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Cook Who Defended Pearl Harbor: A Graphic Novel Biography of Doris Dorie Miller

Contributor(s): Pryor, Shawn (Author), Valdrighi, Alessandro (Illustrator)

ISBN: 9781669083320

Publisher: Capstone Press

$36.65
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Pub Date: January 1, 2025

Dewey: B

LCCN: 2024032163

Lexile Code: 0690

Features: Illustrated

Target Age Group: 08 to 11

Physical Info: 0.30" H x 9.20" L x 7.10" W ( 0.55 lbs) 32 pages

BISAC Categories:

Juvenile Nonfiction | Comics & Graphic Novels | Biography & Memoir

Juvenile Nonfiction | History | Military & Wars

Juvenile Nonfiction | African American & Black | General

Juvenile Nonfiction | History | United States - 20th Century

Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography & Autobiography | General

Accelerated Reader® Info

Quiz #:0000552604 ( Cook Who Defended Pearl Harbor: A Graphic Novel Biography of Doris Dorie Miller)

Reading level: 4.80

Interest level: MG

Point value: 0.5

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: A nonfiction graphic novel about Dorie Miller, a Navy cook who shot down enemy planes during the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, saving countless lives.

Brief description: Shawn Pryor is the creator and co-author of the graphic novel mystery series Cash and Carrie, co-creator and author of the 2019 GLYPH-nominated football/drama series Force, and author of Kentucky Kaiju and Jake Maddox: Diamond Double Play. In his free time, he enjoys reading, cooking, listening to streaming music playlists, and talking about why Zack from the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers is the greatest superhero of all time.

Review Quotes: Books in the Barrier Breaker series celebrate the achievements of individuals during various periods of American History. The Cook Who Defended Pearl Harbor features Dorie Miller, who joined the Navy, shot down two enemy planes, and became the first Black American to receive the Navy Cross. Hitting Her Way to the Negro Leagues introduces Toni Stone, who earned her nickname, Tomboy, while playing baseball on a boys' team. She became the first woman to play on a Negro League baseball team. In 1993, she was honored by inclusion in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Mailing Himself to Freedom describes the ordeal of Henry Box Brown, an enslaved man. In 1849, he crouched in a wooden box, which his friends took to a transport company for delivery to Philadelphia. Traveling by rail and steamboat, Brown suffered in his tight quarters but survived to tell his dramatic tale. The Spy Who Wore Petticoats transports readers to New York during the Revolutionary War, when British troops patrolled areas in Manhattan and Long Island, trying to identify spies who reported to General Washington's staff; Anna Strong was one of those spies. The writing is straightforward, and each book's graphic-novel format features its own color palette and a distinctive style of drawing and character-portrayal. An appealing biography series.--Carolyn Phelan "Booklist"

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