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Goddu, Krystyna PorayGoddu, Krystyna Poray | Alt 1
Goddu, Krystyna PorayGoddu, Krystyna Poray | Alt 1

Krystyna Poray Goddu

Krystyna Poray Goddu holds a degree in comparative literature from Brown University. Author of A Girl Called Vincent, Dollmakers and Their Stories: Women Who Changed the World of Play and coauthor of Krysia, she has contributed to American Girl magazine, the New York Times Book Review, and the Riverbank Review of Books for Young Readers and is a regular reviewer of children's books and writer for Publishers Weekly. She has worked at Woman's Day magazine and was founding editor of Dolls magazine and co-founder of Reverie Publishing Company, which publishes books on dolls and toys for collectors and children. She has also worked in school libraries and taught writing to middle-school students in independent schools in New York City.
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Titles by Krystyna Poray Goddu

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Titles Found: 3
A Girl Called Vincent
A Girl Called Vincent (4 Formats) ›
By Krystyna Poray Goddu
Trade Paper Price 12.99

Trade Paper, PDF, EPUB, Mobipocket

Published Apr 2018

Tracing Millay's life from her youth in Maine to the bohemian fervor of her early adulthood in Greenwich Village and Paris, this fancinating biography will captivate middle grade readers. Including photos, full-length poems, plentiful letter and diary excerpts, a time line, source notes, and bibliography, this is an indispensable resource for any young person interested in poetry, literature, or biographies of remarkable people in American history.
Becoming Emily
Becoming Emily (4 Formats) ›
By Krystyna Poray Goddu
Trade Paper Price 13.99

Trade Paper, PDF, EPUB, Mobipocket

Published Jun 2022

Emily Dickinson wrote short, often-enigmatic poems that are widely anthologized, quoted, and read by students of every age. Yet, as widely known as her poetry is, Dickinson as a person is considered to have been an inscrutable recluse—a silent figure who wore only white, wrote in secret, never left her home, and had no interest in sharing her poetry. In Becoming Emily, young readers will learn how as a child, adolescent, and well into adulthood, Dickinson was a lively social being with a warm family life. Highly educated for a girl of her era, she was fully engaged in both the academic and social aspects of the schools she attended until she was nearly 18. Her family and friends were of the utmost importance to her, and she was a prolific, thoughtful, and witty correspondent who shared many poems with those closest to her. Including plentiful photos, full-length poems, letter excerpts, a time line, source notes, and a bibliography, this indispensable resource offers a full portrait of this singular American poet.
Krysia
Krysia (4 Formats) ›
By Krystyna Mihulka, By Krystyna Poray Goddu
Trade Paper Price 12.99

Trade Paper, PDF, EPUB, Mobipocket

Published May 2026

As German troops and bombs descended upon Poland, Krysia struggled to make sense of the wailing sirens, hushed adult conversations, and tearful faces of everyone around her. Within just days, the peaceful childhood she had known would disappear forever.

Krysia tells the story of one Polish girl's harrowing experiences during World War II as her beloved father was forced into hiding, a Soviet soldier's family took over her house, and finally as she and her mother and brother were forced at gunpoint from their once happy home and deported to a remote Soviet work farm in Kazakhstan.

Through vivid and stirring recollections Mihulka details their deplorable conditions—often near freezing in their barrack buried under mounds of snow, enduring starvation and illness, and witnessing death. But she also recalls moments of hope and tenderness as she, her mother, her brother, and other deportees drew close together, helped one another, and even held small celebrations in captivity. Throughout, the strength, courage, and kindness of Krysia's mother, Zofia, saw them through until they finally found freedom.