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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

THE GREAT FIRE, By Jim Murphy



Murphy, Jim.  THE GREAT FIRE.  New York: Scholastic Inc., 1995.  ISBN 0439203074

In 1871, the city of Chicago was almost completely destroyed by a massive fire that ripped through the town, burning down houses, farms and businesses over the span of two days.  When flames broke out at a small barn on the edge of the city, harsh winds, dry land and a town made almost entirely out of wood combined into the perfect storm of destruction.  THE GREAT FIRE chronicles the events of this historic disaster, told from the stories of actual survivors who braved the flames of chaos on that fateful, windy October night in Chicago.

Jim Murphy’s enthralling account of the Great Chicago Fire details the events surrounding the disaster with great detail and emotion.  Readers will soon become wrapped up in the stories of several survivors of the tragedy, whose writings Murphy uses to account for different perspectives in his tale.  Catherine and Patrick O’Leary, whose barn was the origination of the fire, portray the poor immigrants who were largely blamed for not only the fire itself, but also the chaos of panic and crime that swept the city during the days after the disaster.  James Hildreth, who tried desperately to recruit help in strategically stopping the fire from spreading, and Joseph Chamberlin, a reporter who followed the fire as it spread across the river, showcase those individuals who did their best to remain calm and help others during the fire.  However, perhaps most memorable of all stories Murphy includes are those of twelve-year-old Claire Innes, who is separated from her family while fleeing the flames, and Julia Lemos, the single mother who frantically moves her entire family to safety during the blaze.  Murphy’s research into personal accounts of that fateful night help make the events of the Chicago Fire real and relatable for readers.  Children will imagine wandering the smoldering city, alone and lost with Claire, while adults will wonder how quickly they would have reacted to the distant glowing flames.

Murphy’s informational book is well organized and detailed, including several double-page maps that illustrate how quickly the fire spread and destroyed vast parts of the city as the days passed.  He builds suspense as he provides information, remaining objective and factual as he details the aftermath of the blaze and the deep division of the city’s socioeconomic groups.  Murphy includes a wide variety of drawings and photographs illustrating the fire, many of which were from the Chicago newspapers in the days and weeks following the catastrophe.  Young readers will be astounded to see how quickly the city was destroyed as 100,000 people were left homeless by the fire's end.  The book’s design is simple and straightforward, with pictures in monotone browns and lengthy text on most pages.  Murphy’s extensive bibliography, which cites direct quotes and statistics throughout the text, solidifies the book’s accuracy.  He has also included a lengthy index, allowing for readers to skip directly to the topics in which they are most interested, and a table of contents that outlines the chronological chapters of the book.  THE GREAT FIRE is as riveting as it is informational, promising to not only teach readers about this disastrous day in Chicago, but to also capture their attention with its suspenseful and emotional accounts of the personal ways the event impacted the entire city. 

THE GREAT FIRE is a 1995 Newbery Honor Book and one of many historical nonfiction works by author Jim Murphy.  The book also boasts the 1996 NCTE Orbis Pictus Award and is a SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL Best Book, a BOOKLIST Editors Choice, and an ALA Notable Book.  HORN BOOK’s starred review praises, “The energy and depth of the presentation make this thought-provoking history lesson absorbing and riveting reading.”  PUBLISHERS WEEKLY calls the book “engrossing” and KIRKUS REVIEWS praises it as “a veritable cinematic account.”  Those interested in famous disasters or personal accounts of historical events will enjoy Murphy’s detailed telling of THE GREAT FIRE.

