Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - The Price of Freedom

Author: Dennis Brindell Fradin; Judith Bloom Fradin
Illustrator: Eric Velasquez
Publisher: Bloomsbury/Walkers Children's ( January 8, 2013)
Independent Reading Level: Grades 4 to 7
Read Aloud: Grades 3 to 6
Nonfiction * Slavery * African American History 

Description from GoodReads:
When John Price took a chance at freedom by crossing the frozen Ohio river from Kentucky into Ohio one January night in 1856, the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was fully enforced in every state of the union. But the townspeople of Oberlin, Ohio, believed there that all people deserved to be free, so Price started a new life in town-until a crew of slave-catchers arrived and apprehended him. When the residents of Oberlin heard of his capture, many of them banded together to demand his release in a dramatic showdown that risked their own freedom. Paired for the first time, highly acclaimed authors Dennis & Judith Fradin and Pura Belpré award-winning illustrator Eric Velasquez, provide readers with an inspiring tale of how one man's journey to freedom helped spark an abolitionist movement.

My thoughts on the book:
It is somewhat exhilarating when I find a book that presents a different side or piece of history from many other stories.  I have read numerous picture books on slavery, the Underground Railroad, and abolitionists but this was the first time I have read about the role the townspeople of Oberlin, Ohio played in standing up against injustices against slaves.

Husband and wife team, Dennis and Judith Fradin, share the powerful story of John Price's escape and fight for freedom and how the many townspeoples in Oberlin stood up on his behalf.  As I read through the text and looked at the accompanying illustrations by Eric Velasquez, I found myself emotionally moved by the efforts of both John Price and the Oberlin community.  There was also a sense that this community was strong in both belief and action.  It wasn't simply a few people who stood up to the unfairness of slavery or protested the recapturing of John Price, but instead it seems like everyone in the community has a role to play in change the rules.  The emotion and power of the book is clearly brought forward through the mixed media and oil paintings created by Eric Velasquez.

The final pages of The Price of Freedom contain various resources including an author's note, a bibliography, further reading, and website resources which provide readers with additional information and insight to the story of Oberlin Ohio.    

Released in time for African American History Month (February), this book will be a excellent addition to any classroom or school library collection.  Look for The Price of Freedom at your local independent bookstore or community library.  


Don't forget to link up your nonfiction picture book reviews.

Book Review - Open This Little Book

Author: Jesse Klausmeier
Illustrator: Suzy Lee
Publisher: Chronicle Books (January 1, 2013)
Audience: Ages 4 to 7 years
Source: Copy for Review

Description from GoodReads:
What will you find when you open this little book? A fun story? Sweet characters? Enticing pictures? Yes! But much more. Open this book and you will find...another book...and another...and another. Debut author Jesse Klausmeier and master book creator Suzy Lee have combined their creative visions to craft a seemingly simple book about colors for the very youngest readers, an imaginative exploration of the art of book making for more sophisticated aficionados, and a charming story of friendship and the power of books for all.

My thoughts on this book:
Take a debut author with a creative book concept, mix in a skilled illustrator, and finish off with a publisher who gets  books that are not always mainstream (in size or concept) and you have a winner.  Delving into Klausmeier's debut picture book, Open This Little Book, was similar to opening a specially wrapped present that is just as special on the inside and is a win all the way to the end.

When I started to read, Open This Little Book, I expected a much more traditional story.  Instead I discovered the need to interact with the story by opening each book within a book.  Concepts such as colors, names of animals, and size are brought to life.  There is also a sense of coming full circle - first going from larger to smaller and then back and beyond.  Repetitive language assists younger readers to have success with reading the book, and also experience the comfort of a predictable pattern. 

If you haven't seen Open This Little Book at a local bookstore or library, please make sure that they order it.  You won't want to miss Klausmeier's debut picture book.        

More about Jesse Klausmeier: website | facebook | twitter | pinterest

More about Suzy Lee: website

It's Monday! What are you reading? From Picture Books to YA - 1/14/13



It's Monday! What are you reading? is hosted by Sheila of Book Journey. Jen & Kellee from Teach Mentor Texts have adapted this to focus on Picture Books to Young Adult Books.

