Kids Books - History

Unbroken (The Young Adult Adaptation): An Olympian's Journey from Airman to Castaway to Captive

Unbroken (The Young Adult Adaptation): An Olympian's Journey from Airman to Castaway to Captive

By Laura Hillenbrand

This is by far the best WWII true story I've read, and I've read quite a few. Louie Zamperini was training for the 1940 Tokyo Olympics when they were suddenly cancelled, and the nation was at war. Louie enlisted in the Air Force and soon was in Hawaii, in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. His incredible tale includes extremely aggressive sharks, world records for time as a castaway, prisoner of war camps, sickness, injuries, mental illness, and redemption. Before reading this book, I wasn't as aware of the extent of Japan's involvement in WWII. It is fairly descriptive: I recommend to 12+.

Usborne Young Reading 3-38 : Animals at War

Usborne Young Reading 3-38 : Animals at War

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ASHOK

It is an interesting and amazing book of real stories how the soldiers use the animals to the war. So I don't have to read it please buy it. It's really amazing when you by it you're notice that it is an amazing book and you all will like it, so please buy and read the book. Thank you.

Girls Who Rocked the World: Heroines from Joan of Arc to Mother Teresa

Girls Who Rocked the World: Heroines from Joan of Arc to Mother Teresa

By Michelle Roehm McCann, Amelie Welden

when my mom got it I thought I would not like it but when I read it I loved it! I brought it everywhere I went. I read so much on the weekends. It was really interesting to learn how girls can change the world in so many

In the Heart of the Sea (Young Readers Edition): The True Story of the Whaleship Essex

In the Heart of the Sea (Young Readers Edition): The True Story of the Whaleship Essex

By Nathaniel Philbrick

Grade 6

I think it is a good book but I wouldn't recommend it if your an animal lover and its very complicated and hard to understand and there is gresam

Death on the Nile

Death on the Nile

By AGATHA CHRISTIE

I really want to start reading more Agatha Christie because her books are so AMAZING!! She wrote these books so long ago and people still love them!

The Invisible Man

The Invisible Man

By H. G. Wells

I love this book

The President Has Been Shot!: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy

The President Has Been Shot!: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy

By James L. Swanson

Have you witnessed JFK's assassination or even seen the video on YouTube? Well what if you could see it happen in your mind from just reading a book? The book I read was The President Has Been Shot by James L. Swanson published in 2013, with the genre being nonfiction. I have not always been a big fan of non-fiction, but after reading this book it has shown me as a reader that non-fiction can be just as interesting as fiction. I give this book 5 stars for detailed information and the quality of the details. While reading the book I never felt that there was a part that did not have much detail. The author had to have spent a lot of time finding little but specific facts. The book is mainly about John F Kennedy's assassination, but also his early life of how he became President and the aftermath and chaos from the presidents death. A very interesting feature about the book is that it explains what Lee Harvey Oswald,(JKF's assassin) did to prepare the assassination attempt. The book has exact details because in just one example states,"The third bullet sliced through John Kennedy's thatch of thick reddish-brown hair. It cut a neat hole through his scalp and perforated his skull. The velocity, the pressure, and the physics of death did the rest. The right rear side of the president's skull blew out -exploded really-tearing open his scalp, and spewing skull fragments, blood, and brains several feet into the air where it hung for a few seconds, suspended in a pink cloud."(Swanson 113.) All though this is a disturbing example there is very extreme details which make the book very accurate and more interesting to read because at times like this you feel like you did or are witnessing JFK's assassination. Another example in the book states,"She pressed her cheek against his still warm face. She kissed his body. Then she removed her wedding ring and slipped it onto one of his fingers." This information and the details given are so precise because the author of the book knows every single small fact about the assassination and the aftermath. Some of the information doesn't even matter but it shows how absolutely nothing was left out of the book. The type of reader who would like this book is someone who is interested in American history or if they would like to learn about JFK.

