Browse all books

Books with author Jean Fritz

  • And then what happened, Paul Revere?

    Jean Fritz

    Hardcover (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, Jan. 1, 1973)
    Everyone knows about Paul Revere's big ride to Lexington. But not everyone knows the harrowing details and narrow escapes along the way. Did you know that Paul Revere forgot his spurs on his famous ride. Or that he whittled false teeth to make extra money? A New York Times Outstanding Book of the Year. A School Library Journal Best Book of the Year. An ALA Notable Children's Book. Full color.
    S
  • Traitor: The Case of Benedict Arnold

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Puffin, June 1, 1989)
    A study of the life and character of the brilliant Revolutionary War general who deserted to the British for money.
    X
  • China's Long March: 6000 Miles of Danger

    Jean Fritz

    MP3 CD (Blackstone Audio, Jan. 1, 2014)
    [MP3-CD audiobook format in Vinyl case. *NOTE: The MP3-CD format requires a compatible audio CD player.][Children's Non-Fiction (Ages 10-12)][Read by Bernadette Dunne] From award-winning children's author Jean Fritz comes the incredible true account of the Long March, a six-thousand-mile journey across China. In 1986, Jean Fritz went to China and talked to survivors of the Long March. It is from their recollections and her own broad, personal knowledge of Chinese history that Fritz has written one of the most compelling accounts of the incredible six-thousand-mile journey across China made by the Communist Army in 1934 and 1935. Fritz takes us on the route of the sixty-mile-long First Front Army, the unit of Mao Zedong that wound its way through a terrain so perilous it was often more threatening than their battles with the enemy. The fear of a young soldier on Old Mountain afraid to go to sleep in case he might roll over and fall off the cliff is real to us; the drama and devastation that reduced the Red Army to twenty thousand men and women are immediate. And when the army crosses the thundering Dadu River on the threadbare remains of a bridge, we cross our fingers and hope to make it, too. Skillfully placing events within the context of history, Fritz allows us to view them with the perspective of time, and, as she shares the memories of those she talked with, she brings humanness and intimacy to the participants and their unforgettable journey.
    Z+
  • Make Way for Sam Houston

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Putnam Juvenile, Feb. 3, 1986)
    "San Houston was the kind of larger-than-life hero about whom legends of Texan proportion have been woven. . . . In the hands of the fine biographer Jean Fritz, Houston's life retains its drama and vigor . . ."--New York Times Book Review.
    X
  • Man Who Loved Books by Jean Fritz

    Jean Fritz

    Hardcover (G. P. Putnam's Sons, March 15, 1877)
    Excellent Book
  • The Double Life of Pocahontas

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Puffin, July 1, 1987)
    A biography of the famous American Indian princess, emphasizing her life-long adulation of John Smith and the roles she played in two very different cultures.
    U
  • Stonewall by Jean Fritz

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Puffin Books, Aug. 16, 1647)
    None
  • What's The Big Idea, Ben Franklin?

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Puffin Books, May 7, 1996)
    None
  • Brady: A Story of the Underground Railroad

    Jean Fritz

    Mass Market Paperback (Scholastic, Aug. 16, 1968)
    None
  • Homesick: My Own Story

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Yearling, March 1, 1984)
    Jean Fritz was born in China and lived there until 1927, when she was twelve. Young Jean had spent her entire life in China, but her parents' memories of home and letters from relatives in Pennsylvania made her feel that she was American--and homesick for a place she'd never seen!Family photographs and illustrations by Margot Tomes show us the real people behind Jean's vivid and unforgettable stories--memories of picnics on the Great Wall, pranks, holidays in the foreign compound, rebellious moments at her British school. close ties to Chinese friends, and how it felt to be called a "foreign devil" and spat upon in the streets of a turbulent China on the eve of revolution. When her family embarks upon its long journey home, Jean is thrilled, but she wonders: When she arrives in America at last, will she fit in after growing up on "the wrong side of the world?"
    X
  • Why Don't You Get a Horse, Sam Adams?

    Jean Fritz

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, Nov. 21, 1974)
    In the early days of America when men wore ruffles, rode horseback, and obeyed the King, there lived a man in Boston who cared for none of these things. No one expected Samuel Adams to wear ruffles or pledge allegiance to the King of England, but his friends did think that he might get on a horse. But would he? Never! he said. An ALA Notable Children's Book. Full color.
    S
  • Why Don't You Get a Horse, Sam Adams?

    Jean Fritz

    Paperback (Putnam Juvenile, Feb. 5, 1982)
    "Apiece of history far more entertaining and readable than most fiction . . . the author has humanized a figure of the Revolution: Adams emerges a marvelously funny and believable man. The illustrations play upon his foibles . . . A tour de force, for both author and illustrator."--The Horn Book.
    S