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RED
SCARF GIRL by Ji-Li Jiang
Provides the story of Ji-li Jiang a twelve-year-old girl growing up in China
in 1966, the year that Chairman Mao launched the Cultural Revolution, and the
changes it brought to her and her family. |
| SNOW
FALLING IN SPRING by Moying Li
This inspiring memoir follows Moying Li from age twelve to twenty-two, illuminating
a complex, dark time in China’s history as it tells the compelling story
of one girl’s difficult but determined coming-of-age during the Cultural
Revolution.
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| SOLD by Patricia McCormick
When she is tricked by her stepfather and sold into prostitution, thirteen-year-old
Lakshmi becomes submerged in a nightmare where her only comfort is the friendship
she forms with the other girls, which helps her survive and eventually escape.
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| BOUND
by Donna Jo Napoli
In a novel based on Chinese Cinderella tales, fourteen-year-old stepchild Xing-Xing
endures a life of neglect and servitude, as her stepmother cruelly mutilates
her own child's feet so that she alone might marry well. |
| A SINGLE
SHARD by Linda Sue Park
Tree-ear, a thirteen-year-old orphan in medieval Korea, lives under a bridge
in a potters' village, and longs to learn how to throw the delicate celadon ceramics
himself. |
| WHEN
MY NAME WAS KEOKO by Linda Sue Park
With national pride and occasional fear, a brother and sister face the increasingly
oppressive occupation of Korea by Japan during World War II, which threatens
to suppress Korean culture entirely. |
 | MASTER PUPPETEER by Katherine Paterson
Jiro becomes apprenticed to a harsh puppeteer at the Hanaza Theater in Osaka,
where a series of thefts become the source of excited speculation. |
 | BAMBOO PEOPLE BY Mitali Perkins Two Burmese boys, one a Karenni refugee and the other the son of an imprisoned Burmese doctor, meet in the jungle and in order to survive they must learn to trust each other. |
| SECRET KEEPER by Mitali Perkins
In 1974 when her father leaves New Delhi, India, to seek a job in New
York, Ashi, a tomboy at the advanced age of sixteen, feels thwarted in
the home of her extended family in Calcutta where she, her mother, and
sister must stay, and when her father dies before he can send for them,
they must remain with their relatives and observe the old-fashioned traditions
that Ashi hates.
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| KEEPING
CORNER by Kashmira Sheth
In India in the 1940s, thirteen-year-old Leela's happy, spoiled childhood ends
when her husband since age nine, whom she barely knows, dies, leaving her a
widow whose only hope of happiness could come from Mahatma Ghandi's social
and political reforms. |
| CLIMBING THE STAIRS by Padma Venkatraman
In India, in 1941, when her father becomes brain-damaged in a non-violent
protest march, fifteen-year-old Vidya and her family are forced to move
in with her father's extended family and become accustomed to a totally
different way of life. |
| HOMELESS BIRD by Gloria Whelan
Married and promptly widowed at 13, Koly finds herself in the grim position of
being cast out by a society that has no place for girls like her. With a seemingly
hopeless future in India, this courageous and spirited young woman sets out
to forge her own destiny. |
 | SMALL ACTS OF AMAZING COURAGE by Gloria Whelan In 1919, independent-minded fifteen-year-old Rosalind lives in India with her English parents, and when they fear she has fallen in with some rebellious types who believe in Indian self-government, she is sent "home" to London, where she has never been before and where her older brother died, to stay with her two aunts. |