• Charge Ahead

    “Yesterday the Chargers read to us at school.”

    They told us playing football was a dream come true.

    “You can reach your dreams,” they said, “with good habits from the start if you read, eat well, exercise, and think smart.”
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  • Hansa, The True Story of an Asian Elephant Baby

    "Early one November morning at Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, an Asian elephant named Chai rocked from side to side on her huge legs. She was about to give birth to her first baby."

    In November of  2000, after a twenty-two month pregnancy, one of the Woodland Park Zoo’s female elephants  delivered a healthy female calf, one of only three Asian elephants born in a North America zoo that year. The calf was named Hansa which means “supreme happiness” in Thailand, the country where her mother was born.
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  • Lootas

    Selected as a 1999 Notable Book for Children by Smithsonian Magazine

    "All alone, in the cold quiet waters of Uganik Bay in southern Alaska, a sea otter gave birth to a female pup. Floating on her back, she licked the small wet ball of fur nestled on her belly."

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  • Who wakes the rooster

    Selected as a 1997 Bank Street College Book of the Year

    "It should be morning, but it’s eerie dark. Every thing is quiet…too quiet. Bounce isn’t barking. Where is bounce? Dozing in his doghouse, peacefully dreaming, because Miranda isn’t meowing. Where is Miranda?"

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  • Partner In Revolution: Abigail Adams

    "Thirteen –year-old Abigail Smith brushed a black curl out of her face, her thin lips pursed in frustration. Dipping a quill pen in the ink pot, she wrote, “The mind is like a tender twig which you may bend as you please…(As you get older, it becomes) like a sturdy oak,…hard to move.” Abigail wanted her cousin Isaac to know how lucky he was to be able to go to school…Abigail envied her cousin. While boys and girls could go to school to learn how to write and do simple arithmetic, only boys could continue on to Latin school to prepare for college."

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  • Manorah The Bird Princess

    "Long ago in Thailand, far beyond the human kingdom of Panchala Nakhon, lived a young bird princess named Manorah. Manorah was the youngest of the Bird King’s  seven daughters. She was also the most adventurous. The bird people were magical beings who could fly wherever they pleased or shed their wings and take human form. While her sisters were content to play among the shadowy peaks and silver streams of the Bird Kingdom, Manorah wanted to see what the human world was like."

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  • Olive and Max's Backyard Adventures

    Finalist for the Association of Educational Publishers Distinguished Achievement Award in 2008

    "On a hot summer night, Olive Opossum could not sleep. She had just returned from riding on her mother’s back to find food. Lying in all that fur had made Olive even hotter. Olive hung by her tail from a tree branch to catch the breeze. But no breeze came to cool her off. "I’ll go see if my friend Max is awake," said Olive. "I can’t sleep either," said Max.
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  • A Tale Of Two Rice Birds

    Recipient of the 1995 CBC/ABA Pick of the List for "Children’s Books Mean Business" award.

    "In the center of Thailand, where the Chao Phrya River flows, there once lived two rice birds. The built their nest in a teakwood tree on a ridge between two rice fields."

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  • I Could Not Keep Silent: The Life of Rachel Carson

    "Ten year-old Rachel Carson ran through tall meadow grass to the cool shelter of the woods at the edge of her father’s land. It was a beautiful summer afternoon in the town of Springdale, Pennsylvania. Squatting beside a shallow stream, she reached down to splash water on her face. A small green frog crouched on a rock at the water’s edge. Rachel stared intently at the tailless creature with bulging eyes. Did it remember its earlier life as a tadpole swimming in the water? Was it waiting to snatch a mosquito with its sticky tongue?"

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Book Reviews

Who Wakes Rooster?

"Meeker gets the diurnal rhythms of the farm just right, that ancient slipping from all quiet to all a-buzz..."
- Kirkus Reviews/July 15, 1996   

"Learning opportunities abound—animals to identify, sounds to connect to owner and imitate...a winner for preschool story times."
- School Library Journal /September 1996 

"Strong visual appeal combined with satisfying repetition make this a sure choice for the young."
- Booklist/November 6, 1996

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Lootas Little Wave Eater


"An engaging narrative of the rescue of an orphaned sea otter pup..."
- School Library Journal, January 2000

"Teachers planning a unit on marine biology, or parents who want their kids to know about the natural world would do well to purchase Lootas, the story of a Kodiak sea otter's rearing at the Seattle Aquarium."
- Alaska Magazine, November 1999

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A Tale of Two Rice Birds


"...a glorious introduction not only to a timeless tale but also the artistic and cultural sensibilities of a foreign land."
- Publisher's Weekly, October 3, 1994

"This nicely told tale of enduring love is accompanied by vibrant, luminous, stylized illustrations...a pleasant addition to multi-cultural collections."
- School Library Journal, November 1994
 
"Its story works well primarily because of its elegant intrinsic structure and emotions. It"s suspenseful and makes a postmodernist point about the power of storytelling..."
- The New Yorker, December 12, 1994

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Partner in Revolution: Abigail Adams


"Meeker's command of language is wonderful, and her use of Abigail's own words fits beautifully. We truly get an idea of what her life was like in one of the most trying times in American history."
- Judy Silverman  Children's Literature

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Awards

Clare Hodgson Meeker is an award-winning author of eight published books and over 24 magazine stories for children. Her awards include:

Olive and Max’s Big Backyard magazine series (The National Wildlife Federation’s “Your Big Backyard” magazine for young children from September 2006-December 2008):

  • “Berries, Beavers, and Bears, Oh My!” was a finalist for the Association of Educational Publishers Distinguished Achievement award in 2008.     

Lootas Little Wave Eater (Sasquatch Books, 1999):

  • Selected as a 1999 Notable Book for Children by Smithsonian Magazine
  • Selected as a 2005 Summer Quarter Washington Read by the Washinton State Library

 Who Wakes Rooster? (Simon & Schuster, 1996):

  • Selected as a 1997 Bank Street Book of the Year by the Child Study Children’s Book Committee at Bank Street College;

A Tale Of Two Rice Birds (Sasquatch Books, 1994):

  • Awarded an ABA/CBC recommendation from the American Booksellers Association in 1995.

Can I Quote You ?

Testimonials

At a staff meeting today one of the teachers showed a dramatic change in one student’s writing that she attributed to Clare’s work with her class. The student analyzed the earlier writing stating that she needed to include more details, add conversation to move her writing forward, and to improve the ending. Then the student wrote a second piece which did just that!

- Marilyn Loveness, Principal, West Woodland Elementary



Book Reviews & Awards

Lootas Little Wave Eater

"All alone, in the cold quiet waters of Uganik Bay in southern Alaska, a sea otter gave birth to a female pup. Floating on her back, she licked the small wet ball of fur nestled on her belly."

Selected as a 1999 Notable Book for Children by Smithsonian Magazine.

2005 Washington State Library's Washington Summer Reads Selection on the theme of "courage."

Sneak Preview

Read and respond to Clare’s new work

Eli’s True North – A Middle Grade Novel
First Page of Chapter 1

Eli loved the smell of hay as much as he loved horses. He figured that being born in a barn had something to do with it. To hear his mother tell the story, the sudden snowstorm was another disaster in a long list of unhappy events since they’d moved to Montana, only this one had a happy ending.


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