's colonial family is spending the summer at Grandfather's plantation on the York River. When Grandfather gets some new horses, Felicity recognizes Penny, a colt she helped escape from its mean owner. Then her father's apprentice, Ben, is hurt, and Penny helps save the day. Sequel to _Happy Birthday, Felicity! (BR 10894)_. For grades 2-4. 1992. BR 10895. ## Changes for Felicity: A Winter Story. BR 10896. by Valerie Tripp. 1 volume. Felicity's favorite horse, Penny, is going to have a foal. But there is trouble in colonial Williamsburg. The father of Felicity's friend Elizabeth is in jail for being a Loyalist, and Jiggy Nye is there for debt. Grandfather helps them both, but the cold costs him his life. Sequel to _Felicity Saves the Day (BR 10895)_. For grades 2-4. 1992. BR 10896. ## Silent Superstitions: Christy Fiction Series, Book 2. BR 10897. by Catherine Marshall. 1 volume. Christy is the new teacher at a rural mission school. After a good first week, Christy notices that her students seem wary and distant. Then she learns of a local woman's rumor that Christy is cursed. Christy must summon all of her courage to overcome the superstition of the mountain people. Sequel to _The Bridge to Cutter Gap (BR 10848)_. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10897. ## The Angry Intruder: Christy Fiction Series, Book 3. BR 10898. by Catherine Marshall. 1 volume. In this sequel to _Silent Superstitions (BR 10897)_, teacher Christy Huddleston is plagued by malicious pranks and suspects one of her students. Meanwhile, Christy is in trouble with her mentor, Miss Alice, over soliciting donations for the mission school. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10898. ## Midnight Rescue: Christy Fiction Series, Book 4. BR 10899. by Catherine Marshall. 1 volume. Ruby Mae, one of Christy's students, disappears in a storm. In her search for the girl, Christy happens upon a gang of moonshiners desperate to prevent anyone from exposing their illicit enterprise. Christy uses courage and cunning to evade the outlaws and recover Ruby Mae. Sequel to _The Angry Intruder (BR 10898)_. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10899. ## The Proposal: Christy Fiction Series, Book 5. BR 10900. by Catherine Marshall. 1 volume. When David Grantland, the handsome minister, asks for her hand in marriage, Christy is delighted, but hesitant to commit. Then she is blinded in a riding accident, and all of her dreams for the future seem to be in jeopardy. Eventually, Christy recovers her sight and begins to see things in a new light. Sequel to _Midnight Rescue (BR 10899)_. For grades 5-8. 1996. BR 10900. ## Christy's Choice: Christy Fiction Series, Book 6. BR 10901. by Catherine Marshall. 1 volume. When Christy receives an offer to teach in her hometown of Asheville, she makes a decision that stands to affect her entire future. During a train wreck on her return to Cutter Gap, Christy experiences a life-changing insight that clarifies her destiny. Sequel to _The Proposal (BR 10900)_. For grades 5-8. 1996. BR 10901. ## See You Around, Sam!. BR 10909. by Lois Lowry. 1 volume. Four-year-old Sam Krupnik comes home from school delighted with a set of fangs that makes him look disgusting. His mother won't let him wear them in the house, so Sam decides to run away to Alaska. But after Sam leaves home, he needs food and a drink of water--and maybe there isn't any reason to hurry to Alaska. For grades 3-6. 1996. BR 10909. ## Here There Be Dragons. BR 10910. by Jane Yolen. 1 volume. Five poems and eight stories about dragons by Jane Yolen, who precedes each with an introductory note about the piece. The collection includes "Why Dragons?" "The Dragon's Boy," "The Making of Dragons," and "Here There Be Dragons." For grades 4-7 and older readers. 1993. BR 10910. ## George's Marvelous Medicine. BR 10915. by Roald Dahl. 1 volume. George doesn't have any brothers or sisters. He lives on a farm miles away from everything, so there are never any kids to play with. He is tired of staring at cows and sheep and pigs and hens. And he is especially tired of living with his mean, old grizzly grunion of a grandma, who is always complaining and bossing him around. So one day, he substitutes for her medicine a fantastic bubbling brew he makes himself. For grades 2-4 and older readers. 1981. BR 10915. ## Miracles on Maple Hill. BR 10930. by Virginia Sorensen. 1 volume. As a newly returned POW, a father experiences difficulty in adjusting to his old way of life. When the family moves into a country farmhouse, his ten-year-old daughter sees magic in the changing seasons, and eventually in the changes in her father. For grades 4-7. Newbery Medal. 1956. BR 10930. ## Happy Birthday, Molly! A Springtime Story. BR 10934. by Valerie Tripp. 