Showing posts with label Kennedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kennedy. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2014

Swanson, James L. The President Has Been Shot: Assassination of J.F.K.

Swanson, James L.  The President Has Been Shot: Assassination of J.F.K.  Scholastic Press 2013 270p $18.99  ISBN 978-0-545-49007-8  hs/adult  Nonfiction  E-BN

This book provides a historical minute-by-minute view of John F. Kennedy’s assassination told through photographs, illustrations, and some primary sources. This excellent narrative introduces the Kennedys and gives readers a biographical account of who they were in history.  The pictures personalize the narrative as the reader follows along and sees how John F Kennedy became the president of the United States and subsequently dealt with a variety of difficult situations and crises as the world faced communism and the Cold War. Readers see how tense things became during the Bay of Pigs incident in Cuba and the ensuing confrontation between the President and Mr. Khrushchev that almost started a nuclear war.  The Civil Rights Movement was developing, and Kennedy had to deal with the crisis in the South and the North.  At the same time, Martin Luther King Jr. was becoming a leader.  Readers are shown that Kennedy was a good father who tried to be a president of the people.  

The book also gives some background information on the assassin Lee Harvey Oswald.  A detailed map of the President’s route is provided on that fateful day in 1963, and theories are presented about what exactly happened.     

Summary: This book provides a graphic and historical account of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States of America.

Kennedy, John F., 1917-1963-Assassination                   --Magna Diaz

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Misty Gordon and the Mystery of Ghost Pirates

Kennedy, Kim. Misty Gordon and the Mystery of Ghost Pirates
Amulet see Abrams, Harry 2010 218p 15.95
978-0-8109-9357-0 ms/hs Realistic Fiction VG
Misty’s discovered a pair of glasses and a notebook while helping her parents with their antique business. They give her the ability to see things in the past. The story tells of Misty’s struggle to find the treasure before the pirates. It is full of mystery, intrigue, and pirates.
This takes place in a small New England town that is full of stories of pirates and ship wrecks. Misty and her friend Yoshi team up to try and solve the mysteries of a lost treasure that is rumored to have mystical powers that was buried in the area by pirates long ago.

Misty’s parents run the Deceased’s Estate and Antique Dealer business. From time to time Misty will help her father pick up items in their van. In the course of one such trip, she finds a pair of eyeglasses and a notebook at Madam Zaster’s home. The glasses give the ability to see ghosts and the notebook provides answers for as long as she has it.

The author has done a good job of creating a fast paced scary story with enough mystery to keep readers on the edge of their seats as the girls go to school and keep pace with the various roadblocks that come up in their way. The question remains, will Misty and Yoshi find the golden statue before the pirates? McNeil(3), Linda
Family

Friday, April 9, 2010

Sapet, Kerrily. Ted Kennedy.

Sapet, Kerrily. Ted Kennedy.
Morgan Reynolds 2009 144p 28.95 978-1-59935-089-9 ms/hs
Political Profiles (Morgan R)#8
Beginning with a discussion of Ted Kennedy’s family history, this biography continues with an in-depth look at his life. Edward Moore Kennedy was the youngest child in a large Irish-American family that gave America some of its finest politicians. Brother to both a assassinated president and a martyred senator, he held the senate seat from Massachusetts for forty-six years until his death in August 2009. He spent much of his congressional career implementing the policies of his brothers and was dedicated to furthering the common good. This is a very well written and insightful book and a succinct and lucid treatment of the subject. It is remarkably nonjudgmental and non-sensationalized and objective in its treatment of a remarkable man. It carefully discusses both the positive and negative aspects of Kennedy’s life. The descriptive text is enhanced by excellent well-captioned photographs and ends with a timeline, source notes, a bibliography of books and web sites, and an index. Ogintz, Susan