Deborah Howe
James Howe is the author of more than ninety books for young readers, including the modern classic Bunnicula" and its highly popular sequels. In 2001, Howe published The Misfits", the story of four outcast seventh-graders who try to end name-calling in their school. The Misfits is now widely read and studied in middle schools throughout the country, and was the inspiration for the national movement known as No Name-Calling Week (NoNameCallingWeek.org), an event observed by thousands of middle...See more
James Howe is the author of more than ninety books for young readers, including the modern classic Bunnicula" and its highly popular sequels. In 2001, Howe published The Misfits", the story of four outcast seventh-graders who try to end name-calling in their school. The Misfits is now widely read and studied in middle schools throughout the country, and was the inspiration for the national movement known as No Name-Calling Week (NoNameCallingWeek.org), an event observed by thousands of middle and elementary schools annually. There are three companion novels to The Misfits" Totally Joe "(2005), Addie on the Inside "(2011), and Also Known as Elvis "(2014). Howe's many other books for children from preschool through teens frequently deal with the acceptance of difference and being true to oneself. See less
Deborah Howe's Featured Books
Deborah Howe book reviews
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The Portland Edge: Challenges and Successes in Growing Communities
A plan for planning
by mkenseth, Sep 22, 2010
The Portland Edge describes some of the factors involved in the city plan; and that plan is not focused on the physical design, but instead, the social and political factors that evolved within a ... Read More