Yes, I got this post in while it is still Monday!  Better late than never.  I have been doing a lot of re-reading lately so I'll just share some favorite new reads of 2013.
 

Extreme Babymouse by Jennifer L. Holm and Matt Holm (Random House)


The Dark by Lemony Snicket; Illustrated by Jon Klassen (Little, Brown Books - releases 4/13)


The Yuckiest, Stinkiest, Best Valentine Ever by Brenda Ferber; Illustrated by Tedd Arnold (Dial Books for Young Children) - Just a fun Valentine picture book with characteristic Tedd Arnold illustrations.


Brave Girl: Clara and the Shirtwaist Makers' Strike of 1909 by Michelle Markel; Illustrated by Melissa Sweet (Balzer & Bray)- I read this book for the Nonfiction Picture Book 2013 challenge.  I loved Sweet's illustrations.


I am hoping to get to Navigating Early by Claire Vanderpool (Delacorte Books for Young Children) - I have heard so many good things about this one.

So what are you reading?

Blog Tour & Guest Post: Amy Timberlake

I am excited to welcome author, Amy Timberlake to the blog today.  Her new book ONE CAME HOME was released on January 8th.  Check out her blog tour for more great interviews and guest posts.   Here's what Amy had to say:

Recently, there was an on-line discussion amongst a group of teachers identifying periods of history that seem to be ignored in children’s literature. I have to admit that my knowledge of Wisconsin history and the “pigeoners” is limited and for me added to the excitement of reading ONE CAME HOME. What motivated you to write a story set in 1870’s Wisconsin and particularly focused on the “pigeoners”? 

Sounds like a great discussion—wish I could have listened in!

By the way, I get the sense that hardly anybody knows about the 1871 passenger pigeon nesting in Wisconsin—so there’s no shame there!

For me, it was a happy convergence of interests that led to writing about the passenger pigeons, the pigeon hunters (the “pigeoners”) and Wisconsin’s passenger pigeon nesting of 1871. For instance, I love history; I love novels set in the Midwest; and I’m a birder. (Yes, I’m actually one of those folks up at dawn watching birds. My husband and I do the whole deal—a pocket bulging with The Peterson Guide, binoculars in hand. We yell out to each other, saying phrases like “Yellow crown! Bandit mask! Red Rump!” It’s quite hilarious!)

Anyway, you can imagine that a person like me might read a book on birds every once in awhile—and I do. So One Came Home began because I was reading A.W. Schorger’s history of the now-extinct passenger pigeons.

Now Schorger’s book is a scholarly work, published in the 1950s by the University of Wisconsin Press. Picking it up, I expected dry, fussy prose wrapped around a lot of charts. But I thought I’d find something to like because I like birds.

 It was a scholarly book—tables, charts, an endnote section as thick as the text—but I was riveted. Here was this history that read like something straight out of science fiction. I mean, a billion birds the size of crows? Add to this that they flew at 60 mph and my imagination just stopped working. But wait, there was more: Sometimes passenger pigeon migrations darkened the sky for days. As these birds passed overhead, everyday folks were shooting at them from their windows and hitting twelve birds at one pop. These birds were so loud that as they passed you couldn’t hear a thing. Their dung dropped from the sky like sleet. This was weird, weird stuff!

So I’m reading this—and reading bits of it out loud to my husband because I cannot believe it—and I turn the page, and there, on the page, is a map of this huge passenger pigeon nesting in Wisconsin in 1871. (850 square miles?!?) It just floored me. I grew up in Wisconsin—this was my state—and I knew nothing of this. I couldn’t stop thinking about it. I started writing about it. And that was the real beginning of One Came Home.

Yeah, I had a few story ideas knocking around in my head earlier, but I didn’t put much of it on paper until I happened to read about this, crazy, jaw-dropping, maybe-a-billion-birds, 1871 nesting. I knew then where this story was going to be set. It was going to set in my home state of Wisconsin, and I was going to put a small, fictional town right next to this monstrous nesting. I’d have this living, breathing, science-fiction-like (but historical) setting. How could I resist?

