west (u.s.)

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a
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west (u.s.)

You wouldn't want to live in a Wild West town!

dust you'd rather not settle
2002
Humorous illustrations and facts combine to provide a portrait of what life was like in a Wild West town in the years just after the Civil War.

You wouldn't want to work on the railroad!

a track you'd rather not go down
2001
Illustrations and simple text introduce young readers to the events surrounding the construction of the transcontinental railroad in the 1860s.

Ghost medicine

2008
Still mourning the recent death of his mother, seventeen-year-old Troy Stotts relates the events of the previous year when he and his two closest friends try to retaliate against the sheriff's son, who has been bullying them for years.

The dirty thirties

2007
Provides information about the Dust Bowl of the 1930s which occurred when the U.S. was stricken by a drought that caused devastating dust storms, primarily in the middle of the country. Includes primary source quotes, comments, and photographs.

Shane

1975
A stranger rides into a small Wyoming town in 1889 and creates a lasting impact on its inhabitants, especially on young Bob Starrett and his family.

Scrib

a novel
2005
In 1863, a sixteen-year-old boy nicknamed Scrib travels around the West making his living writing and delivering letters, an occupation that leads to him nearly getting killed, being jailed as a criminal, joining up with the notorious Crazy James Kincaid, and delivering a letter from President Abraham Lincoln to a Paiute Indian.

Stop the train!

a novel
2003
Despite the opposition of the owner of the Red Rock Runner Railroad in 1893, the new settlers of Florence, Oklahoma, are determined to build a real town.

Lewis and Clark

from ocean to ocean
2002
Pictures and text trace the famous Lewis and Clark Expedition through the Louisiana Purchase to the Pacific Coast.

Dog of discovery

a Newfoundland's adventures with Lewis and Clark
2002
A detailed account of the Lewis and Clark expedition features the dog that was its most unusual member. Selections form the actual journals of Lewis and Clark appear throughout the text.

The story of Sacajawea

guide to Lewis and Clark
1989
Recounts the life story of the Native American woman, Sacajawea, who was taken as a slave when she was a girl, then later sold as a wife to a French fur trader, and who eventually guided Lewis and Clark as they explored the western United States.

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