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point of view
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From: Peggy Rader <rader004>
Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1998 13:45:30 -0600
CCBC subscribers considering point of view might be interested in a review of Bat 6 written by a student at Riverdale School in Portland, Oregon
(www.riverdale.k12.or.us). The kids in Brian Black's class regularly post book reviews. You can subscribe by sending an e-mail to majordomo at riverdale.k12.us and typing, as a message, "subscribe kidlit." You need type nothing in the subject line of your e-mail. Here is what ginnyc has to say about POV:
Once upon a time some pioneer women started playing a softball game, called Bat 6, that became an annual tradition. Fifty years late, right after World War II in 1949 this game is still going on. This book is about the girls of both teams. One of the things that swept me into the book is that it is told from everyone?s point of view. This helped me, the reader, understand what happened much better. ?Bat 6? is one of those books where you have to listen to what is being said and not who said it.
Peggy J. Rader Communications/Media Relations College of Education and Human Development University of Minnesota 612b6?82 rader004 at tc.umn.edu
Received on Thu 12 Nov 1998 01:45:30 PM CST
Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1998 13:45:30 -0600
CCBC subscribers considering point of view might be interested in a review of Bat 6 written by a student at Riverdale School in Portland, Oregon
(www.riverdale.k12.or.us). The kids in Brian Black's class regularly post book reviews. You can subscribe by sending an e-mail to majordomo at riverdale.k12.us and typing, as a message, "subscribe kidlit." You need type nothing in the subject line of your e-mail. Here is what ginnyc has to say about POV:
Once upon a time some pioneer women started playing a softball game, called Bat 6, that became an annual tradition. Fifty years late, right after World War II in 1949 this game is still going on. This book is about the girls of both teams. One of the things that swept me into the book is that it is told from everyone?s point of view. This helped me, the reader, understand what happened much better. ?Bat 6? is one of those books where you have to listen to what is being said and not who said it.
Peggy J. Rader Communications/Media Relations College of Education and Human Development University of Minnesota 612b6?82 rader004 at tc.umn.edu
Received on Thu 12 Nov 1998 01:45:30 PM CST