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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A-cuddle-up-with-your-child book about justice and pride.
This is a delighfully sublte book that both children and adults will enjoy. It is about justice, about change, about pride, and about community. The illustrations are wonderful and in themselves provide many opportunities for discussion. Every school should have this book and every teacher should read it. Please check it out!
Published on May 24, 1999

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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars BAD WOMAN
I did not liked this book, because she did a bad thing (Pearl).she did not respect the man that had orders to cut the tree and she fooled him by making him eat and by telling him a story about her family's photos.
Published on February 7, 2005 by Magnum


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A-cuddle-up-with-your-child book about justice and pride., May 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand (Hardcover)
This is a delighfully sublte book that both children and adults will enjoy. It is about justice, about change, about pride, and about community. The illustrations are wonderful and in themselves provide many opportunities for discussion. Every school should have this book and every teacher should read it. Please check it out!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pearl Moscowit's Last stand, May 10, 2005
A Kid's Review
Pearl Moscowitz's Last stand by Arthur A. Levine

How would you feel if somebody cut down trees that you planted when you were a little girl? The book I read is called Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand. Since her mother died, there have been a lot of changes on Gingko Street. Pearl has three sisters. Their names are Selma, Velma and Wilma. The change that occurred was that the trees that they planted were cut down, all except for one. The apartment she lives in looks like a dorm. I think this s a good book for children. Pearl played poker with her sisters under the last gingko tree. The next day she was reading a book to the children on the street. A man came up to them and said, "You have to get away from under the this tree because I have to cut it down." She asked him to eat with her. He looked hungry and he didn't eat lunch. The next day he comes back and she shows him a pictures of her and her family each picture has a story. The next day he comes back and Ronnie, the next door neighbor, he put a bike lock around her and the tree and locked it. There is a big party because she's stopping the man from cutting down the tree. The news crew was there. She tells them a story about her and the tree and why she' wont let him cut down the tree. The she invites the guy who paid the man to cut down the tree and the man who was going to cut down the tree over to eat at her house. They changed the street name. To find out what happens at the party and to see what the street is called finish the book!!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand, September 9, 2005
This is a MUST HAVE for any teacher. I have used it with children across many grade levels and with training adults and it is a wonderful story!

The people who gave it poor reviews are way off base.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a fun story with a great lesson, with great watercolors, June 30, 2002
The author never forgot the time his mother, Eileen Levine, stopped an official from cutting down a neighbor's tree in Elmont (Long Island), NY. From that seed, this exciting story germinated, the story of a tough but sweet woman who saves a gingko tree and teaches us how to be a mensch in the world. Pearl and her sisters (Selma, Velma, and Wilma) grew up on Gingko Street (formerly Smith St) -- a street filled with Jewish and other immigrants, shaded by young, wide leafed, gingko trees. As time progressed, the trees grew, and people moved. Pearl stayed and the surnames changed. By the end of the book, Pearl is playing cards and hanging with her neighbors -- neighbors with Asian, African American and Hispanic surnames. They eat bagels and steamed dumplings, jalapenos and iced tea. When someone comes to cut down the last remaining gingko tree on the street, Pearl takes action, involves her neighbors, leverages the media, and gets the mayor to save the tree, plant new trees, and try her warm noodle kugel.
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5.0 out of 5 stars change their lives, February 7, 2005
I gives this book a 10 because a took about a women who save

Her neighborhood.

Is about a woman who live and Gingko street and one day she was

Playing with her neighbors and one man came to the neighborhood

And they were going to cut the trees and she don't lets the people doing.

And she saves the neighborhood again.
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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars BAD WOMAN, February 7, 2005
I did not liked this book, because she did a bad thing (Pearl).she did not respect the man that had orders to cut the tree and she fooled him by making him eat and by telling him a story about her family's photos.
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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars pearl moscowitz's last stand, February 1, 2005
pearl moscowitz's last standis about a women that came to the united state. that lives in gingko street that begens to renew the place like planting trees. then named the street pearl street. the grade that gave to this book is a 100. I recomend this book to the kids that like to read interesred books li pearl moscowit's last stand.
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Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand
Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand by Arthur A. Levine (Hardcover - Sept. 1993)
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