
My Brain Won’t Float Away/Mi cerebro no va a salir flotando
Annie, an eight-year-old girl, gathers the courage to ask her mother, “Why is one of my hands smaller than the other? Why do I fall so much?”

Annie, an eight-year-old girl, gathers the courage to ask her mother, “Why is one of my hands smaller than the other? Why do I fall so much?”
Follow the adventures of Lexi, her family and friends in the highly-awaited sequel to “Moko Jumbi Dreams.”
By Ashley-Ruth Moolenaar Bernier Illustrated by Yolanda Fundora Synopsis Have you ever gone to the beach in the middle of January? Eaten scores of Caribbean food at a Carnival Food Fair? Picked mangoes or genips or limes […]
One summer afternoon Rebecca (Becca) and her friend Khalid go on a simple errand and find a mysterious, shiny box that seems to have appeared out of nowhere. What should they do? Leave it where they have found it? Take it home? Tell their parents?
Lexi continues to work towards her goal of becoming the first ever moko jumbi majorette in the carnival parades. After much practice, and lots of help from Granny and Tooty, she can FINALLY jump and dance in her stilts.
The Taino people of the Caribbean lived a peaceful existence in harmony with nature until the day when strange men arrive in large ships to their shores.