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My Great-Aunt Arizona by Gloria Houston
My Great-Aunt Arizona by Gloria Houston












Still she becomes a teacher in spite of the obstacles in her path. Her mother dies and she takes on family responsibilities. As she grows up, she longs to visit the faraway places she learns about, but life doesn't offer her those opportunities. Grade 1-3- Arizona, a child of the Blue Ridge, is named by her older brother, a cavalryman out West. (Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.)

My Great-Aunt Arizona by Gloria Houston

She goes with us in our minds." Readers will be among the many touched by this very special relative. Though her great-aunt died at the age of 93, Houston concludes that she "travels with me and with those of us whose lives she touched. For 57 years, Arizona hugged her students, and "taught them words and numbers, and about the faraway places they would visit someday." Lamb's bustling paintings-with glowing characters straight out of Laura Ingalls Wilder-convey the timeless beauty of the region, as well as Arizona's warmth and charisma. in the Blue Ridge Mountains." Arizona and her younger brother attended a one-room school, helped tap the maple trees in spring and "caught tadpoles in the creek." Later, she went away to school, and returned to teach in the same schoolhouse where she herself learned. In spare yet stirring prose, she recounts the life of her great-aunt Arizona, who "was born in a log cabin her papa built.

My Great-Aunt Arizona by Gloria Houston My Great-Aunt Arizona by Gloria Houston

The author of The Year of the Perfect Christmas Tree and Littlejim again demonstrates her skill as a graceful, affecting storyteller.














My Great-Aunt Arizona by Gloria Houston