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Paperback Aliens Are Coming!: The True Account of the 1938 War of the Worlds Radio Broadcast Book

ISBN: 0385736789

ISBN13: 9780385736787

Aliens Are Coming!: The True Account of the 1938 War of the Worlds Radio Broadcast

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

A picture-book account of one of the most famous pieces of radio history * "Sandwiched between a look at Depression-era radios and a set of fanciful period advertisements, McCarthy delivers a semi-serious account of the 1938 War of the Worlds broadcast, illustrating both passages from the script and briefly told descriptions of widespread panic with smudgy cartoon scenes featuring bug-eyed monsters and equally bug-eyed people. The author closes with...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Learning From History Can Be Fun For Kids!

This colorful picture book provides an amusing and accurate (though simplistic) account of the pandemonium produced by Orson Welles' sensational 1938 radio adaptation of author H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds. Well-researched, there is even a bibliography. Also included at the end of the book is a brief but interesting mention of other occasions when "The War of the Worlds" radio show was broadcast with resulting public bedlam. The text is interspersed with actual dialogue from the play and focuses on how the news broadcast style of the play had Americans fooled into thinking the Martian invasion was real at a time when America was highly dependent on the radio for up-to-date news coverage. The subtle lesson, not to believe everything you hear despite its aura of authenticity, is well taken and can be applied today to other sources of news media such as television and the internet. This book is also valuable in showing that learning about history has its fun side, too. (Probably best for grades K-3)

Really fun book!

I found this book to be a lot of fun! It is a entertaining way to look at an event that really happened! My class GOT IT!

Extra extra read all about it!

Aliens Are Coming is about a false radio broadcst about aliens.This book illustrates how a little prank could affect so many people. I thought this book was great and you should too.

Who can you believe?

This would be a great way to start a unit for upper elementary kids on media and truth in journalism. It's a visual delight, and has lots of details to spark further inquiry. While most kids today think they are pretty media-wise, can they indeed tell the difference between "entertainment" and "infotainment?" A fun visually engaging introduction to the "War of the Worlds" broadcast, might provoke some interesting conversations in the classroom.

They're here. They're aliens. Get used to it.

Picture book non-fiction. A hard format to write in, or the hardest format to write in? Every year countless libraries get inundated with the same old same old. Your bee books. Your dinosaur books. Your fifteen different biographies of Teddy Roosevelt. So you can imagine my surprise when I picked up a book that looked... different. You don't expect something called, "Aliens Are Coming" to be factual. You especially don't expect it to tell the truth when you flip through the pages and see large multi-tentacle-laden outer space beasties terrorizing the natural landscape. But then, it helps to know your history. Seeing the 1938 radio broadcast of "War of the Worlds" for what it truly was (perfect picture book fare), McCarthy gives us, thrills, chills, and some wonderful little factoids in the back of what I might well call my favorite non-fiction picture book of 2006. It's the 1930s! Good old 1930s. Open the book and here's a cheery announcer telling kids that back in the thirties the primary source of entertainment and information was the radio. It then explains that some people "were easily fooled by a radio play that sounded like an actual news bulletin". Turn the page, and everything is black and white. We're looking at a typical American street scene. "It was October, 30, 1938, the day before Halloween". We next see a nice black and white scene of a family gathered in their living room. The noise coming out of the radio forms into colorful dancing sequences. Suddenly an announcer comes on and starts talking about a flaming meteorite that has fallen in New Jersey. As the listeners grow worried, the scene shifts to a field where a group of people stand around as a flying saucer slowly begins to open up. It's aliens! And they've come to conquer us all! They ransack the farmlands. They invade the cities. They land all over the country. "Was this the end of the world?" Certainly a lot of people listening thought so. The pictures are back to black and white and we're seeing clogged highways and jammed phone lines, and police investigating perfectly calm fields in the country. It wasn't the end of the world. It was Orson Welles and his troupe of actors at the Mercury Theatre performing a realistic version of "War of the Worlds". Interesting factual information rounds off the book with the true story and fun info about subsequent readings of the story (with similar results). Part of the fun of this book is that there is no indication that any of this story might not be entirely on the up and up until you reach its end. Then it finishes a bit abruptly. Still, imagine introducing this book to a room full of second graders. You tell them in all seriousness (preferably around Halloween time) that this book is a true story. True true true. Then you fill their little heads with a wacked-out tale of alien invasion and widespread panic. The fact that they've been duped only makes them (like those poor 1938 American citi
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