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Ben and the Emancipation Proclamation

Contributor(s): Sherman, Pat (Author), Cooper, Floyd (Illustrator)

ISBN: 9780802855411

Publisher: Eerdmans Books for Young Readers

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Pub Date: February 11, 2020

Dewey: 973.714

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Illustrated, Price on Product

Target Age Group: 08 to 12

Physical Info: 0.20" H x 10.80" L x 8.40" W ( 0.35 lbs) 32 pages

Series: Incredible Lives for Young Readers (Ilyr)

Accelerated Reader® Info

Quiz #:0000136148 ( Ben and the Emancipation Proclamation)

Reading level: 4.10

Interest level: LG

Point value: 0.5

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

A young slave teaches himself to read, eventually reading Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation to fellow slaves imprisoned during the Civil War.

Ben, a young slave, uses every chance he gets to teach himself to read, practicing with the words he sees on street signs and in shop windows and even in cast-off newspapers he finds in the gutter.

But after the Civil War breaks out, his master leaves town and Ben finds himself in a slave prison. One night, the prisoners bribe a guard to get their hands on a newspaper, and to the applause of his fellow slaves, Ben reads aloud the momentous news of Mr. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation -- surely one of the most remarkable readings of that document ever.

Author Pat Sherman's stirring text, based on the true story of Benjamin C. Holmes, pairs with memorable illustrations from Coretta Scott King medalist Floyd Cooper to honor the power of freedom and the written word. Awarded the Once Upon a World Children's Picture Book Award from the Simon Wiesenthal Center / Museum of Tolerance, Ben and the Emancipation Proclamation is part of Eerdmans' Incredible Lives for Young Readers series.

Brief description:

Pat Sherman works as a writer, library professional, and writing instructor in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her previous books include The Sun's Daughter, illustrated by R. Gregory Christie (Clarion), and several nonfiction books for young people on historical subjects ranging from colonial America to the present day.

Review Quotes: School Library Journal
"Based on the life of Benjamin Holmes, a slave who taught himself to read at a young age, this picture book is an inspiring account of overcoming oppression. Sherman's fictionalized telling is stirring, especially when Holmes revels in the discovery of new words; readers are moved to cheer on his clandestine efforts to learn. When Union troops approach Charleston, the tailor to whom Holmes is apprenticed leaves town, and the boy is imprisoned indefinitely with other slaves, and he is credited with reading the Emancipation Proclamation to his fellow inmates. The story culminates in a forceful scene when the inmates implore Ben to read the newspaper that contains Lincoln's history-making document. 'Louder, ' someone called out. 'Stand up.'' Sherman's text has a stately simplicity. Cooper's paintings glow with a hopeful, golden warmth, and the best of them feature Benjamin and the other imprisoned slaves bearing witness and then celebrating as his voice rings out. This is a powerful tale of a bright ray of light in a very dark period in America."

Publishers Weekly
"Driven by Cooper's (The Blacker the Berry) textural, earth-toned oil paintings, this uplifting story spotlights the early life of Benjamin C. Holmes, born a slave in the 1840s."

Kirkus Reviews
"The story and its telling are inspirational, and Cooper's signature oil paintings featuring muted shades of brown are, as usual, lovely . . . a solid Black History choice for younger students."

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