About The Book: The greatest entertainer of his era, Buffalo Bill was the founder and star of the legendary show that featured cowboys, Indians, trick riding, and sharpshooters.
But long before stardom, Buffalo Bill—born Billy Cody—had to grow up fast. While homesteading in Kansas just before the Civil War, his family was caught up in the conflict with neighboring Missouri over whether Kansas would enter the Union as a free or slave state. To support his family after a pro-slaver killed his father, Billy—then eleven—herded cattle, worked on wagon trains, and rode the Pony Express. As the violence in Bleeding Kansas escalated, he joined the infamous Jayhawkers, seeking revenge on Missourians, and then became a soldier, scout, and spy in the Civil War—all by age seventeen.
About The Author: Award-winning author Andrea Warren brings to life the compelling childhood of an adventurous, determined boy who transformed himself into a true American icon. Andrea Warren combines her love of history and story with her passion for children and education in her award-winning non-fiction books for young readers, including Orphan Train Rider and Surviving Hitler. Her many honors include the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Nonfiction, the Robert F. Sibert Honor Award for Most Distinguished Informational Book for Children, the Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children and the William Allen White Award. Reviewers and readers have called her books “riveting,” meticulously researched,” and a “top flight example of historical storytelling.” Andrea Warren has lived in Kansas for many years, the setting for much of this book, and now makes her home in the Kansas City Area.
My Thoughts On The Book: This was my first book by Andrea Warren and it will not be my last. When I was young I loved reading about the wild west and what their daily lives were like. I grew up reading about Annie Oakley, Buffalo Bill, Wild Bill Hickok and loved them all. My father would read these stories to me at bedtime and in the mind of a young girl I wanted to live their lives. The problem was that those stories were glamorized for young children to read. Until I read this book I never truly knew life was really like. From the moment I began until I finished I was transformed back to a time during my childhood and was captivated. I am a school teacher and could see this book as a great fit for the library and history classes. Loved it!
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this e-book free from Two Lions and Net Galley Publicity Group as part of their Book Review Blogger Programs. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.” Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
Showing posts with label Children's non-fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children's non-fiction. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Monday, May 5, 2014
Plant a Pocket of Prairie
About The Author: Phyllis Root was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, on Valentine's Day, 1949, and grew up among green grass, gardens, trees, open fields, and books, books, books. Her father says he remembers her reading in her high chair. She used to make up stories in bed at night when she couldn't sleep and her parents had caught her with a book and a flashlight. Since then she has published thirty books, starting with Moon Tiger in 1985. In 1997 Aunt Nancy and Old Man Trouble, an original tale about a female trickster, won the Minnesota Picture Book text award. What Baby Wants was cited as a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year in 1998. Big Momma Makes the World won the 2003 Boston Globe Horn Book Award for picture books.
She is currently teaching in the MFA Writing for Children program of Hamline University. She lives in Minneapolis with two cats, and numerous butterflies in season amid prairie plants, trees, lakes, and books, books, books. In her spare time she loves canoeing, sailing, gardening, and of course reading.
About The Illustrator: According to Betsy Bowen “The aim of an artist is to make people love life,” said Leo Tolstoy. the artist lives and works on the edge of the wilderness near Minnesota’s north shore of Lake Superior, on the old homestead bought by her suburban parents in 1963 to allow the family to experience another way of life. In her early years, she focused on hand made textiles. Her work in woodblock printmaking has continued the ethic of seeking a straightforward livelihood generated by making goods by hand. The prints recently have focused on illustrations for picture books, written by herself, and others. The topics have evolved from views of local rural life into the folktales and stories which inform rural lives worldwide. Recent interest in the oral tradition of these folktales has led Bowen toward pageantry, creating puppets, scripts, and staging for community street theater and dance performances. Artistic activities include woodblock print illustrations for five picture-books, published by Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1991-2002, with topics embracing rural Minnesota life, and Ojibwe and Norwegian traditional stories. Three of the books, Antler, Bear, Canoe, Tracks in the Wilderness and Gathering: A North Woods Counting Book are written by Betsy. Other recent projects are calendars for Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center, Minnesota Journal 2000 project for Minnesota Historical Society, and large, and small-scale puppet theater works as Good Harbor Hill Players. Currently operating Betsy Bowen Studio, a fine art family print shop, hand-printing Betsy’s woodblocks for sale to galleries and art fairs. Her education includes various college level experiences from 1965 through 1997, the finale being a BA degree from Vermont College in Liberal Studies as well as significant workshop experiences with Grand Marais Art Colony.
My Thoughts On The Book: As a child who was introduced to nature at an early age by parents who loved planting, growing, hunting, fishing, bird watching this story touched my heart to the core. It brought back so many memories of bird watching with my father. There is nothing better than exploring nature as a child.
This charming book encourages readers young and old to bring back the prairie by planting their own little pocket of plants native to long-lost prairies. I enjoyed the progression of the author’s suggested plantings, and the amazing illustrations brought the story to life. It was written about Minnesota, but it made me realize that this did not just have to be a prairie, it could be anywhere that the ecosystem is being threatened. I am from South Florida and thought of the Everglades and the amazing orange groves that used to be. Because of my mom's love for plants, herbs, trees, and my dad's love of nature and birds I found that I recognized many of the plants and birds from the story. This is a must read.
DISCLAIMER: I received a copy of this novel from Netgalley in exchange for my honest review. This has not affected my review in any way, all opinion contained in this review are 100% my own.
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