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TINY JUMPER

HOW TINY BROADWICK CREATED THE PARACHUTE RIP CORD

A well-executed biography of an extraordinary woman.

A peek at the woman known as the “First Lady of Parachuting.”

“Georgia Ann Thompson weighed only three pounds at birth on April 8th, 1893.” These words are accompanied by a pleasing, colorful portrait of three reverent people surrounding a woman cradling a baby. The word tiny floats above in a word balloon. Readers learn that the nickname “stuck.” Dahl goes on to detail Tiny’s life of child labor from the age of 6, culminating with Tiny atop a tree at sunset, envisioning herself “rising up” from a life of poverty. By 1907, she had convinced parachutist Charles Broadwick to teach her to parachute from hot air balloons as part of his traveling act. (Broadwick adopted her.) Her compromise: At age 15, she endured the embarrassment of being dressed as a baby doll and labeled the “Doll Girl.” After winning accolades as “the most daring parachutist,” Tiny became the first woman to parachute from an airplane and then the first person to deliberately free fall from a parachute. The latter was a dramatic, happy accident that both saved her life and inspired further development of rip cords and of Charles Broadwick’s pack parachute invention. Excellent choices of quotations from the brave aeronaut are nicely interspaced with thoughtful, understated text and complementary art.

A well-executed biography of an extraordinary woman. (author’s note, photographs, bibliography) (Picture-book biography. 6-10)

Pub Date: Oct. 10, 2023

ISBN: 9781499813944

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Little Bee Books

Review Posted Online: Aug. 26, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2023

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BASKETBALL DREAMS

Blandly inspirational fare made to evoke equally shrink-wrapped responses.

An NBA star pays tribute to the influence of his grandfather.

In the same vein as his Long Shot (2009), illustrated by Frank Morrison, this latest from Paul prioritizes values and character: “My granddad Papa Chilly had dreams that came true,” he writes, “so maybe if I listen and watch him, / mine will too.” So it is that the wide-eyed Black child in the simply drawn illustrations rises early to get to the playground hoops before anyone else, watches his elder working hard and respecting others, hears him cheering along with the rest of the family from the stands during games, and recalls in a prose afterword that his grandfather wasn’t one to lecture but taught by example. Paul mentions in both the text and the backmatter that Papa Chilly was the first African American to own a service station in North Carolina (his presumed dream) but not that he was killed in a robbery, which has the effect of keeping the overall tone positive and the instructional content one-dimensional. Figures in the pictures are mostly dark-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Blandly inspirational fare made to evoke equally shrink-wrapped responses. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Jan. 10, 2023

ISBN: 978-1-250-81003-8

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Review Posted Online: Sept. 27, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2022

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WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL ABOUT FREEDOM

A reasonably solid grounding in constitutional rights, their flexibility, lacunae, and hard-won corrections, despite a few...

Shamir offers an investigation of the foundations of freedoms in the United States via its founding documents, as well as movements and individuals who had great impacts on shaping and reshaping those institutions.

The opening pages of this picture book get off to a wobbly start with comments such as “You know that feeling you get…when you see a wide open field that you can run through without worrying about traffic or cars? That’s freedom.” But as the book progresses, Shamir slowly steadies the craft toward that wide-open field of freedom. She notes the many obvious-to-us-now exclusivities that the founding political documents embodied—that the entitled, white, male authors did not extend freedom to enslaved African-Americans, Native Americans, and women—and encourages readers to learn to exercise vigilance and foresight. The gradual inclusion of these left-behind people paints a modestly rosy picture of their circumstances today, and the text seems to give up on explaining how Native Americans continue to be left behind. Still, a vital part of what makes freedom daunting is its constant motion, and that is ably expressed. Numerous boxed tidbits give substance to the bigger political picture. Who were the abolitionists and the suffragists, what were the Montgomery bus boycott and the “Uprising of 20,000”? Faulkner’s artwork conveys settings and emotions quite well, and his drawing of Ruby Bridges is about as darling as it gets. A helpful timeline and bibliography appear as endnotes.

A reasonably solid grounding in constitutional rights, their flexibility, lacunae, and hard-won corrections, despite a few misfires. (Informational picture book. 6-10)

Pub Date: May 2, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-399-54728-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Philomel

Review Posted Online: March 28, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2017

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