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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
J Johnson's Review,
By J Johnson (Kentucky) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Boy Who Saved Cleveland (Hardcover)
The Boy Who Saved Cleveland is the wonderful coming of age story of Seth Doan. Although this is a work of fiction, Giblin has based the book on actual events. In the summer of 1798, the small settlement of Cleveland experiences a malaria outbreak. Many of the founders fall ill to the "shakes and fever" and it is left up to Seth Doan to supply food for the entire settlement. Seth has been protected from hardwork by his father, who fears something may happen to his only surviving son. Although, understandably terrified by the task ahead, Seth sets out to try and save his family and the rest of the settlement his father has worked hard to help establish. This book is great for children in grades 3-5. The sentences flow smoothly and has a vocabulary that will challenge young readers. In addition, the historical setting is sure to captivate young history lovers.
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
New target audience; New Style,
This review is from: The Boy Who Saved Cleveland (Hardcover)
James Cross Giblin is known for writing extraordinary nonfiction books for young adults. His books have a reputation for being accurate, readable, and above all enjoyable.THE BOY WHO SAVED CLEVELAND is a departure in some ways from your typical Giblin book. It is a fiction book for young readers--I'd estimate second to fourth graders. Definitely a "chapter-book" look and style to it, clear, easy-to-read, straight forward text, short chapters. Also, the book is fiction not nonfiction. THE BOY WHO SAVED CLEVELAND is based on a true story of a young boy who saved his small settlement in 1798 from from a malaria epidemic. As one by one his family members and neighbors get sick it is his responsibility to take the corn to the mill to grind. Each day his burdens become heavier as more neighbors add in sacks of corn to be taken to the mill. This young boy has a great responsibility, and a newfound purpose. He is proud of his accomplishments...and is taking his first steps to manhood. Overall, while not as 'fascinating' to adult readers like his YA books are...it's hard to have a 'fascinating' chapter book...it is an enjoyable read that I hope many children will enjoy. The illustrations by Michael Dooling are also impressive.
4.0 out of 5 stars
True Story Turned into Fiction,
By
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This review is from: The Boy Who Saved Cleveland (Hardcover)
This is the true story of a young boy in a small farming settlement in Ohio, back when Ohio was the wild frontier. One by one, the adults in the village come down with malaria, but Seth Doan does not. Although he is only ten years old, it becomes his responsibility -- because this is a matter of survival -- to carry corn to the mill each day, so that it can be ground and then cooked and eaten. As more and more people come down with malaria, Seth's job grows more and more burdensome, because he ends up carrying more and more grain each day. But Seth meets the challenge and thus the community that would become Cleveland is saved. An inspiring story, though a bit slow.
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The Boy Who Saved Cleveland by James Giblin (Hardcover - April 4, 2006)
$16.99 $13.25
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