A Long Way Gone - Memoirs Of A Boy Soldier

A Long Way Gone - Memoirs Of A Boy Soldier

By Ishmael Beah

A memoir of a child soldier in Sierra Leone, A long way gone, by Ishmael Beah, will take you on an expedition through survival and the suffering of many people. A struggle that everyone faced but couldn’t do anything about it, it was an impossible cause. A miraculously delivery. In the telling of his story, he takes a position to view the war as an innocent child. As an innocent child he makes the reader view the story from the perspective he did. The reader will experience an understanding of the war, the suffering of many losses, and the minds of the young and elderly. This all began during the beginning of the civil war, which spreaded out fairly quick though small villages, destroying families, and small tribes which then became a bloodbath. It was a commotion and was just violent matters that couldn’t be adjusted. At the age of 10 Beah couldn’t believe what was happening, his imagination at that age didn’t have the capacity to grasp what had taken away the happiness of the refuges. Beah had to then realize that the war was real. Because of the loss of many people from the war that became so intense, the government was shortlisted and needed to recruit people. Beah was recruited at the age of 13 and was forced into combat against the rebels. In the period he was enlisted for about three years Beah was forced to take drugs in order to turn him into a master killer. Beah faced many things many don’t face at the age of 13. He faced death everyday and suffered the loss of many of his friends and family members. At the age of 13 Beah lost his innocence. You could say that it wasn’t his fault because he tells you what he wanted to live and the way he really did. He would have preferred it to be a dream and not his life story. He wrote about the line between reality and dreams but throughout days that line became to disappear. Beah Spent weeks with just a little or no sleep at all. He was just attacking village to village. For people like us we can usually wake up and forget about the dream we have or we can wake up and just keep that memory but Beah couldn’t do that, although he would really want to just wake up he can’t, that memory, that life he is really living it. Besides the violence and the killing Beah wants to know who he really is. He wants to know where he came from, his heritage, and his traditions. In telling the story of his survival, Beah weeps in his childhood memories. It makes his realize how important traditions, heritage, elders, family and especially the way he grew up. These memories just stayed as memories because he had lost his innocence fairly young. These memories were no longer available until he received rehabilitation, he then accepts himself and gives readers hope. Throughout this story, Beah’s message is very clear: he witnesses many losses, many destruction of different villages, including his own. He not only sees destruction but he sees life before war. He experiences many difficulties throughout this period. Beah watched his whole life turn upside down. The people he loved were tremendously hurt. Adults and Elders from different families, different villages were hurt as well. Many people were scared not only of the rebels but even their own family, they couldn’t trust anyone. People were afraid because no one could be themselves anymore. On different occasions Beah watched kids destroy families and villages. Children killed adults and set villages on fire. Older people were not respected, they no longer were able to give their opinion. Traditions were lost and everything was just about war now. No one cared about the values of anyone, everything was just violence and killing. Eventually Beah went to New York and was removed from the society he got so traumatized in. He was then removed from drugs and violence. He then slowly goes back into civilian life. A bit after he meets his new family, his new mother his foster mother. He faces new challenges like living with new family, new people in his life, ad a totally new civilization. He goes to school to finish high school and is faced with people who judged him for his past life. Although these challenges he still was curious about his violent past and wanted to know more about it. He couldn’t though, no one could tell him anything because they didn’t know either. In the end Beah’s leaves readers with hope as well as a feeling of encouragement. He wants people to feel a responsibility for their own society. But, he has transformed everyone. He inspired people to take action against the use of children, and take action against war.

Alexander Hamilton, Revolutionary

Alexander Hamilton, Revolutionary

By Martha Brockenbrough

This book honestly moved my heart. Hamilton had a rough life, but he soared above all of it and became victorious in the end of the revolution. He was a respected man, and his family, honor, and knowledge meant everything to him. Alexander was an intelligent individual: He graduated law school, he became a lawyer, he was George Washington's right hand man, and he was the first head of the Treasury Department. I am inspired by him to do the best I can in school, and I always remind myself that if he could be that successful in life, then so could I.

Wuthering Heights (New School Classics)

Wuthering Heights (New School Classics)

By Emily Bronte

Its a great book. In some parts its a bit hard to read though. I like the challenge that it gives.

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