Friday, July 20, 2012

Module 7- Informational Nonfiction and Biography




14 Cows for America

Carmen Agra Deedy

2009 Peachtree Publishers

Summary: The story is about a young Maasai youth named Kimeli who was awarded a scholarship to an American university. While he was in America the attack on the twin towers occurred and made a deep impression on him. He journeyed back to his village and told the story to his tribe. He felt drawn to do something for the American people to help heal their sorrowing hearts. To the Maasai the cow is life. Kimeli decided to give his only cow to America as a blessing to try to help heal the wounded hearts. All total 14 cows were given by the tribe. The American ambassador came to Kimeli’s tribe for a meeting with the tribal leaders but found a ceremony instead in which America was honored and the cows presented.
  
Impressions: Very moving story due to the author’s style and the illustrator’s beautiful spread across both pages. The color and faces give such meaning and emotion to the story. The author’s choice of words and tone give the information needed but in such a riveting way. “He has brought with him one story. It has burned a hole in his heart.” “Because there is no nation so powerful it cannot be wounded, nor a people so small they cannot offer mighty comfort.” It could be read to any age although young children might not understand it fully.

 Reviews:
"Rarely do books for children address the bridging of cultural difference on a grand scale." Newsday
"I dare you to read this special picture book without getting teary every time."Library Media Connection, * STARRED REVIEW *
"...elegant sentences...The suspenseful pace is especially striking when surrounded by Gonzalez's exquisite colored pencil and pastel illustrations. The colors of Kenya explode off the page..." School Library Journal, * STARRED REVIEW *
"...gentle yet piercing present-tense prose...A stirring, heartwarming tale that made headlines when it happened-and is now, thankfully, preserved on the page for children." ?Kirkus Reviews
"...the words and the glowing mixed-media illustrations show empathy and connections across communities..." Booklist

http://www.amazon.com/Cows-America-Carmen-Agra-Deedy/dp/1561454907
Suggestions:
This would be a great way to remember 9-11 and the impact it had around the world. So often we do not realize the outpouring from other countries that took place after the attack. After discussing with and preparing the teachers, I would read this story on the live morning show as it is a quick read and then the classroom teachers could continue the discussions and follow up activities.

An Egg is Quiet

By Dianna Aston

2006 Chronicle books




Summary:
This is a beautiful informative picture book on eggs. The story takes you through the various types of animal eggs from birds, insects, and reptiles, to fish highlighting characteristics such as their colors, textures, sizes, and shapes. The amount of factual information given in such a short amount of pages is phenomenal.
  
Impressions:
The main text is written in cursive handwriting so it flows across the pages and carries you through the book. The details are written smaller and underneath the various individual pictures on the pages. But, this book was impressive because of the illustrations. The text without the pictures would have left you cold. It is the precise, carefully detailed eggs and pictures that hold your attention. Even after you have finished reading the book, you continue to look and turn the pages just enthralled by the pictures. Younger students would enjoy this read to them but second grade and above could gain information from it.

Reviews:
Worthy successor to Ruth Heller’s Chickens Aren’t The Only Ones (1981), this engrossing album pairs images of dozens of precisely detailed eggs and their diverse wild parents to basic facts presented in neatly hand-lettered lines…A delight for budding naturalists of all stripes, flecks, dots and textures. (Picture book/nonfiction. 6-9)
Review Posted Online: May 20th, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15th, 2006
   From Booklist
PreS-Gr. 2. This beautifully illustrated introduction to eggs resembles pages drawn from a naturalist's diary. The text, scrolled out in elegant brown ink, works on two levels. Larger print makes simple observations that, read together, sound almost like poetry: "An egg is quiet. . . . An egg is colorful. An egg is shapely." On each spread, words in smaller print match up with illustrations to offer more facts about bird and fish eggs across the animal spectrum. The illustrations are too detailed for read-alouds, but there's a great deal here to engage children up close. The succinct text will draw young fact hounds, particularly fans of Steve Jenkins' Biggest, Strongest, Fastest (1995) and his similar titles. Long's illustrations are elegant and simple, and the gallery of eggs, as brilliantly colored and polished as gems, will inspire kids to marvel at animals' variety and beauty. A spread showing X-ray views of young embryos growing into animal young makes this a good choice for reinforcing concepts about life cycles. Gillian Engberg   Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Retrieved from    http://www.amazon.com/Egg-Quiet-Dianna-Hutts-Aston/dp/0811844285

Suggestions:
This book would lend itself to a shared reading to welcome in the spring. It would need to be projected on the screen so all the children could view the exquisite pictures. This would precipitate a great discussion starter on animal groups and animal characteristics.


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