Nonfiction
Abraham Lincoln
written by Amy L. Cohn and Suzy Schmidt;
illustrated by David A. Johnson (Scholastic)
With the informality and intimacy of a family photo album,
the authors introduce this “giant” of a man to
young readers. Tall, craggy pictures accompany a strong, engagingly
conversational text. Review 3/02.
Phineas Gage: A Gruesome but
True Story about Brain Science
by John Fleischman (Houghton)
After expertly engaging readers with his captivating story
of a man who miraculously survived an accident that sent an
iron rod through his skull, the author then leads into a lively
discussion of evolving brain science. Review 5/02.
Hole in My Life
by Jack Gantos (Farrar)
Gantos relates with excoriating honesty the time he fell through
the hole in his life — when, as an aimless teenager,
he went to prison for smuggling drugs — and shows how
the experience helped turn him into a writer. Review 5/02.
What Charlie Heard
written and illustrated by Mordicai Gerstein (Foster/Farrar)
Composer Charles Ives had his “ears wide open”
to all sounds, whether traditionally melodic or not. Gerstein’s
remarkably unified, creative picture-book biography makes
visual the noise Ives heard and transformed into music. Review
5/02.
Action Jackson
written by Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan;
illustrated by Robert Andrew Parker (Roaring Brook)
A picture-book biography follows Jackson Pollock through the
process of creating one painting. The brevity of the text
reflects the artist’s reserved nature; the quick, improvisational
line of Parker’s large watercolor illustrations mirrors
Pollock’s active mind. Review 11/02.
Talkin’ about Bessie:
The Story of Aviator Elizabeth Coleman
written by Nikki Grimes; illustrated by E. B. Lewis (Orchard/Scholastic)
African-American aviator Coleman gets a hero’s send-off
in this commemoration, a well-orchestrated sequence of fictional
monologues by her friends and relations. Lewis’s watercolors
work like snapshots to be passed around, returning us to each
key moment of a life fully lived. Review 1/03.
Life on Earth: The Story of
Evolution written and illustrated by
Steve Jenkins (Houghton)
Showcasing Jenkins’s skillfully executed cut-paper artwork,
this superb introduction to evolution for younger readers
admirably avoids oversimplification and is both comprehensive
and comprehensible. Review 9/02.
Fireboat: The Heroic Adventures
of the John J. Harvey
written and illustrated by Maira Kalman (Putnam)
The emergency re-commissioning of a retired New York City
fireboat gives Kalman a unique focus for this September 11
story, in which the artist’s trademark exuberance is
anchored by a sober and direct consideration of the events
of that day. Review 9/02.
This Land Was Made for You and
Me: The Life and Songs of Woody Guthrie by Elizabeth
Partridge (Viking)
Partridge lays out the complexities as well as the contradictions
of song-writing icon Woody Guthrie’s life in an extraordinary
page-turner of a biography. Review 3/02.
Revenge of the Whale: The True
Story of the Whaleship Essex
by Nathaniel Philbrick (Putnam)
A totally engrossing survival story details the ordeal of
sailors on a Nantucket whaleship rammed by a sixty-ton sperm
whale. A gripping narrative, meticulously researched. Review
1/03.
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