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Paperback Carry On, Mr. Bowditch Book

ISBN: 0395137136

ISBN13: 9780395137130

Carry On, Mr. Bowditch

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$7.09
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Book Overview

Newbery Medal WinnerReaders today are still fascinated by "Nat," an eighteenth-century nautical wonder and mathematical wizard.Nathaniel Bowditch grew up in a sailor's world--Salem in the early days,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

A Coming-of-Age and a Lesson in Fortitude

"Sometimes, if you look at the stars long enough, they sort of shrink your troubles down to size." Some guys can see around corners and some gals have eyes in the back of their hearts. I'm not familiar with Nat Bowditch. I don't know how much liberty Jean Lee Latham took with Nat Bowditch's life details but regardless, it's a good story to tell. Many men lose their life to "book sailing" on the sea while even more men, women and children lose their lives to consumption on land. Maybe one day, consumption can be battled better but at sea, Bowditch vows to battle the simple mathematics of navigation to keep so many men from dying to bad books. Nat, in this story, seems to keep an optimistic look about the woes of his family's life, that once a certain step is reached, everything will get better. But everything gets harder. And a lot to bare. Nat's goals become distant memories but his consistency and fortitude become his greatest memorial. Even in the face of tragedy and hardships, Nat shows us the importance of will and learning. Harvard men, smart sailors and dumb sailors all have the ability to learn if they just try and get the right method of teaching/understanding. I thought it was a potent moment in the book that had Nat's brother, Hab, teach him that boys don't blubber. They don't cry. They don't complain. But if course they cry or complain but they don't blubber. This stems, not from toxic traits among men to teach stern pride, but from boys coping with haughty bullying. Too poor to afford a winter jacket, Nat responds to those jeering him that only pansies need winter coats. He'd love a winter coat but he won't let his down-and-out life be a means of ridicule by the haughty. By story's end, I was sad to not read more takes about the "ghost" of Lem Harvey going to arms against a foe with crude words and gusto, or to read more on Lupe Sanchez's loyal and smooth willingness to drop a crying a mate with a left hook. Who would have ever thought some things are as simple as mathematics, and in 2022, Polly's symbolic words would be so controversial that "[people] just don't understand about [Nat] and mathematics, dear. Two plus two is four. It comes out right, doesn't it?"

A Childhood Favourite

The first time I met this book, my dad read it to me. I remember being quite sad at parts of this true story re-told in fiction... The 1700s and 1800s were hard times on life expectancy. Nat Bowditch was dedicated to learning and was quite the self-starter when it came to education (language-learning, mathematics, etc). I think that is what impressed me so much about him and drew me to his story. Since that first read-through, I've re-read this book many times and was *thrilled* to find a signed first edition for a very affordable price. :)

Deserved the Newberry Medal!

Carry On, Mr. Bowditch contains absolutely fascinating background information about Salem and navigation in the 1700s, providing a valuable context for Nathaniel Bowditch's contributions to maritime navigation and allowing the reader to more fully understand just how remarkable and important they were. It is quite inspiring to read how Nathaniel Bowditch, who experienced many traumatic events in his youth and childhood, made such a meaningful - albeit a bit obscure today - contribution to mankind by rewriting the book on Maritime navigation. While he had excellent intelligence, he did not have much luck in his early years, and his accomplishments are largely due to his dogmatic perseverence to educate himself against all odds. My favorite parts of the book described his ocean voyages - how he solved various problems of navigation and how he won the allegiance of the motley crew of every ship he sailed on. My children are not old enough yet for this story, but I look forward to the day they are.

Carry On, Mr. Bowditch

As a small country strives for her freedom, a small boy also fights to be free. And as that country grows into the powerful United States, the boy grows also. Nathaniel Bowditch- a small boy in a poor family who has a history of mariners, with a curiosity and a love for math. Nat's dream is to enter Harvard and get a degree. However, that dream is cut short when his father sends him to be apprenticed to a bookkeeper because he cannot support Nat. Even this apprenticeship cannot stop Nat from learning. Using his position to his advantage, he uses the books around him whenever he has time. He comes across Newton's "Principia" He discovers, chagrined, that it is written in Latin, which he cannot comprehend. He tackles this problem by using his memory of the Bible and comparing it with a bible written in Latin. As he slowly but surely translates Principia, he develops a love for languages. Carry On, Mr. Bowditch is a book that inspires us to never give up our dreams no matter how bad our situation is. Anyone interested in astronomy, math, navigation, or ships in general will most likely love this book.

incredible

This story is an incredible true tale of a simple young boy who is forced into an apprenticeship by his father. Rather than letting his new life depress him, he began the process of educating himself. He found he had a talent for math and navigation, and became a famous navigator at sea. I could not put this story down, even though it was written a long time ago and is a historical novel.

Victoria's (age 9) Review--Wonderful Book!

Carry On Mr. Bowditch is an exciting historical fiction book that is filled with adventure and discovery. The story is about a boy who is the fourth child of six children who grows up to be a math genius. The names of the six children, oldest to youngest, are Mary, Hab, Lizza, Nat, William, and Sammy. They all live in Salem, MA with their mother, father, and grandmother. I think that the author, Mrs. Lathem, was trying to tell us that even a genius can have some emotional times too. What I liked about this book is that it seemed as if Nat took me aboard his ship to different lands and to adventure in learning. I recommend it!
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