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For more by Jim Murphy, readers can check out:

INSIDE THE ALAMO, By Jim Murphy, ISBN 0385325745

ACROSS AMERICA ON AN EMIGRANT TRAIN, By Jim Murphy, ISBN 0395764831

BLIZZARD!: THE STORM THAT CHANGED AMERICA, By Jim Murphy, ISBN 0590673106

For a more recent comparison of a natural fire disaster, young readers can try:

FIRE IN OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA: BILLION-DOLLAR BLAZE (AMERICAN DISASTERS), By Carmen Bredeson, ISBN 0766012204

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Sources:

Monday, March 25, 2013

BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY: THE TRUE STORY OF THE PUPPETEER OF MACY'S PARADE, By Melissa Sweet


Sweet, Melissa.  BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY: THE TRUE STORY OF THE PUPPETEER OF MACY’S PARADE.  New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011.  ISBN 0547199457

Tony Sarg grew up collecting toys and learning how to make things move, a passion he turned into a career in New York City’s Broadway theatres.  When Macy’s department store enlisted him to create a street parade without real live animals that scared children, Tony turned to his beloved marionette puppets – supersized! – to get the job done.  Part puppet, part blimp, these creatures evolved into the soaring parade balloons millions of children still love to see every Thanksgiving Day at the Macy’s parade.

Caldecott Honor Winner Melissa Sweet’s creation, BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY, is a delightful biography about the man who made magic come to life on the streets of New York.  Sweet’s extensive research on the life of Tony Sarg is evident in the book’s careful attention to detail, which includes stories from Sarg’s childhood, quotes from the man himself, and even excerpts from letters the puppeteer received from young fans.  The story is chronologically organized, with clear reference aids to help readers find just what they want to lean about Sarg’s story.  For example, drawings and photographs are creatively labeled to show the correct pronunciation of Sarg’s last name (“Sarg rhymes with aargh!”), the winding parade route on a map of New York City, and even the design sketches and color palettes for balloons in the works.  Sweet displays this information in bright colors and catchy layouts, which invite children to explore and wonder about Tony Sarg’s creative life and career.  Young readers will want to look through the book again and again, and will be sure to catch a new detail on the pages each time.  Sweet includes an author’s note at the book’s end, which gives more information on Sarg’s balloons and art, as well as cites her quotes and sources.  Her thorough notes prove to give BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY the accuracy and credibility to shine as a children’s picture book biography. 

The illustrations in BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY truly steal the show, inviting readers to pore over every nook and cranny of each page.  Sweet uses a range of media in her collage pictures, including pages from old puppet books, actual newspaper articles about the first Macy’s parades in New York City, and even original toys hand created during her research for the book.  The illustrations blend these materials with Sweet’s watercolor paintings to create a whimsical and magical style that portrays Tony Sarg’s life in a way that will inspire children to create art of their own.  The layers of detail and texture in the book’s pictures help tell Sarg’s story, such as the clipped scraps of fabric he used to make puppet clothes and the Indonesian rod puppet laying across his plan book, later inspiring the upside down marionettes that would become Sarg’s famous balloon animal puppets.  BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY’s illustrations are colorful and imaginative, encouraging curiosity and surprise for eager young readers.

Melissa Sweet has created a true masterpiece in BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY.  The 2012 winner of The Robert F. Sibert Medal for distinguished informational books and the 2012 winner of The National Council of Teachers Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children, this tale of Tony Sarg’s life is a must-read for anyone who has ever marveled at the soaring balloons in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.  SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL calls BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY “a delightful example of good nonfiction that should capture the interest of young and old alike.”  PUBLISHERS WEEKLY raves, “The rush that comes from inspiration, the cliffhanger moments of creation, the sheer joy of building something and watching it delight the multitudes – Sweet captures it all in what is truly a story for all ages.”

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Students reading BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY may be inspired to create their own miniature parade balloons, using art supplies and balloons.  These creations, when filled with helium, can be used to create a small-scale version of Sarg’s famous parade.