1 volume. During World War II, Emily Bennett, an English girl Molly's age, has come to stay. Molly is excited, but Emily is very quiet, and the girls have a hard time becoming friends. But they do, just in time for Molly's birthday. Then they can't agree on how to celebrate. Sequel to _Molly's Surprise (BR 10933)_. For grades 2-4. 1989. BR 10934. ## How Do You Spell GEEK?. BR 10980. by Julie Anne Peters. 1 volume. Eighth graders Ann and Kimberly are busy practicing for the national spelling bee when Ann is asked to help home-schooled Lurlene through her first days in class. Everyone, Kimberly included, makes fun of Lurlene's geeky ways, and Ann is mortified to be associated with her. So why does Ann suggest Lurlene join them in the spelling bee? For grades 4-7. 1996. BR 10980. ## The Pain and the Great One. BR 10981. by Judy Blume. 1 volume. An eight-year-old girl and her six-year-old brother tell all about each other. She thinks that their parents love him best, and he thinks that they love his sister more than they love him. For grades 2-4. 1974. BR 10981. ## Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin. BR 11001. by Lloyd Moss. 1 volume. Musical instruments take their place, one by one, on the stage until there is a chamber group of ten. PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1995. BR 11001. ## Do You See a Mouse?. BR 11002. by Bernard Waber. 1 volume. The Park Snoot Hotel is very fancy, and the staff makes sure everything is always clean and neat. But one day there is a big commotion in the hotel. Someone has seen a mouse! PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1995. BR 11002. ## The Shepherd Boy. BR 11003. by Kristine L. Franklin. 1 volume. A young Navajo boy discovers that one of his sheep is missing when he brings in his family's flock one evening. He then must rescue the lost lamb before nightfall. PRINT/BRAILLE. For preschool-grade 2. 1994. BR 11003. ## Swimmy. BR 11004. by Leo Lionni. 1 volume. Swimmy is the only black fish in a school of little red fish who live in a corner of the sea. One day a big fish comes along and eats all the little red fish, but Swimmy, who can swim very fast, escapes. He is very sad, until he starts meeting all the other wonderful creatures in the sea. PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1963. BR 11004. ## Two Mrs. Gibsons. BR 11006. by Toyomi Igus. 1 volume. A girl recalls growing up with two Mrs. Gibsons--her mother, who is Japanese, and her grandmother, who is African American. She explains how their love for her overcame racial barriers. PRINT/BRAILLE. For preschool-grade 2. 1996. BR 11006. ## Some Smug Slug. BR 11010. by Pamela Duncan Edwards. 1 volume. While out strolling one summer Sunday, a slug struggles up a bumpy slope that is blocking his path. Despite the warnings of a sparrow, a spider, a swallowtail, a skink, and a squirrel, the slug continues on...until a toad has a succulent meal. PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1996. BR 11010. ## ### _Braille Magazines_ The following is a list of braille magazines in the Library of Congress program. Readers may obtain free personal subscriptions to these magazines. For information on the availability of specific magazines, consult the library that send you braille materials. Boys' Life (for children and teens, monthly) Braille Book Review (bimonthly) Braille Chess Magazine (British quarterly) Braille Music Magazine (British monthly) Conundrum (British monthly) Cooking Light (bimonthly [3] and monthly [6]) Inside Sports (monthly) Harper's (literary; monthly) Health Newsletters (includes Harvard Health Letter, Mayo Clinic Health Letter, and University of California at Berkeley Wellness Letter; monthly) Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine (monthly) Ladies' Home Journal (monthly) Martha Stewart Living (home and entertaining; 10 issues) Muse (for children; 6 issues) The Musical Mainstream (quarterly) National Geographic (monthly) The New York Times Large Type Weekly (weekly) News (NLS quarterly) Parenting (monthly except January and July) PC World (personal computing; monthly) Playboy (monthly) Poetry (monthly) Popular Communications (monthly) Popular Mechanics (monthly) Popular Music Lead Sheets (irregular) Rolling Stone (popular culture; 26 issues) Science News (weekly) Seventeen (for teens, monthly) Short Stories (British monthly) Spider: The Magazine for Children (monthly) Stone Soup (children's writings; 5 issues) Update (NLS quarterly) The Washington Post Book World (weekly) The following sports schedules are also available: American Baseball League Schedule National Baseball League Schedule National Basketball Association Schedule National Football League Schedule National Hockey League Schedule