Story is a powerful way to build compassion and bridge understanding between cultures. Story has the power to heal as well as teach.

Beyond Boundaries · Essays and tidbits from Nancy Bo Flood

Rodeo excellence begins with the right lariat

December 24, 2015

In Cowboy Up! Ride the Navajo Rodeo, entrants may get to know their favorite lariat almost as well as their horses.Is a rope just a rope? Not in rodeo!

Read More

Young rodeo competitors seek a trophy they can wear

December 22, 2015

In Cowboy Up! Ride the Navajo Rodeo, young entrants learn that champions are rewarded with decorative belt buckles. In the early days of rodeo, many contestants were former boxers. If…

Read More

Coconuts sustain Warriors in the Crossfire

December 17, 2015

Find a coconut, find hope. That’s how Joseph and Kento respond to stockpiled coconuts, all while worrying about food and freedom. Modern cooks might deal with the coconut differently, turning…

Read More

Ghost crab materializes in Warriors in the Crossfire

December 15, 2015

Joseph and Kento find their island of Saipan becoming a World War II battleground in Warriors in the Crossfire. As they hide on the beach, a ghost crab is one…

Read More

Italian marble links past and present in No-Name Baby

December 10, 2015

Sophie’s grandfather’s World War I death was marked with a small headstone of Italian marble “from our homeland,” said her Nonna. The famous marble has a history dating back centuries.

Read More

No-Name Baby highlights olive oil’s magic

December 8, 2015

In No-Name Baby, Nonna and Aunt Rae treat a bottle of olive oil like a magic potion. The family baptized their new baby with the prized oil sent by a…

Read More

Will water bring an unhappy ending to the story of Shishmaref, Alaska?

December 5, 2015

Climate change. Climate disruption. Coastal erosion. What does it all mean? To the people of Shishmaref, Alaska, it means EVERYTHING.

Read More
Brownstone staircase

Marveling at the mystery of sandstone

December 3, 2015

“From one grain of sand, I became a mountain.” Those words are part of my tribute to sandstone in Sand to Stone and Back Again. Beginning in the late 1800s,…

Read More