 I should add—in case readers of this interview think that the book is all about passenger pigeons—that One Came Home is a western with a mystery in it. (It also qualifies as historical fiction. Yeah, that’s a lot of genres, but I swear it’s the truth!) Anyway, the story is told in the voice of thirteen-year old Georgie Burkhardt who leaves home in order to find her sister. Everybody else says her sister is dead, and has good reason—after all, there has been a funeral. But Georgie refuses to believe it and so sets off.

Georgie Burkhardt is a wonderful character. Was she based on anyone specific or did you just have fun creating her? 

I’m glad you liked her – that’s good news!

Let’s get this off the table first: There is a lot of me in Georgie. Deep down, I’m stubborn and sure I’m right. I know it’s silly, and half the time, it’s plain dumb, but there it is. I think I’m pretty good at hiding this though, so you shouldn’t worry about meeting me.

 Georgie is also derived from a character named Miss Illene Viola Wiggins who appeared in my novel, That Girl Lucy Moon. Miss Wiggins is a powerhouse. She’s a businesswoman and philanthropist in her late 60s who owns the town’s primary business. When I discovered I was still thinking about Miss Wiggins after that novel was published, I asked myself what she might have been like as a thirteen year old. From that question came the first versions of Georgie Burkhardt.

Can you identify one research technique that you use that a classroom teacher may be able to adopt as a writing exercise with students?

Well, I love primary historical documents (and by that I mean documents that were written by someone from a particular time period). For instance, in One Came Home, I quote from a period book, Captain Randolph B. Marcy’s The Prairie Traveler.

So I’d suggest doing a writing exercise that begins with a primary document. Say you have an old photograph of several people—you can ask the students to put themselves into that photograph and imagine that world. Ask the students to write quickly about the relationships between the people. Ask them to write about what they imagine the people are thinking. Ask them to imagine what these people do ‘for fun.’ (Maybe one of them doesn’t look like they have any fun at all. Why not? Write about it!) Tell them to imagine the sounds these people hear, the things they can feel, what they’re looking at—remind them to use all their senses. Ask them to pick a person and make a list of the important objects in that person’s life. Tell them to jot down any questions they’d like to ask these people.

The students won’t get everything ‘right,’ but misinterpretations can be the start of a good conversation, or the beginning of a research project. Personally, I like learning history this way. I’m not great at dates, names and places, but if I’ve seen a photograph, or read a letter, the rest of the history sticks.

One thing I am always curious about is the writing habits and writing space of authors? Some work in their home or a writing space, and others in coffee shops. Some like music playing in the background and others have special snacks or beverages. Tell us a little bit about your writing space and habits.  

It helps if I write regularly. That’s the biggest thing for me—to write regularly. If I don’t do it regularly I lose the threads of my plot. So I try to write four hours a day consistently. I take one day off a week.

 I have an office, and my own desk. I’ve got a door I can shut. But I’ve worked in lots of crazy places, and have strategies for each. I’ll say this: I love owning a laptop.

As for practices: When it’s an early draft, I can listen to music. But later, when I’m working at the sentence level, I need silence because I need to be able to hear the rhythm of the words. I also do a lot of reading out loud to hear the voice of the book.

At the end of my process, reading out loud is the only thing I trust to make sure the words are hitting their marks. I’ve found that when I read in my head (which goes much, much faster and is therefore tempting) I’ll add words, rhythms, beats that aren’t there. When the editor and I are sending a manuscript back and forth, I often go hoarse from reading out loud.

What book would you identify as being the book that turned you into a reader or inspired you to become a writer? 

William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying. It was required reading in high school, and I just got it in a sort of primal way. The voices were so specific and regional. In addition, I had never before considered that a narrator in a book might be unreliable. Wow. It blew me away.

If you could spend the day with your favorite character (from any book – doesn’t have to be one of your own characters), who would it be and what would you do for the day? 

 I would love it if Tolkien’s Gandalf would drop by to set me off on an adventure. Would you let him know I’m interested, please?

What is the question that you most frequently get asked by children who write to you?

“Are you going to write another book about Lucy Moon?” Man, that is such a compliment!

If we were to get a peek at your “To-be-read” pile, what titles would be see in the stack of books? 

I love this question! Last year, I was curious about how many books actually passed through my hands, so I kept track on Goodreads. You can go see it! I summed up my reading here: http://amytimberlake.com/blog/12/1/2012/amys-2012-book-list-new-years-resolution.

