Showing posts with label children's literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children's literature. Show all posts

Friday, August 5, 2011

Review: "Migrant Mother" by Don Nardo

Migrant Mother: How a Photograph Defined the Great DepressionMigrant Mother: How a Photograph Defined the Great Depression by Don Nardo
Coughlan Publishing, 2011
64 pages
Review copy courtesy of NetGalley and the publisher. 

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What I love most about history is the people and the study of the everyday. What better way to connect with someone (sometimes) long past than an image, be it a tapestry, a painting or a photograph.

Migrant Mother tells the story of - and reveals the human faces - behind one iconic photograph, taken at a time when America (and the entire world) was dealing with a period of turmoil subsequently known as the Great Depression. While the focus of the book is on the lives of two women - the one featured in the photo and the one behind the lens - both during the time of the image and beyond, it also briefly details the effects of the Great Depression on families and the land.

The text is interspaced evenly with lots of images, as well as sidebars on a variety of topics. Nardo has also included a brief timeline, a list of additional resources, a glossary of terms, source notes, a bibliography, and a complete index.

Migrant Mother is an excellent resource for both the children it was written for and for adults. Anyone interested in the history of this particular image, as well as an introduction to the Great Depression and the effects it had on a single family, will benefit from flipping through this book.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Thoughts on Double Crossing by Carolyn Keene

Double Crossing (A Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys Super Mystery, #1)Double Crossing by Carolyn Keene

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

How do you rate nostalgia? I read (most of) this series as a preteen/teen and absolutely loved them. Now, as I re-read them in (roughly) numerical order, I'm finding them really...corny. But I can see why I enjoyed them at that age - and I can see how they shaped my future (and current) reading choices.

View all my reviews at Goodreads

Monday, May 30, 2011

Till Death Do Us Bark (43 Old Cemetery Road, 3) by Kate Klise

Title: Till Death Do Us Bark by Kate Klise and illustrated by M. Sarah Klise (2011)
Author Status: favourite author
Series Status: returning
Rating: 4.5 stars
Would I read this author again: definitely!
Challenge(s): Support Your Local Library


When a shaggy dog arrives at Spence Mansion, Seymour is overjoyed. His adoptive parents, Ignatius B. Grumply and Olive C. Spence, are less enthusiastic - especially when Secret, the dog, begins barking all night long.

Is it possible Secret just misses his old companion, the late Noah Breth, whose children are fighting like cats and dogs over their father's money? Or does Secret have a secret that, in the end, will make the entire town of ghastly howl with delight?