Book Cover

I Am Not a Number

Contributor(s): Dupuis, Jenny Kay (Author), Kacer, Kathy (Author), Newland, Gillian (Illustrator)

ISBN: 9781927583944

Publisher: Second Story Press

Hardcover
$21.95
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Pub Date: September 6, 2016

Dewey: FIC

Lexile Code: 0640

Features: Dust Cover, Illustrated, Price on Product

Target Age Group: 07 to 11

Physical Info: 0.50" H x 11.00" L x 8.60" W ( 0.90 lbs) 32 pages

Accelerated Reader® Info

Quiz #:0000186507 ( I Am Not a Number)

Reading level: 4.00

Interest level: LG

Point value: 0.5

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: When eight-year-old Irene is removed from her First Nations family to live in a residential school she is confused, frightened, and homesick. She tries to remember who she is and where she came from. When she goes home for the summer, her parents decide never to send her and her brothers away again. But what will happen when they disobey the law?

Brief description:

Kathy Kacer has won many awards for her books about the holocaust for young readers, including Hiding Edith, The Secret of Gabi's Dresser, Clara's War and The Underground Reporters. A former psychologist, Kathy tours North America speaking to young people about the importance of remembering the Holocaust. For more information, visit www.kathykacer.com.

Review Quotes: Publishers Weekly
July 11, 2016

Kacer (The Magician of Auschwitz, also illustrated by Newland) and educator Dupuis unflinchingly recount a story from the childhood of Dupuis's grandmother, one of some 150,000 Canadian First Nations children relocated to residential schools as part of an assimilation policy. Irene Couchie and two brothers were taken from their family in 1928 to attend a Catholic boarding school. She was assigned a number in lieu of her name, her long hair was unceremoniously cut, and a nun physically abused her for speaking her native language ("even though the red sores had now turned pink, the memory of the punishment had not faded one bit"). The story never shies from the harsh treatment Irene endured, peaking dramatically when the children hide from the agent coming to collect them for a second school year. They were among the lucky ones whose parents took a stand and refused to return them. Most spreads feature a full page of first-person narrative opposite Newland's somber watercolors. An afterword discusses Canada's history with the residential school program (and recent government apologies for it) and provides additional details about her grandmother's life. Ages 7-11.-- "Publishers Weekly"

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