- The Journey of the one and only Declaration of Independence, Judith St George, History
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I am
interested in history and took a US history course last semester. I enjoyed
the way the narrator's lens is used here to look at well known events. It has an immediate, human
perspective on events normally presented engraved in white marble (so to
speak).
Some talk topics:
Some talk topics:
o
This
is a humorous telling of a United States’ history between 1776-1950.
o
The
explicit plot line follows the actual document of the Declaration of
Independence; from inception to its placement in the National Archive in 1952.
o
The
narrator intimates that at some point the Declaration of Independence may be
put away and not needed anymore, but that social and national upheaval
continually call it back to protect the rights and freedoms of Americans.
o
This
is an interesting and funny book by the way that it shows well-known historical
events from a very human perspective.
o
The
great historical events and figures carry the document through history, always
reminding the reader what it would be like to weather history as a piece of parchment.
o
This
book could be the basis for dozens of small group activities, such as research projects,
art projects, and literature circles.
Other books by Judith St George include: Haunted, The Halloween Pumpkin Smasher, In the Shadow of the Bear, The Brooklyn Bridge: They Said It Couldn't Be Built, and The Mount Rushmore Story. Also, So You Want to Be President?, winner of the Caldecott award.
Image taken from http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration.html 1/30/13
Anita, this is a nice post. It's an interesting book to read and ponder with students. You've brought up some good points. I look forward to your posts this semester, I am sure they will be interesting and insightful.
ReplyDeleteI think you did a great job giving us a summary of what the book was about and some interesting points! I really liked how you gave us more books by the author so that we could use those as references for our own annotated bibliographies or in our own classes! Love the background for your blog as well!
ReplyDeleteI feel this book would be awesome for children beginning to learn about history and give them a good solid base to work on. Good post!
ReplyDelete