Backwards Moon is a tale of adventure, magic, and friendship for anyone who’s ever flown on a broomstick—or wanted to.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Books About Witches, Fantasy: Supernatural Fiction, Mary Losure, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Author Showcase, Middle Grade Books, Add a tag
Blog: GregLSBlog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: nonfiction, middle grade, 1790s, Timothy Basil Ering, Mary Losure, Add a tag
WILD BOY: THE REAL LIFE OF THE SAVAGE OF AVEYRON, by Mary Losure, ill. by Timothy Basil Ering (Candlewick, March 2013)(ages 10+). In the last years of the 18th century, a boy -- about ten or eleven years old -- was captured in rural France. He'd been living on his own -- foraging in the forest, naked and running on all fours -- and no one knew where he came from. Ultimately, he was taken to Paris for study, where scientists tried to "civilize" him...
WILD BOY offers a fascinating look at one boy and human nature and what it means to be civilized -- a compelling and thought-provoking read.
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 9-12, Historical Fiction, Chapter Books, Author Showcase, Books for Girls, Mary Losure, Add a tag
Author Showcase
The Children’s Book Review
Published: March 27, 2012
The Fairy Ring, Or Elsie and Frances Fool the World
By Mary Losure
Candlewick Press, March 27, 2012
Elsie is a terrible speller and hates school. The only thing she’s ever been good at is art. Then one day, she gets a letter. It’s from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, author of the Sherlock Holmes stories.
“I have seen the wonderful pictures of fairies which you and your cousin Frances have taken, and I have not been so interested for a long time,” the great man writes.
How can she tell the creator of the world’s most famous detective that the fairies in the photographs are cardboard cutouts?
She never meant to bamboozle him! She and her cousin Frances only took the photos so their parents would stop teasing! It began after Frances told the grownups about the fairies, real fairies, she’d seen
by the waterfall behind their house….
Kirkus Reviews
“The remarkable, true story of a fairy hoax successfully perpetrated by two young girls in the early 1900s offers a fascinating examination of human nature.”Booklist—Starred review
“Losure’s elegant and charmingly formal prose makes palpable the girls’ loss of control as their fame spirals ever wider… The photos themselves are included and, like the astonishing true story, they are simultaneously silly and haunting.”Publishers Weekly
“Accompanied by the famous photos, the story is written in an accessible narrative style that includes the attitudes of the time and explains historical items like the use of hatpins and how cameras of the period worked. An intriguing glimpse into a photo-doctoring scandal well before the advent of Photoshop.”The Horn Book—Starred review
“The yearning for the supernatural and the magical to be real seems timeless…. Losure has written an engaging account of the affair, focusing sympathetically on the two young photographers….”
A Junior Library Guild Selection
For more information, visit: http://www.marylosure.com
The Author Showcase is a place for authors and illustrators to gain visibility for their works. This article was provided by the author. Learn more …
©2012 The Childrens Book Review. All Rights Reserved.
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