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Stellaluna gets scolded
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Images from Janell Cannon's
Stellaluna. Reprinted with
permission from Harcourt Publishers.
 
Reviews

Reviews: (by author)

(2 Reviews)

Fleming, Denise. The Everything Book. New York: Henry Holt, 2000. ISBN 0-8050-6292-0. $18.95.

This lively, bright, comprehensive book starts with a morning poem by a rooster and ends with a hen and her chicks nestling. In between are many poems by Anonymous, colorful alphabets and representative words, number pages, season pages, familiar Mother Goose rhymes, and-special fun for kids-a number of little ladybugs to count on each page.

It's a good book, a little pricey at $19, but certainly an excellent buy when one hopes, Holt brings it out in paperback. The end flap describes Fleming's artistic technique as "pouring colored cotton pulp through hand-cut stencils.The result-images set in handmade paper."

A. Allison

 

Fleming, Candace. Ben Franklin's Almanac: Being a True Account of the Good Gentleman's Life. New York: Atheneum, 2003. $19.95. 120 pp., large format. ISBN 0-689-83549-3.

"This is not your traditional biography," the author says in a note addressed to the "Courteous Reader." It's not traditional in the way it presents information: on very full, well-designed pages, nor is it traditional in the way it portrays its subject, himself certainly one of the most interesting of early Americans. Franklin appears here in the round, large and small –great events to daily doings. This is a slow, though-provoking read with much to relish on each page, so be aware of the reading level of the kid you give this to. It would be excellent for the upper elementary and older classroom.

Actually, anyone interested in American history would appreciate this book. It's printed on fine glossy paper and is substantial. The pages are laid out as if designed in the 1700s, with inset etchings, portraits, designs for inventions, and miscellaneous sketches such as cartoons, all set off neatly by black borders. The texts of the insets tell intriguing side stories. Adding to the colonial look of the book are the type fonts used, very attractive, very clear. This is a tidbits book, a lot of fun to open on many occasions to random pages and pick up a fact, an anecdote, or one of Franklin's wise sayings, like this:

Good writing should be smooth, clear, and short, and the art of saying little in much must be avoided at all costs. In written discourse, every needless thing gives offense and must be eliminated….Had this always been done, many large and tiresome volumes would have shrunk into pamphlets, and many a pamphlet into a single period. 23

The information about the Revolutionary War period is fascinating as told from a different perspective than as in a traditional history. Fleming researched for three years before writing this outstanding book.

Highly recommended
Alida Allison, January 2004

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