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An excellent series exploring the breadth of immigration stories for middle schoolers.
This series provides general glimpses into many immigrant groups' struggles in the U.S. Each book's vignettes (with direct quotes) on real immigrants striving for citizenship and acceptance in America add intimacy and impact to the presentation; frank discussions of discrimination are included. Photographs extend the narratives. There are four other fall 2017 books in this series. Reading list, timeline. Glos., ind.
This useful, appealing series covers cookery genres that are rarely found in books for young people, and have a play-focused appeal.
Step-by-step recipes follow safety and cooking tips in these offbeat cookbooks. [cf2]Campfire[cf1] includes fire-specific tips and is organized by cooking method (in foil, skillet, or Dutch oven); [cf2]Disgusting[cf1] includes ideas for snacks, entrees, sides, and desserts, and recommends presenting mainstay foods in kid-appealingly gross ways (e.g., "Maggoty Chili"). Both include photos of completed dishes, quirky facts, and "Try This!" alterations. Reading list.
Readers won't learn many "secrets" from this set, making it supplementary to most collections.
This book describes some lesser-known aspects of the Great War, with emphasis on secret plots and pacts, weapons, spies, and technology. Each topic, mainly illustrated with black-and-white photographs, is briefly covered; fact sidebars and definitions of technical terms provide supplemental information. The last chapter is an unfortunate hodgepodge of topics. Critical thinking questions using the Common Core are appended. Reading list. Glos., ind.
Gr 3–5—Besides acknowledging the long, wide appeal of these mysterious creatures, places, and events in human history, these "quick reference guides" cover long ago and recent and far and near occurrences...
This hi-lo book's content isn't as strange as it could be. The discussion barely scrapes the surface of bizarre, nibbling on such tidbits as contemporary carnival food (e.g., deep-fried Oreos), hardtack from sailing ships, a smattering of historical facts about royalty and banquet customs, and Jell-O. The slight content is enhanced by contemporary and archival photos and illustrations. Reading list. Glos., ind.