[ If you’re not into first ladies, you can skip to the roundup. ]
Sure, it’s President’s Day, but behind all those men stood 46 women—the first ladies. [1] Of all of them, I have two favorites: Eleanor Roosevelt and Dolley Madison.
I think the first characteristic of a decent illustrated biography about Eleanor Roosevelt should be the fact that it’s not part of the ValueTales series. I think the existence of those books in my home library growing up can, by itself, explain my love for public libraries. The series was comprised of horrible revisionist biographies that somehow reasoned that the best way to teach values was to give imaginary friends to prominent historical figures (to say nothing of the late 1970s cartoon illustrations).
Oh, but this is NONFICTION Monday…moving on…
Doreen Rappaport. Eleanor: Quiet No More. Illustrated by Gary Kelley. Hyperion Books, 2009. 48 pages. Age 6+.
While this book does work its way through Eleanor’s social milestones and political accomplishments, it also looks at her personal transformation, from an arms-length, seen-but-not-heard Victorian upbringing, to the confident, active humanitarian who left her mark on the world. The prose is concise, but the engaging narrative covers a lot of ground. Each page is enhanced with poignant quotations. The illustrations are moving and match the tone of the book throughout. It’s a great introduction to the life of an amazing woman, accessible to young readers, and nary an imaginary friend within.
Don Brown. Dolley Madison Saves George Washington Houghton Mifflin, 2007. 32 pages. Age 4 to 8.
This book does not discuss Dolley’s early life, except to describe her as a “farm girl.” Let’s ignore how that belittles her Quaker upbringing, or how she tragically lost her first husband and a son to yellow fever. Truth is, she’s only famous for marrying that heartbreaker, James Madison.
As a first lady, Dolley became a charming socialite who was known for her dinner parties. But there was also that one time she facilitated the rescue of a portrait of George Washington from the soon-to-be-burning presidential mansion. It’s a good story, and worthy of being the central element of this simple biography.
My favorite spread is the book’s treatment of the War of 1812. On the left we have a finger-pointing George III who says, “You side with our enemies!” On the right we have Uncle Sam, poised for a fistfight in period dress (excepting an anachronistic I Want You! hat), saying, “You kidnap our sailors!” Love it.
So, Nonfiction Monday is happening right here today! Leave your links in the comments, and I’ll post them at intervals throughout the day. Use this permalink for your incoming links:
http://artofirreverence.com/2010/02/15/nfmon1/
News
Anastasia Suen has created a Nonfiction Monday listserv, and bloggers and authors are invited to join.
Cybils Winner
There is a lot of excitement about the 2009 Cybils winners (announced yesterday!), so there are several posts about the nonfiction picture book winner, The Day Glo Brothers by Chris Barton (text) and Tony Persiani (art):
- Roberta at Wrapped in Foil
- Shirley at SimplyScience Blog
- Jone at Check It Out
- Anastasia at Picture Book of the Day
Arts & Recreation
- At Bookends, Lynn and Cindy review Lights On Broadway: A Theatrical Tour from A to Z by Harriet Ziefert (text) and Elliot Kreloff (art).
- At Wendie’s Wanderings, Wendie reviews The Best of Figure Skating by Kathy Allen.
- BookMoot has a review of What Can You Do with an Old Red Shoe: A Green Activity Book about Reuse by Anna Alter.
Geography/History/Biography
- At Playing by the Book, Zoe reviews As the Crow Flies: A First Book of Maps by Gail Hartman (text) and Harvey Stevenson (art).
- At Charlotte’s Library, Charlotte reviews The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind: Creating Currents of Electricity and Hope by William Kamkwamba and Brian Mealer.
- At Jean Little Library, Jennifer reviews Spies of the Mississippi by Rick Bowers.
- At Abby (the) Librarian, Abby reviews Child of the Civil Rights Movement by Paula Young Shelton (text) and Raul Colon (art).
- At Whispers of Dawn, Sally reviews The Pirate Queen by Emily Arnold McCully.
- At Becky’s Book Reviews, Becky reviews Pick & Shovel Poet: The Journey of Pascal D’Angelo by Jim Murphy.
- At Young Readers, Becky reviews Big George: How A Shy Boy Became President Washington by Anne Rockwell (text) and Matt Phelan (art).
- At A Patchwork of Books, Amanda reviews John Brown: His Fight for Freedom by John Hendrix.
- At Biblio File, Jennie reviews A Life in the Wild: George Schaller’s Struggle to Save the Last Great Beasts by Pamela S. Turner, and The Great and Only Barnum: The Tremendous, Stupendous Life of Showman P. T. Barnum by Candace Fleming.
- At Lost between the Pages, Anna reviews Muckrakers by Anne Bausum.
Science
- At In Need of Chocolate, Sarah reviews Dino Dung: The Scoop on Fossil Feces by Dr. Karen Chin & Thom Holmes (text), and Karen Carr (art).
- At proseandkahn, Brenda reviews Charles Darwin and the Beagle Adventure by A.J. Wood and Clint Twist.
- At SimplyScience Blog, Shirley reviews Toco Toucans: Bright Enough to Disappear by Anastasia Suen.
- At Wild about Nature, Kim reviews Adopted by an Owl: The True Story of Jackson the Owl by Robbyn Smith van Frankenhuyzen (text) and Gijsbert van Frankenhuysen (art).
