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Sunday, June 30, 2013

As Fast As Words Could Fly

This post joins other Nonfiction Monday blogs
hosted today by Ms. Yingling Reads
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

Lee & Low Books
(pub. 4.2013) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Pamela M. Tuck
     and Illustrator:  Eric Velasquez

haracter: Mason Steele (fictional character inspired by real-life experiences of the author's father, Moses Teel Jr)

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "Young Mason Steele takes pride in turning his father's excited ramblings about the latest civil rights incidents into handwritten business letters. One day Pa comes home with a gift from his civil rights group: a typewriter. Thrilled with the present, Mason spends all his spare time teaching himself to type. Soon he knows where every letter on the keyboard is located.
        When the civil rights group wins a school desegregation case, Mason learns that now he will be attending a formerly all-white high school. Despite his fears and injustice from the students and faculty, Mason perseveres [and] decides to take a stand, using his skills to triumph over prejudice and break racial barriers."

T antalizing taste: 

    "'Mason Steel, from Belvoir High, has broken all previous records with a typing speed of sixty-five words per minute.'
     No one cheered. Mason just stared straight ahead.
     Mr. Bullock accepted the typing championship plaque for Belvoir High. Not a single person in the audiencd applauded.
    Mason received nothing...
    'Why in the world did you choose a manual typewriter? [instead of an electric one which all the other students in the competition used]'
    Mason cleared his throat. 'Cause it reminds me of where I come from, sir.'"

and something more: I was very pleased to be asked by Lee & Low Books if I would like to feature AS FAST AS WORDS COULD FLY on my blog. Although it's not a nonfiction picture book biography, I feel this new terrific picture book fits within the "something more" category of my blog.  I believe stories inspired by true events, especially those based on stories of people close to us, can be as rich and inspiring as nonfiction biographies. 
      I was touched by Pamela M. Tuck's explanation of the genesis of this book, as she explains on her website

        "The inspiration to turn a snippet of my father’s story into a picture book was initiated by my husband, Joel. In listening to my father tell his story over and over, his determination to excel always overshadowed his oppositions. Although he mentioned his fears and his feelings of isolation, his confidence kept him from wavering. He held his own personal pep rally, by telling himself, “I can do this.” At first, I didn’t think I could give my father’s story justice as a picture book, and my husband became my personal cheerleader by telling me, “You can do it.” It’s ironic how the same willpower that enabled my father to surpass his doubts, also allowed me to surpass mine."

         I certainly have been blessed by many cheerleaders in my life and I truly cherish each and every one of them. Surpassing one's doubts, especially in the face of discrimination as Pamela M. Tuck's father and countless others did, is to be credited. AS FAST AS WORDS COULD FLY is just the type of book that will not only teach children about the injustices of the 1960's in the United States, but will also inspire children to believe in themselves to overcome life's challenges and obstacles. 

Monday, June 24, 2013

Louisa May's Battle


How the Civil War 
Led to Little Women


This post joins other Nonfiction Monday blogs hosted today
by Playing by the book
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

Walker Books for Young Readers
(Bloomsbury)
(pub. 3.5.2013) 48 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Kathleen Krull
     and Illustrator:  Carlyn Beccia

haracter: Louisa May Alcott

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "Louisa May Alcott was a proper young lady from a poor but respected New England family. The Alcotts believed that slavery was wrong and even worked as part of the Underground Railroad. So when the Civil War started, Louisa longed to fight for the North. But since she wasn't a man, she did what she could - she volunteered as a war nurse.
       Everything about this experience opened Louisa's eyes to new possibilities: from the long and difficult journey to Washington DC to caring fro the young injured soldiers and witnessing the treatment of the African American staff. Louisa returned from the war a very different person, and these changes led her to develop a new writing style and outlook that ultimately led to her greatest writing triumph, Little Women."

