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Books in Creative Minds Biographies series

  • The Country Artist: A Story About Beatrix Potter

    David R. Collins, Karen Ritz

    Library Binding (Carolrhoda Books, March 1, 1989)
    A biography of the English author and illustrator who grew up during the Victorian era and whose detailed drawings of plants and animals found their way into her famous picture books
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  • Listening to Crickets: A Story about Rachel Carson

    Candice Ransom, Shelly O. Haas

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press TM, Aug. 1, 1993)
    From the time she was a very young girl, Rachel Carson felt a bond with nature. Growing up in Pennsylvania, she spent hours exploring meadows and woods, dreaming of seeing the ocean. As Rachel grew older, she combined her gift for writing with her love of nature, producing award-winning books about the sea. But her best-known achievement was the publication of Silent Spring, an account of the dangerous effects of pesticides on plants and animals. With Silent Spring, Rachel helped create a movement to ban these harmful chemicals. Her findings helped to assure that future generations would be able to dream about the ocean and listen to crickets.
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  • Bold Composer: A Story About Ludwig Van Beethoven

    Judith p. Pinkerton, Barbara Kiwak

    Library Binding (Millbrook Pr, Oct. 1, 2006)
    Narrates the life of Ludwig van Beethoven, the celebrated Austrian composer who created numerous classic works, even after his hearing had completely faded.
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  • Mammolina: A Story About Maria Montessori

    Barbara O'Connor, Sara Campitelli

    Paperback (First Avenue Editions, Jan. 1, 1993)
    Describes the life and achievements of the Italian woman doctor who developed a revolutionary method of educating children
  • Discovering Nature's Laws: A Story about Isaac Newton

    Laura Purdie Salas, Emily Reynolds

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press TM, Aug. 1, 2003)
    Sir Isaac Newton changed the world with his many discoveries and inventions about mathematics, science, optics, and physics. Although he was brilliant, Newton felt no need to publish his ideas or to inform his fellow scientists of the amazing discoveries he made. Because of this, his discoveries were often disputed. Despite the controversy that often surrounded him, Newton made astounding advances in his efforts to understand how nature worked. His legacy lives on through inventions such as microscopes, eyeglasses, telescopes, and cameras.
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  • First Son and President: A Story about John Quincy Adams

    Beverly Gherman, Matthew Bird

    Paperback (LernerClassroom, Jan. 1, 2006)
    America’s sixth president and son of America’s second president, John Quincy Adams lived an extraordinary life. Beginning as a young boy as secretary for his father during the peace talks that ended the Revolutionary War, Adams served his country as a diplomat, state senator, secretary of state, the president, and as a representative in congress. Through his many speeches, essays, books, and written reports, Adams helped shape America. Today, he is remembered as a great statesman, a scholar, and a poet, just as he hoped he would be.
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  • Living with the Senecas: A Story about Mary Jemison

    Susan Bivin Aller, Laurie Harden

    Paperback (LernerClassroom, Jan. 1, 2007)
    Mary Jemison was born in 1743 as her parents emigrated from Ireland to Pennsylvania. When she was fifteen years old, a group of raiding Shawnee Indians and French soldiers captured her and her family. She was the only one to survive. For seventy-five years, she lived among the Seneca Indians who adopted her. She outlived two husbands and bore eight children. She witnessed two wars and a revolution. Even though she could have returned to the white world, she chose to remain with the Senecas and became a loyal and respected member of her tribe.
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  • Father of the Constitution: A Story about James Madison

    Barbara Mitchell, Alex Tavoularis

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press TM, Aug. 1, 2003)
    James Madison loved to debate--as long as he wasn't in public! Painfully shy, Madison was content to listen and absorb ideas rather than to speak them. But when he saw a newly independent America about to be torn apart, his love for the American nation conquered his shyness. Known as the father of the constitution because of the leadership he showed during its creation, he helped shape what America would become.
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  • Science Fiction Pioneer: A Story about Jules Verne

    Tom Streissguth, Ralph L. Ramstad

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press TM, Aug. 1, 2000)
    When Jules Verne was born in 1828, his family had his future planned out for him. They expected him to become a lawyer, but he dreamed of writing. He started out writing more traditional poetry and plays, but then he began to create a new, unconventional kind of fiction. It combined adventure, the modern world of science and invention, and his personal view of the future. With fantastical characters, spaceships to the moon, and deep-sea submarines, his books told of things that would not actually occur for decades.
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  • Between Two Worlds: A Story about Pearl Buck

    Barbara Mitchell, Karen Ritz

    Paperback (LernerClassroom, Jan. 1, 2007)
    Growing up in China as the child of American missionaries, Pearl read and listened to stories from both the East and the West. A story, she thought, was a wonderful way to learn about people and places. Pearl had read and heard about America and her family there, but she had never met her American relatives. When, at the age of 10, she spent a year in America, Pearl came to understand that she was a part of two worlds. Between Two Worlds tells the story of how Pearl Buck worked to increase the understanding between the two worlds she knew.
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  • To The Point: A Story about E. B. White

    David R. Collins, Amy Johnson

    Paperback (LernerClassroom, Aug. 1, 1989)
    E. B. White first recognized the magic in words when he was very young. As a child, some of his happiest hours were spent finding just the right words to describe his feelings and experiences. After graduating from college, he took a job with a new magazine called The New Yorker. The magazine's readers soon began to look forward to the poetry and essays written by E. B. White. His writing was clear and lively with no wasted words, and it could make people laugh as easily as it could make them cry. In 1936, White and his family moved to a little farm near the coast of Maine, complete with sheep, chickens, and pigs. It was there that E. B. White wrote Charlotte's Web, perhaps one of the most beloved children's books ever written.
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  • Bold Composer: A Story about Ludwig van Beethoven

    Judith Pinkerton Josephson, Barbara Kiwak

    Paperback (LernerClassroom, Jan. 1, 2007)
    Famous 19th century composer Ludwig van Beethoven compsed hundreds of works in his lifetime, including the well-known Moonlight Sonata and Symphony No. 5 and Symphony No. 9. He remains among the most-studied and most-loved composers.
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