Related books on the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade include:

MILLY AND THE MACY’S PARADE, By Shana Corey, Illustrated by Brett Helquist, ISBN 0439297559

MACY’S ON PARADE: A POP-UP CELEBRATION OF MACY’S THANKSGIVING PARADE, By Pamela Pease, ISBN 0966943325

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Sources:


Sunday, March 24, 2013

WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE, By Barbara Kerley, Illustrated by Edwin Fotheringham



Kerley, Barbara.  WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE? HOW ALICE ROOSEVELT BROKE THE RULES, CHARMED THE WORLD, AND DROVE HER FATHER TEDDY CRAZY!.  Ill. by Edwin Fotheringham.  New York: Scholastic Press, 2008.  ISBN 0439922313

Alice Roosevelt did not grow up like an ordinary young lady, President’s daughter or not.  She did not attend school or wear dresses like the other girls her age.  She kept a pet snake in her room and ran wild in the White House with her stepsiblings.  And she never cared what reporters wrote about her and her adventures in the newspapers.  An outrageous and fiercely independent girl, Alice captured the heart of the entire nation with her shocking behavior and sharp knowledge of the world around her.

Barbara Kerley’s biography captures the spunk and spirit of a young Alice Roosevelt as she grows and matures under the watchful eye of her president father.  Young readers will be delighted to learn about Alice’s antics, which Kerley describes with great detail and dynamic adjectives that allow students to truly imagine what life inside the White House would be like for a child.  From greeting visitors with her pet snake to stealing the attention at her father’s second inauguration, Kerley depicts Alice as full of nerve and wit.  The author writes objectively and even includes documented dialogue between Alice and her famous father, quoting a letter Theodore Roosevelt wrote to his daughter on her return from a visit to Cuba and Puerto Rico.  Kerley captures both the President’s pride in his daughter’s accomplishments and his exasperation with her bold personality and actions.  The book’s unique style showcases both these sides of Alice, highlighting her outrageous behavior (sumo wrestling in Japan!) alongside her love and knowledge of politics.  Kerley increases her credibility with an author’s note at the story’s end, where she details more about Alice Roosevelt’s life, marriage and political impact.

The digital illustrations by Edwin Fotheringham in WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE? complement Kerley’s portrayal of a young, boisterous Alice Roosevelt.  Fotheringham’s pictures are bright and inviting, while also depicting Alice as an unruly and rowdy child who was indeed a “running riot.”  The illustrations suggest her quick movement on every page, showing Alice springing up and down on her grandfather’s couch, dashing around the Capital’s lawn, flying down the length of the page on a bicycle, and zooming down the White House staircase.  Fotheringham communicates Alice’s love for adventure and controversy, often depicting her with a sly smile or backwards glance as her daring behavior astonishes those around her.  The bright and colorful illustrations, as well as a speckling of bold and enlarged fonts on the pages, beg young readers to take a peek inside and learn just how Alice “charmed the world” while driving her father crazy!

BOOKLIST gives WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE? a starred review, writing “Irrepressible Alice Roosevelt gets a treatment every bit as attractive and exuberant as she was.”   THE NEW YORK TIMES agrees, stating “Kerley reveals the essence of Alice in an upbeat account of her life.”  WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE? is a witty and entertaining informational biography for children that is both accurate and lively.  Kerley and Fotheringham are a perfect team to create enthusiasm for the wild life of Alice Roosevelt.  An award-winning picture book biography, WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE? boasts:

PUBLISHER’S WEEKLY Best Book of the Year
SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL Best Book of the Year
KIRKUS REVIEWS Best Book of the Year
ALA Notable Book

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Readers who are curious to learn more about growing up inside the White House can also read:

FIRST KIDS: THE TRUE STORY OF ALL THE PRESIDENTS’ CHILDREN, By Noah McCullough, ISBN 0545175380

OF THEE I SING, A LETTER TO MY DAUGHTERS, By Barack Obama, Illustrated by Loren Long, ISBN 037583527X

PRESIDENTIAL PETS: THE WEIRD, WACKY, LITTLE, BIG, STRANGE ANIMALS THAT LIVED IN THE WHITE HOUSE, By Julia Moberg, Illustrated by Jeff Albrecht Studios, ISBN 1936140799

OUR WHITE HOUSE: LOOKING IN, LOOKING OUT, By multiple authors and illustrators with the National Children’s Book and Literacy Alliance, ISBN 0763646091
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Sources:

http://barbarakerley.com/Alice.html


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/books/review/Posesorski-t.html?_r=0

http://www.amazon.com/dp/0439922313/ref=rdr_ext_tmb