Nine-year-old Teresa is uprooted from San Antonio to Michigan’s sugar beet fields, where she faces cold winds, hard work, and a life shaped by migration. Inspired by true family stories, I Am Teresa follows her resilient journey between two worlds on the eve of the Great Depression.
Papers of the Algonquian Conference is a collection of peer-reviewed scholarship from an annual international forum that focuses on topics related to the languages and cultures of Algonquian peoples.
The Paradox of Protection: The Making of Indirect Rule in Southern Sierra Leone, 1850–1915 charts the history of protection to tell a new story about indirect rule in West Africa.
The Paradox of Protection: The Making of Indirect Rule in Southern Sierra Leone, 1850–1915 charts the history of protection to tell a new story about indirect rule in West Africa.
Like many American urban waterways, Ken-O-Sha has been in decline for nearly two hundred years. Once life-supporting, the waterway now known as Plaster Creek is life-threatening. This provocative book explores the watershed’s ecological, social, spiritual, and economic history to determine what caused the damage, and describes efforts to repair it.