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Books with author Barbara Jane Feinberg

  • Articles Of Confederation, The

    Barbara Feinberg

    Library Binding (Twenty-First Century Books, April 1, 2002)
    Examines the pivotal time in America's history, between 1776 and 1787, when a young government was being formed, and The Articles of Confederation were created which, although imperfect, lead the way to the creation of the U.S. Constitution.
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  • John McCain: Serving His Country

    Barbara Jane Feinberg

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, Aug. 1, 2000)
    John was born into a tradition of service to the United States of America. His life is being spent fulfilling that goal, first as one of the few recognized heroes of the Vietnam War, and now in politics. John McCain has devoted his life to his country.
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  • Welcome to Lizard Motel: Protecting the Imaginative Lives of Children

    Barbara Feinberg

    Paperback (Beacon Press, Sept. 7, 2005)
    Welcome to Lizard Motel is one of the most surprising books about reading and writing to come along in years. Not only does this rich and wonderfully readable memoir explore the world of children and stories, it also asks us to look at how our children are growing up. Barbara Feinberg suggests that we have lost touch with the organic unfolding of childhood, with that mysterious time when making things up helps deepen a child's understanding of the world. This book will reacquaint readers with the special nature of children's imaginations and why they need to be protected and fostered.
  • A. Lincoln'S Gettysburg Addres

    Barbara Jane Feinburg

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, Oct. 1, 2000)
    Provides an insightful examination of the presidentÆs motivation behind the Gettysburg Address in relation to the issues he faced during that period, the political climate of the time, his personal position on slavery, and his views on the Constitution.
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  • Welcome to Lizard Motel: Children, Stories, and the Mystery of Making Things Up, A Memoir

    Barbara Feinberg

    Hardcover (Beacon Press, Aug. 1, 2004)
    Welcome to Lizard Motel is a completely original memoir about the place of stories in children's lives. It began when Barbara Feinberg noticed that her twelve-year-old son, Alex, who otherwise loved to read, hated reading many of the novels assigned to him in school. These stories of abandonment, kidnapping, abuse, and more-called "problem novels"-were standard fare in his middle school classroom. Alex and his friends hated to read these books. As one of them said, "They give me a headache in my stomach." So Feinberg set out to discover just what these kids were talking about. She started to read the books, steeping herself in novels like Chasing Redbird, Bridge to Terabithia, The Pigman, and more. She consulted librarians, children's literature experts, and others, trying to get a handle on why young-adult novels had become so dark and gloomy and, to her mind, contrived.What she found both troubled and surprised her. "In the middle of the 1960s," observed one children's literature expert, "political and social changes leaned hard on the crystal cage that had surrounded children's literature for ages. It cracked and the world flowed in."Welcome to Lizard Motel documents this dramatic change in the content of young-adult novels but does so in a uniquely touching memoir about one family's life with books, stories, and writing. Feinberg's examination of the problem novel opens her eyes to other issues that affect children today-such as how they learn to write, how much reality is too much for a young child's mind, and the role of the imagination in children's experience. Quirky, moving, serious, and witty, Welcome to Lizard Motel is one of the most surprising books about reading and writing to come along in years. Not only does it explore the world of children and stories, but it also asks us to look at how our children are growing up. Feinberg wonders if, as a society, we have lost touch with the organic unfolding of childhood, with that mysterious time when making things up helps deepen a child's understanding of the world. This memoir will reacquaint readers with the special nature of children's imaginations.
  • Black Tuesday

    Barbara Feinberg

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, Oct. 1, 1995)
    A chronicle of the most disastrous stock market crash in American history remembers the financial circumstances that contributed to it and the extensive impact it had on the entire country.
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  • Welcome to Lizard Motel: Children, Stories, and the Mystery of Making Things Up

    Barbara Feinberg

    Hardcover (Beacon Press, Aug. 1, 2004)
    Excellent Book
  • Joseph Lieberman:Keeping Faith

    Barbara Silberd Feinberg

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, April 1, 2001)
    Accompanied by a bevy of photographs, an insightful look into the life of the Senator from Connecticut, who is the first Jewish man ever nominated for Vice President of the United States, details his lucrative career.
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  • Eleanor Roosevelt

    Barbara Silberd Feinberg

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, Jan. 16, 2003)
    An addition to the popular Gateway Biography series introduces the wife of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt who also got involved in politics and social causes, becoming a U.S. delegate to the United Nations.
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