Best of
Family

1971

Leo the Late Bloomer


Robert Kraus - 1971
    But Leo's mother isn't. She knows her son will do all those things, and more, when he's ready.With its message of patience and humor, Leo the Late Bloomer is more timely than ever. As Children's Books and Their Creators commented: "Leo's reassuring 'I made it!' at the end delights young listeners who may have been scrutinized for early blooming by well-intentioned moms and dads. Deserves space on any parenting shelf."

Just Wait Till You Have Children of Your Own!


Erma Bombeck - 1971
    With Erma Bombeck in your corner, laughter is the best coach you can have....

I Married You


Walter Trobisch - 1971
    Through the struggles of the people they are trying to help, both find themselves facing unexpected challenges to their own marriage. Nothing in this book is fiction. All the stories have really happened. All of the conversations have really taken place. The people involved are still living today. The setting of these events is Africa, but the problems dealt with are relevant to all parts and to all cultures.

The Bears' House


Marilyn Sachs - 1971
    They know that she sucks her thumb and that she smells bad. But they don’t really know anything important about her.They don’t know that she lives in two houses. One is with her brothers and sisters and sick mother. There is no father in that house, and nobody to take care of the children. Everything is sad and dismal, except for Fran Ellen’s baby sister, Flora, whom she loves best in the world. To keep Flora, Fran Ellen has to lie about that house.The other house that Fran Ellen lives in is the Bears’ House. Most of the kids think it is only a dolls’ house. For Fran Ellen it is a real house, bright with fun and laughter. In that house Mama Bear cooks and cleans and gives Fran Ellen a beautiful dress with red and yellow flowers. In that house Papa Bear holds Fran Ellen on his lap when she feels unhappy. There is Baby Bear in the Bears’ House, and Goldilocks too. They give Fran Ellen the best birthday party she ever had.Nobody really knows anything important about Fran Ellen. Only that she sucks her thumb, and smells bad.

Through Grandpa's Eyes


Patricia MacLachlan - 1971
    Grandpa is blind, and so when John visits him he gets to see things from a new perspective. If he closes his eyes, everything comes alive through sound and touch. This house is the place where John gets to experience the special way Grandpa sees and moves in the world.

Sex, Love & Marriage - A Christian Perspective


Zac Poonen - 1971
    The Christian approach to these subjects

A Class Divided: Then and Now


William Peters - 1971
    was killed, Jane Elliott, a third-grade teacher in Riceville, Iowa, gave her pupils a unique lesson in discrimination. The first day, brown-eyed children were declared “superior,” given special privileges, and encouraged to discriminate against their suddenly “inferior” blue-eyed classmates. The next day, roles were reversed. What happened astonished both students and teacher. On both days, children labeled “inferior” took on the look and behavior of genuinely inferior students; they did inferior work. “Superior” students excelled in their work and delighted in discriminating against their erstwhile friends. Jane Elliott repeated the exercise with succeeding classes, and the third year, it was filmed for an award-winning television documentary, “The Eye of the Storm.” The original edition of A Class Divided, written by William Peters, the producer-director-writer of the documentary, expanded on the story revealed in the television program.This new edition of A Class Divided continues the story of Jane Elliott and her sixteen third-graders of 1970, eleven of whom returned to Riceville in 1984 for a reunion with their former teacher. In the new chapters, Peters reports on that meeting and its evidence that the long-ago lesson has had a profound and enduring effect on the students’ lives and attitudes—indeed, on the way they are raising their own children. Peters also relates the surprising reactions of employees of the Iowa Department of Corrections and other adults to the same exercise.The students’ reunion and the session with adult Corrections workers were covered in Peters’ recent Emmy-Award winning documentary, “A Class Divided.” This new edition of A Class Divided expands significantly on the material covered in both documentaries.

The golden evenings of summer


Will Stanton - 1971
    . . the aroma of the backyard lilac bush . . . the inviting appeal of the vacant lot next door . . . the riches of a bottle-cap collection . . . the temptation of the cookie jar . . . the summers that never ended.Capture a moment and journey back with us to the good old days . . . those very, very good old days.

A Joyful Noise


Janet L. Gillespie - 1971
    There was grandmother Baba, erect and small, bellowing messages from porch to boathouse via a megaphone; Mother and siblings, at work on Father's clerical vocation ("Guess what God's done now!"); and Father, gentle and high-spirited, bird-walk guide, organizer of expeditions, and an enthusiast like the others, of bracing seascapes. There is a delicate, compassionate portrait of Uncle Tink, a mental retardate in his twenties (but only ""two or three inside""), which encompasses a natural, affectionate and genial hilarity at some of his pecadillos. Warm but not the least cloying.

No Such Thing as a Witch


Ruth Chew - 1971
    Some very strange things begin to happen when two children get to know their unusual next-door-neighbor.

First Christmas: The True yet Unfamiliar Story of Christ's Birth


Paul L. Maier - 1971
    Maier.

All and More


Joan Aiken - 1971
    A bind-up edition of Joan Aiken's first two collections of short stories: "All You've Ever Wanted and Other Stories" and "More Than You Bargained For and Other Stories."

Saving Graces: The Inspirational Writings of Laura Ingalls Wilder


Laura Ingalls Wilder - 1971
    This collection of her inspirational writings reflects faith and wisdom distilled from a lifetime of experience.

Cambridge Latin Course Book 2 Student's Book


Cambridge School Classics Project - 1971
    Book II is full colour throughout, with a clear layout of stories and language notes. Featuring a glossary for quick reference and comprehension questions, the book also includes a full explanation of language points and grammar practice exercises.

Joseph the Dreamer


Clyde Robert Bulla - 1971
    When Joseph told the dream, his father asked, ". . . were not the eleven stars your eleven brothers?" Jealous and angry, his brothers nicknamed Joseph "the dreamer" and plotted to do away with him as the person who, according to the dream, would one day rule them. When the chance came, they seized him and sold him to some passing traders, who took him to faraway Egypt.Alone and enslaved, Joseph had nothing left but his faith in God and his marvelous ability to tell the meaning of dreams. Through these, he came to be a rich and powerful leader in Egypt. And one day, when their own land was suffering from famine, his brothers came to Egypt in search of food. As in the dream, they bowed down before Joseph. Many years had passed, and they did not know that the great leader was their brother. But Joseph recognized them. Would he choose to punish his brothers or to forgive them?Clyde Robert Bulla retells one of the greatest stories of the Old Testament with dramatic simplicity. The grandeur and adventurous sweep, as well as the deeper meaning of the story, are perfectly conveyed by Gordon Laite's beautiful illustrations.