T antalizing taste: 

    "Any spare minute she had, she wrote home, letters full of snap and bite, using an upside-down teakettle as a desk. She chatted about her soldiers - and also about the chaos at the hospital, or the doctor who had trouble treating his patients as human beings...
     Being a war veteran was the key to all that she accomplished: 'My greatest pride is... that I had a very small share in the war which put an end to a great wrong.'"

and something more: I liked the description in the Women in Medicine section of Louisa May's Battle: "Most of the women in medicine were also active in fighting for equal rights for women - including Alcott, who took to signing her letters, 'Yours for reform of all kinds.'"  What a lovely way to sign one's name!

Monday, June 10, 2013

Mary Walker Wears the Pants

The True Story of
The Doctor, Reformer,
and Civil War Hero

This post joins other Nonfiction Monday blogs hosted today
by Practically Paradise
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

Albert Whitman & Company
(pub. 3.1.2013) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Cheryl Harness
     and Illustrator:  Carlo Molinari

haracter: Mary Walker

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "Mary Edwards Walker was always an outspoken woman. She was one of America's first woman doctors, and she fought for women's rights and gave speeches around the county. But she could also make a statement just by walking down the street - wearing pants in a time when women always wore dresses!
       When the Civil War struck, she set out to serve her country and treat wounded soldiers - not as a nurse, but a a doctor. She faced extreme danger behind enemy lines and for her bravery she received the Medal of Honor, the highest award a war veteran can receive. She remains the first and only woman to ever hold this honor..."

T antalizing taste: 

    "After the war, audiences in America and abroad paid to hear Mary tell about her Civil War service and her imprisonment - and to see her in her notorious gentlemanly suit. It got her laughed at and made people angry. It caused scenes and even got her arrested! ...
    But there was more to Mary than her trousers. She lived as she believed, as an individual, fully equal and entitled to walk, breathe, and think freely, unbound by a corset or her society's expectations."
                       
and something more: I was intrigued by the statement that Mary Edwards Walker was "the first and only woman" to ever receive the Medal of Honor. The back matter explains that "in 1917, the U.S. Congress ordered 84 year-old Mary, along with 910 other honorees, to return their Medals of Honor. The rules had been changed: the medal could only be awarded to those who'd been in 'actual combat with the enemy.' ... Mary refused to give back her medal. She wore it all the remaining days of her life until she died... at the age of 86... And, on June 10, 1977, President Jimmy Carter officially restored the Medal of Honor to Dr. Mary Edwards Walker." Only fair given the injustice of taking back medals because the rules changed later!

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Who Says Women Can't Be Doctors?

The Story of Elizabeth Blackwell

This post joins other Nonfiction Monday blogs hosted today
by Jean Little Library
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

Christy Ottaviano Books
(Henry Holt and Company)
(pub. 2.19.2013) 40 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Tanya Lee Stone
     and Illustrator:  Marjorie Priceman

haracter: Elizabeth Blackwell

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "In the 1830s, when a brave and curious girl named Elizabeth Blackwell was growing up, women were supposed to be wives and mothers. Career options were few. There were certainly no female doctors. But Elizabeth refused to accept these common beliefs and would not take no for an answer.
       This inspiring story of the first female doctor in America shows how one strong-willed woman opened the doors for all the female doctors who followed."

T antalizing taste: 

    "The teachers had let the students vote on whether or not to allow Elizabeth to come. And the boys, figuring the school would never really accept a girl, said yes. They planned to turn the whole thing into a big joke.
     But the joke was on them!"
                       
and something more: As always, I'm fascinated by the Author's Note in picture book biographies. In Who Says Women Can't Be DoctorsTanya Lee Stone explains that after Elizabeth Blackwell graduated from medical school "with the highest grades in the whole class" in 1849,  "no one would hire her to work as a doctor."  Thank goodness Elizabeth Blackwell "refused to give up. She was as stubborn as a mule. Quite rightly!" I didn't realize that her sister also became a doctor and together they started The New York Infirmary for Women and Children - "the first hospital run by women, for women."  Thanks to Tanya Lee Stone for sharing this true tale of perseverance.