Description |
260 pages ; 21 cm |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references. |
Summary |
Fourteen-year-old Mateo and other Caribbean islanders face discrimination, segregation, and harsh working conditions when American recruiters lure them to the Panamanian rain forest in 1906 to build the great canal. |
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One hundred years ago, the world celebrated the opening of the Panama Canal, which connected the worlds two largest oceans and signaled Americas emergence as a global superpower. It was a miracle, this path of water where a mountain had stoodand creating a miracle is no easy thing. Thousands lost their lives, and those who survived worked under the harshest conditions for only a few silver coins a day.From the young "silver people" whose back-breaking labor built the Canal to the denizens of the endangered rainforest itself, this is the story of one of the largest and most difficult engineering projects ever undertaken, as only Newbery Honor-winning author Margarita Engle could tell it. |
Study Program |
AR RL 6.8 2.0 165231 PCMS PHS. |
Subject |
Panama Canal -- History -- Fiction.
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Racism -- Fiction.
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Segregation -- Fiction.
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Rain forests -- Fiction.
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Novels in verse.
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ISBN |
9780544109414 (hardback) |
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0544109414 (hardback) |
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