FROM THE ARCHIVE
Yellow Bird: Children's stories getting better
Facebook Twitter Email
TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2003

"As I watched 29 young people board a bus for a Winnipeg outing Sunday, I noticed that among the sweaters, pillows and snacks which several were clutching was the new "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix." When I made that observation to a counselor, she smiled and said her copy would be in the mail when she got home.

J.K. Rowling's book may be a top seller right now, but hers is just one among several good children's stories that have hit the streets in the last few years. And most of these stories move right from the hardcover to paperbacks and then film or television. The color and animation of these films have improved greatly over the years, too.

Remember when children's stories were only in books or told at a grandparent's knee? Some of those old fairy tales such as Little Red Riding Hood were very violent."

Get the Story:
DORREEN YELLOW BIRD COLUMN: Children's literature teaches and entertains (The Grand Forks Herald 6/24)

More Dorreen Yellow Bird:
Yellow Bird: Not your average bear adventure (6/17)
Yellow Bird: Preserving tribal medicine (6/16)
Yellow Bird: Nature's wonders in own back yard (6/10)
Yellow Bird: Public school teachers deserve praise (6/9)
Yellow Bird: Where the land and wind heal the soul (6/3)
Yellow Bird: Women should be allowed to fight (6/2)
Yellow Bird: Rebate forms difficult but addictive (5/27)
Yellow Bird: Indian Country tourism could work (5/27)
Yellow Bird: Dragonflies important to Natives (5/20)
Yellow Bird: This year, a sad Mother's Day (05/12)
Yellow Bird: Crazy Horse monument worthy task (5/6)
Yellow Bird: The good SPAM and the bad spam (5/5)
Yellow Bird: Black Hills hurt by urban sprawl (5/1)
Yellow Bird: My mother, at the final chapter (04/22)
Yellow Bird: Taxes, bills and orange peels (4/21)
Yellow Bird: Sacred ceremonies are not a business (4/15)
Yellow Bird: Indian child welfare act a necessity (4/14)
Yellow Bird: Pow-wow crosses cultural lines (4/8)
Yellow Bird: An Indian guide to Lewis and Clark (4/7)
Yellow Bird: Columnist 'put his foot in his mouth' (4/1)
Yellow Bird: Events help teach about Native culture (3/31)
Yellow Bird: Native people are never unpatriotic (3/25)
Yellow Bird: All is still not equal for women (03/17)
Yellow Bird: Enough of the cold already! (3/11)
Yellow Bird: Don't cut funds for the elderly (3/10)
Yellow Bird: Mister Rogers was like an elder (3/3)
Yellow Bird: Worries have changed in U.S. capitol (2/25)
Yellow Bird: Great-grandfather Little Sioux (2/24)
Yellow Bird: Unity needed in journalism too (2/18)
Yellow Bird: Finding peace in uncertain times (2/17)
Yellow Bird: Astronauts were elite, courageous (02/04)
Yellow Bird: Through diversity comes unity (2/3)
Yellow Bird: We're cold and proud of it (1/28)
Yellow Bird: It could have been anyone (01/14)
Yellow Bird: Deer encounters, Part 2 (1/13)
Yellow Bird: Listen up roaming deer! (1/7)
Yellow Bird: Looking past stereotypes (1/6)
Yellow Bird: We can learn from TIME report (12/23)
Yellow Bird: Happy Birthday, Mom (12/17)
Yellow Bird: Grandmother Moon (12/16)
Yellow Bird: Include Natives in plan (12/10)
Yellow Bird: Walking a different path (12/9)
Yellow Bird: An Indian Martha Stewart (11/18)
Yellow Bird: The dangers of smoking (11/12)
Yellow Bird: Worry about GOP control (11/11)
Yellow Bird: It's cold but it's home (11/5)
Yellow Bird: Gangs in Indian Country (11/4)
Yellow Bird: Wellstone will be missed (10/29)
Yellow Bird: Making the final journey (10/22)
Yellow Bird: No McDonald's in Mongolia (10/21)
Yellow Bird: Next stop, ESPN Sportszone (10/18)
Yellow Bird: Keeping traditions alive (10/08)
Yellow Bird: Burgers, chips and fries oh my (10/1)
Yellow Bird: The smallpox threat (9/30)
Yellow Bird: Oops, I did it again... (9/24)
Yellow Bird: Reservation elections (9/17)
Yellow Bird: Learning from 9-11 (9/16)
Yellow Bird: Remembering 9-11 (9/10)
Yellow Bird: Protecting the Badlands (9/9)
Yellow Bird: My secret nickname (9/2)
Yellow Bird: Appreciating art (8/28)