Posts Tagged ‘first thanksgiving’
This First Thanksgiving Day: A Counting Story
About This First Thanksgiving Day: A Counting Story
From School Library Journal
Buy This First Thanksgiving Day: A Counting Story
First Thanksgiving
The First Thanksgiving dated to September 1620 when a group of pilgrims sailed from Plymouth, England, to search for new home. These men, women, children wanted freedom to worship whatever they wanted, a freedom which they were denied in England. The pilgrims crossed the Atlantic Ocean on a small ship called the Mayflower.
After a long and perilous journey, the pilgrims arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts. They started to build their new homes. Life was difficult at the time and the pilgrims did not have much resources. They lacked food and warm clothes so many of them did not survive the winter ’s cold.
Spring time
When Spring arrived, the pilgrims were grateful. The native Indians taught them to grow crops and hunt for food. The pilgrims were hard workers and their crops grew so much in the growing season that soon they had plenty to eat. The fall harvest yielded more food than they could ever imagined. They were grateful and wanted to thank God for all the food for the coming Winter.
The first thanksgiving ever
The first thanksgiving was the pilgrims’ feast to thank God for all the crops and food. The native American indians were invited. This great feast was the Pilgrims’ first thanksgiving which was in the fall of 1621. The first thanksgiving feast and celebration lasted three days.
The Thanksgiving Story
The Thanksgiving Story
Dagliesh and Sewell received praise for the clarity and immediacy of their picture book, a hit of the season in 1954. Today’s children, beginners and advanced readers, will value the story about one family’s first Thanksgiving in the Plymouth Colony, strikingly present in stylized, naive pictures like colored etchings.
Giles, Constance and Damaris Hopkins are aboard the Mayflower, overcrowded when the Speedwell turns back to England. On the journey, the children’s baby brother is born and named Oceanus; he will be one of the smallest in the company of settlers who endure the terrible first year in the New World and gather to celebrate the harvest the next November.
The story ends with the great feast to which the colonists invited the Indian chief Massasoit, Squanto and their people who had helped the strangers survive hunger, cold and sickness.
Product Description
The Thanksgiving Story “is the only really distinguished book we have on that holiday. Miss Dalgliesh has told the Pilgrim story simply from the point of view of the Hopkins family whose little Oceanus was born on the Mayflower; and Miss Sewell has made wonderful full-color pictures. A beautiful book.”–The Horn Book. Caldecott Honor Book.
My First Thanksgiving
My First Thanksgiving is a board book about Thanksgiving. PreSchool– In just six double-page spreads and fewer than ten sentences, dePaola tries to capture some of the historical significance and manifestations of the holiday and to relate them to contemporary celebrations.
Pilgrims are depicted on the first spread (dressed in a variety of pastel tones?), but there is no attempt to define who they are, where they came from, or why they are grateful to be in “their new home.” de Paola states, “Their friends came with food for the feast,” but there’s no indication that they joined in.
The book then jumps to the ways in which a modern family prepares for and enjoys the annual feast–with lots of company and food aplenty. Only total strangers to children’s books will fail to recognize the author’s familiar illustrative style executed here in watercolor and colored pencil. A harmless, but lackluster holiday offering that should set preschoolers well on the road to asking questions–just don’t expect to find any answers here.
- Luann Toth, School Library Journal
Description
The traditional celebration is clearly and simply explained in My First Thanksgiving with spare text and Tomie dePaolas bright illustrations. A 3-D effect brings the cover artwork to life!
Pilgrim’s First Thanksgiving
The Pilgrims’ first Thanksgiving lasted three whole days. Ann McGovern’s simple text introduces children to the struggles of the Pilgrims during their first year at Plymouth Colony and the events leading to the historic occasion we celebrate today.
About the Author
Ann McGovern, the author of more than 55 highly regarded books for children, is excited about the world: the world of history, nature, imagination, and the world of people. Her enthusiasm is the foundation for each word she writes. Her books, which range from fast-paced biographies and fact-filled fun histories to voyages in faraway lands, from playful picture books to retellings of well-known legends and fables, reflect her diverse and many interests.
A tireless traveler who has visited every continent, McGovern frequently incorporates her adventures into her books. Playing with Penguins and Swimming with Sea Lions were inspired by expeditions to Antarctica and the Galapagos Islands, respectively. Desert Beneath the Sea resulted from a scientific scuba expedition to the Red Sea, the Caribbean, and the China Sea with Shark Lady Eugenie Clark. And, for Questions and Answers About Sharks, McGovern took notes on her underwater slate with twelve sharks just inches away, after she took part in an underwater shark feeding in Papua New Guinea, where she was scuba diving.
But when McGovern visits schools to show slides of her travels and discuss how they provide ideas for her books, she emphasizes that inspiration can come from feelings and close-to-home experiences as well as far-off adventures.
McGovern grew up in New York City where she lives today. Her interest in books and writing began at an early age. “As a child, I developed a terrible stutter and never raised my hand in class,” she says, “I became a writer to express the feelings that I couldn’t speak about and an avid reader as way to escape a sad life.”
Her formal education ended after her first year at the University of New Mexico, where the only “A” she received was in horseback riding. But McGovern believes her most valuable education has come form her travel experiences and scuba diving expeditions, along with the intensive research she does for her books.
McGovern credits her late husband, Martin Scheiner, with introducing her to many of the experiences that have come to influence her writing. “With Marty, I stopped stuttering, I learned to drive, scuba dive, sail, take risks – maybe too many – when lions growled outside our tent in East Africa and the time a shark got too cozy with me in the Great Barrier Reef ,” she says. “I plan to write about my journey to the North Pole, when the walrus poked its tusks into our rubber boat. I’ll never run out of ideas – or memories!”
McGovern makes certain she visits schools and speaks to student as often as she can. “School children give me feedback that’s wonderful for my work. Sometimes when I look at a sad, shy face in the audience, I see the lonely child I once was, and I hope that maybe my words can have some influence on a life. Making a difference in children’s lives in why I plan to write until I am ninety.”