- At The Cat and the Fiddle, Michelle discusses the ending of All Pigs Are Beautiful by Dick King-Smith.
- At Raising Readers and Writers, Julie reviews The Edible Pyramid: Good Eating Every Day by Loreen Leedy.
[1] For the tally, we are counting Buchanan’s niece, Harriet Lane. If When we get to transition to the term “first spouses,” we’ll see where that leaves Harriet.
[ Posted in » Book Review Channel :: Nonfiction Reviews ]




Hello Amy,
Here’s my contribution to Nonfiction Monday:
http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/02/15/finding-our-way-nonfiction-monday/ – A review of As the Crow Flies: A First Book of Maps by Gail Hartman, illustrated by Harvey Stevenson.
Thanks for hosting!
Thanks for hosting this week! I’ve posted about Dino Dung: The Scoop on Fossil Feces. http://inneedofchocolate.wordpress.com/2010/02/15/non-fiction-monday-dino-dung/
Thanks for hosting and I love the focus on First Ladies. Very cool.
http://proseandkahn.livejournal.com/89418.html
Charles Darwin and the Beagle Adventure, written by A.J. Wood & Clint Twist
Good Morning,
I put up a post about the Cybils nonfiction picture book winner The Day Glo Brothers. I have a feeling I’m not the only one :-)
http://blog.wrappedinfoil.com/2010/02/day-glo-brothers-book-wins/
Great tie-in to first ladies.
I have The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind– http://charlotteslibrary.blogspot.com/2010/02/boy-who-harnessed-wind-creating.html
(I’ve never seen any of the ValueTales, but they sound scary)
I have a post about The Day-Glo Brothers as the NF PB winner, followed by a review of Toco Toucans.
Thanks for hosting.
Shirley
http://simplyscience.wordpress.com/2010/02/15/we-have-a-winner-nonfiction-picture-book-category/
Heidi Bee Roemer reviews Adopted By An Owl at the Wild About Nature blog:
http://wildaboutnaturewriters.blogspot.com/2010/02/nonfiction-monday-adopted-by-owl.html
Thanks for hosting this week!
Hi, I have taken a look at Spies of the Mississippi by Rick Bowers
http://jeanlittlelibrary.blogspot.com/2010/02/spies-of-mississippi-by-rick-bowers.html
Your blog is so cool! I am excited to discover you!
Happy Nonfiction Monday!
At Abby (the) Librarian, I have a review of Child of the Civil Rights Movement by Paula Young Shelton.
http://abbylibrarian.blogspot.com/2010/02/book-review-child-of-civil-rights.html
Thanks for hosting!
Cindy and I at Bookends are reviewing Lights On Broadway: A Theatrical Tour from A to Z by Harriet Ziefert. Take a look at this jazzy book of theatrical definitions.
Lynn
I had to laugh at your remarks on the ValueTales series. I picked one no Abe Lincoln thinking I’d use it for nonfiction Monday, but I couldn’t get over the stupid squirrel he kept talking to and how it followed him throughout his life.
Today I posted The Pirate Queen, written and illustrated by Emily Arnold McCully.
http://www.sally-apokedak.com/whispers_of_dawn/2010/02/the-pirate-queen/
Yes – anthropomorphism and biographies don’t seem to mesh well together.
At Becky’s Book Reviews, I’ve got a review of Pick and Shovel Poet by Jim Murphy. And at Young Readers, I’ve got a review of Big George by Anne Rockwell.
http://maclibrary.wordpress.com/2010/02/15/nonfiction-monday-73-to-7-to-1-cybils-announced-yesterday/
Hit the reply too quick. Thank you for hosting.
Thanks for hosting, Amy. I’m blogging about the Cybils winner http://6traits.wordpress.com/2010/02/15/nonfiction-monday-the-day-glo-brothers/ and inviting all Nonfiction Monday bloggers join a new listserv http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nfmon/join
I have a review up of John Brown: His Fight for Freedom over at my blog:
http://apatchworkofbooks.blogspot.com/2010/02/non-fiction-monday-john-brown.html
Thanks so much for hosting!
Much obliged for hosting! At The Cat & The Fiddle I’ve posted Picture Book Endings- Day 1.
I talk about successful, affective endings in non-fiction books, using All Pigs Are Beautiful by Dick King-Smith as an example.
http://michellemarkel.blogspot.com/
Thanks for hosting! I’m in this week with two biographies that were Cybils nominees:
http://www.jenrothschild.com/2010/02/nonfiction-monday_15.html
This is my first Nonfiction Monday post. I review the Edible Pyramid here http://www.raisingreadersandwriters.com/?p=513
Thanks!
Wendie’s Wandering’s is featuring The Best of Figure Skating today, in honor of the Olympics at
http://wendieold.blogspot.com/2010/02/nonfiction-monday-best-of-figure.html
Hi! Anna over at Lost Between The Pages – I wrote about Muckrakers by Ann Bausum http://lostbetweenthepages.blogspot.com/2010/02/nonfiction-monday-muckrackers-by-ann.html
Been too busy today to get over here before now. Review of What to do with an Old Red Shoe at BookMoot.
http://www.bookmoot.com/2010/02/nonfiction-monday-what-can-you-do-with.html