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Hardcover Dear Mr. Rosenwald Book

ISBN: 0439495229

ISBN13: 9780439495226

Dear Mr. Rosenwald

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Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$5.79
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List Price $16.99
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Book Overview

Based on the true story of the Rosenwald schools built in the rural African-American South in the 1920s, award winning writer and poet Carol Boston Weatherford tells the lyrical story of third grader... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Dear. Mr. Rosenwald

This is an excellent book to increase the knowledge of the Rosenwald Schools and what they meant to education and to the need for cooperation among all.

An eye-opener regarding an Afro-American community in the South from 1921-22.

What a wonderful children's book. It tells a good story and is educational at the same time. While reading the text it was a joy to look at the illustrations to get some perspective as to what the book was about. The pictures in the book were well done and appropriate. There are 14 scenes (double-page pictures) included. The book is set in the rural South in 1921 and 1922. The narrator of the book is a young black girl who has never had a good school to go to. The book explains how she got her school within a year's time due primarily to the financial contribution of Julius Rosenwald who had made millions as President of Sears Roebuck and Company. My favorite part of the book was the Author's Note at the end of the book. That's where the history behind the book is explained. And it is from that blurb that a parent reading the book to their child or children will probably get inspiration when fully explaining the book to their listeners. I would have liked the book better if its message had been slightly different. I found there to be too much emphasis on the value of the school instead of the value of an education. Wise people are constant learners. Some have gone to school, and others have been self-taught. While it is true that most wise people have at least some school in their past, it's children who want to learn and study for themselves who really benefit from an education. 5 stars!

A fine tale of a generous man's lasting impact on the Afro- American community.

Carole Boston Weatherford's DEAR MR. ROSENWALD receives award-winning artist R. Gregory Christie's fun illustrations as it tells of a one-room school and a Sears president who is donating money to redo it. But how can a poor community match funds with a rich man to make their dream come true? It's based on the true story of the Rosenwald schools of the 1920s and 30s and offers a fine tale of a generous man's lasting impact on the Afro- American community.

Well done!

"Dear, Mr. Rosenwald" is a great way for folks to become familiar with the Rosenwald Initiaive. Many of the schools are disappearing due to age and neglect, and this book is a great way to show the importance of restoration and preservation. I think it is fantastic that this "children's" book gives a hint of the partnership between Booker T. Washington and Julius Rosenwald AND community involvement in building approximately 5300 schools in rural, southern, black America in the early 20th century. Well done!

Well-written and beautifully illustrated

I highly recommend this book for children and adults alike. (I am even buying one for my sister, a Ph.D. student in History with a focus on the education of blacks in the South.) This book is a great historical glimpse into an era from which we are not too far removed from. Accesible to kids and informative to adults, this is a definite must read.
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