
In the early 1700s, twelve-year-old Suzette, an Ojibwa-French girl, hopes that her father will win the fur-trapping contest so that he can quit being a voyageur and stay with his family year-round, but when he is accused of stealing, Suzette must use her knowledge of both French and Ojibwa ways to find the real thief.
year: 2000, 2010
call number/section: 1000
subjects: ojibwa indians, superior, lake, juvenile fiction, fiction, indians of north america, fur traders, racially mixed people, superior, lake, fiction, mystery and detective stories, native americans, ojibwa, north america
Editions

Ernst, Kathleen
Pleasant Co. (2000)
In the early 1700s, twelve-year-old Suzette, an Ojibwa-French girl, hopes that her father will win the fur-trapping contest so that he can quit being a voyageur and stay with his family year-round, but when he is accused of stealing, Suzette must use her knowledge of both French and Ojibwa ways to find the real thief.
Schools: 8

Ernst, Kathleen
Skyview Books (2010)
In the early 1700s, twelve-year-old Suzette, an Ojibwa-French girl, hopes that her father will win the fur-trapping contest so that he can quit being a voyageur and stay with his family year-round, but when he is accused of stealing, Suzette must use her knowledge of both French and Ojibwa ways to find the real thief.
Schools: 1

Ernst, Kathleen
Pleasant Company Publications
In the early 1700's twelve-year-old Suzette, an Ojibwa-French girl hopes that her father will win the fur-trapping contest so that he can quit being a voyageur and stay with his family year-round, but when he is accused of stealing, Suzette must use her knowledge of both French and Ojibwa ways to find the real thief.
Schools: 0