Current list?
• Right now, I’ve got a bunch of cookbooks waiting to be read and tried. I want to learn to make artisan bread, my own mustard, and maybe ferment something. (Cider? More mead? Haven’t decided.)

• I’m reading a lot of Thomas Merton. Going to read The Seven Storey Mountain—finally!

• I need to finish Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma. I’m at his fourth meal, so nearly there.

• I’m reading a mystery that I picked up because the cover was so beautiful: Kevin McCafferty’s The Royal Wulff Murders. I’m a sucker for covers, but this one doesn’t disappoint—it’s good so far!

• I will be doing some reading for a Kindling Words conference I’m going to in January, so add William Alexander, Natalie Babbitt, and John Green to the list.

• And I’m going to read Elizabeth Fama’s Monstrous Beauty. She’s a friend of mine and I can’t wait to read it because I heard early excerpts. Yay! Okay, that’s a startlingly large list for “what’s next.” Clearly this is an eyes-bigger-than-stomach situation. Does your list get this big?

Hey, as long as we’re bringing Gandalf into my life (see earlier question) maybe he can arrange for more time to read . . . What do you think? (I think my own list just got longer. *sigh*)

Thanks for this interview! This was fun!

Amy Timberlake grew up in Hudson, Wisconsin. She has an M.A. in English/Creative Writing from the University of Illinois at Chicago, where she’s also taught writing. She’s worked as a book reviewer, a book event coordinator, and as a children's bookseller. Her previous books include That Girl Lucy Moon and The Dirty Cowboy. The Dirty Cowboy was illustrated by Adam Rex and won SCBWI's Golden Kite Award. That Girl Lucy Moon was chosen as a Book Sense Pick, a NYPL’s “100 Titles for Reading and Sharing,” a Bank Street Best Children’s Book of 2007, an Amelia Bloomer Book, and the winner of the Friends of American Writers Literary Award. Amy Timberlake lives with her husband in Chicago. Learn more about her life and work at her website: www.AmyTimberlake.com.

Amy also has a great Pinterest page about passenger pigeons: http://pinterest.com/amytimberlikes/imagining-passenger-pigeons/

Amy's next stop in the blog tour:  January 14th over at  http://sharpread.wordpress.com/

Thanks to Blueslip Media, I am able to offer a copy of ONE CAME HOME to a reader who lives in the United States.    a Rafflecopter giveaway

Nonfiction Picture Book Releases - January 2013


As part of the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge, I try to post new releases for the month.  Here are a list of titles that I found being released in January 2013.  Books marked with an asterik (*) indicated full length chapter books for grades 5 to 8.


January 1, 2013


*Yoko Ono: Collector of Skies by Nell Beram, Carolyn Boriss-Krimsky (Scholastic)


*Lincoln's Grave Robbers by Steve Sheinkin (Scholastic)

January 2, 2013


Nelson Mandela by Kadir Nelson (Katherine Teegan Books)

January 8, 2013


The Price of Freedom: How One Town Stood Up to Slavery by Dennis Brindell Fradin, Judith Bloom Fradin; Illustrated by Eric Velasquez (Walker Children's)


A Splash of Red: The Life and Art of Horace Pippin by Jen Bryant; Illustrated by Melissa Sweet (Knopf Books for Young Readers)


You Never Heard of Willie Mays?! By Jonah Winter, Terry Widener (Schwartz & Wade)

January 22, 2013


*Courage Has No Color, The True Story of Triple Nickles: America's First Black Paratroopers by Tanya Lee Stone (Candlewick)


Henry and the Cannons: The Extraordinary True Story of the American Revolution by Don Brown (Roaring Brook Press)


Brave Girl: Clara and the Shirtmakers' Strike of 1909 by Michelle Markel; Illustrated by Melissa Sweet

January 29, 2013


Peace by Wendy Anderson Halperin (Atheneum)

The links for the above books will take you directly to the Indie Bound's webpage for purchasing information, unless otherwise noted. Please note, I do not make anything off these links or profit in anyway from posting the links. If you know of a book that should be included in this list, please include the title and author in the comments section and I will update the list.  

If you have posted any nonfiction book reviews, please link them up with this post: