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RE: YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction Award
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From: Susan Kuklin <skuklin1_at_nyc.rr.com>
Date: Fri, 12 Feb 2010 13:10:43 -0500
I couldn't agree more. This book is an absolute treasure. I envy all who have not yet read it. What a treat you have in store.
Susan
Susan Kuklin www.susankuklin.com skuklin1_at_nyc.rr.com
Message-----
From: Megan Schliesman
Sent: Friday, February 12, 2010 1:02 PM To: ccbc-net, Subscribers of Subject:
YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction Award
I'll second the appreciation for "Charles and Emma" by Deborah Heiligman that Kathleen Odean stated earlier this week. This is a book that I didn't want to end because I found it a pure pleasure to read. It's a vivid history full of humor, drama, passion, and keen details of time, place, and personalities. If I were in a high school library, I'd want to share it with teachers of natural sciences and literature, and anyone doing courses about or connected to religious studies. (And I've already recommended it to a number of adult friends.)
I've heard CCBC director K.T. Horning mention it as a book that would appeal to teen readers who have found Jane Austen, and I agree. It's also such a great example of non-fiction as story: The rich primary source material was clearly a treasure trove for the author--the letters of Charles and Emma alone must have felt like a biographer's dream. But beyond these, there is a narrative tone in Charles and Emma as satisfying to me as that of a terrific novel--it was irresistible. And I think there are teen readers who will think so, too. Others may come to it from an interest in science rather than story, and there, too, the book has so much to offer, detailing how Darwin's voyage on the "Beagle" influenced and helped solidify his thinking in the years that followed.
Megan
-- Megan Schliesman, Librarian Cooperative Children's Book Center School of Education, University of Wisconsin-Madison 600 N. Park Street, Room 4290 Madison, WI 53706
608/262-9503 schliesman_at_education.wisc.edu
www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/
Date: Fri, 12 Feb 2010 13:10:43 -0500
I couldn't agree more. This book is an absolute treasure. I envy all who have not yet read it. What a treat you have in store.
Susan
Susan Kuklin www.susankuklin.com skuklin1_at_nyc.rr.com
Message-----
From: Megan Schliesman
Sent: Friday, February 12, 2010 1:02 PM To: ccbc-net, Subscribers of Subject:
YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction Award
I'll second the appreciation for "Charles and Emma" by Deborah Heiligman that Kathleen Odean stated earlier this week. This is a book that I didn't want to end because I found it a pure pleasure to read. It's a vivid history full of humor, drama, passion, and keen details of time, place, and personalities. If I were in a high school library, I'd want to share it with teachers of natural sciences and literature, and anyone doing courses about or connected to religious studies. (And I've already recommended it to a number of adult friends.)
I've heard CCBC director K.T. Horning mention it as a book that would appeal to teen readers who have found Jane Austen, and I agree. It's also such a great example of non-fiction as story: The rich primary source material was clearly a treasure trove for the author--the letters of Charles and Emma alone must have felt like a biographer's dream. But beyond these, there is a narrative tone in Charles and Emma as satisfying to me as that of a terrific novel--it was irresistible. And I think there are teen readers who will think so, too. Others may come to it from an interest in science rather than story, and there, too, the book has so much to offer, detailing how Darwin's voyage on the "Beagle" influenced and helped solidify his thinking in the years that followed.
Megan
-- Megan Schliesman, Librarian Cooperative Children's Book Center School of Education, University of Wisconsin-Madison 600 N. Park Street, Room 4290 Madison, WI 53706
608/262-9503 schliesman_at_education.wisc.edu
www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/
---Received on Fri 12 Feb 2010 01:10:43 PM CST