Rush Revere and the first patriots Time-travel adventures with exceptional Americans

Rush H. Limbaugh

Book - 2014

Substitute middle-school history teacher Rush Revere takes his students back in time to eighteenth-century Boston to experience the start of the American Revolution as it happens.

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jFICTION/Limbaugh Rush
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jFICTION/Limbaugh Rush Due Apr 23, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Threshold Editions 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Rush H. Limbaugh (-)
Edition
First Threshold Editions hardcover edition
Physical Description
ix, 240 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781476755885
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Rush Revere and his horse, Liberty, return to Manchester Middle School for more "rush, rush, rushing to history."It hasn't been long since Rush and Liberty took students Tommy and Freedom to Plymouth Plantation (Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims, 2013), but they are stoked for more time travel when the unorthodox substitute teacher returns. This time, he includes new student Cam, an African-American military child, and blonde queen-bee Elizabeth in his hops, taking various configurations of the foursome to a handful of places and times between 1765 and 1774. Oddly, though Rush's namesake's famous ride is referenced, they do not travel to witness it. Other missed opportunities include a visit to chat with Patrick Henry, though not to hear his "Give me liberty or give me death" speech, and a trip to Philadelphia to stand around outside Carpenters' Hall while inside, the First Continental Congress debates severing trade ties with Great Britain. As before, blithe disregard for the basic conventions of time-travel fantasy and leaden, amateurish prose characterize the effort. A surfeit of exclamation points (seven in one paragraph at one point) fails to compensate for the text's inveterate tendency to tell, not show. Characterizations are particularly weak; Elizabeth is an extreme cartoon of a brat, and Cam displays bizarre equanimity at being assumed a slave. Rush himself and Liberty are as affable as ever, though. Readers interested in the received narrative of the lead-up to the American Revolution would do much better to look for the old Landmark books in their local libraries.What's next? Probably an equally maladroit series of trips to the Revolutionary War itself. (author's note, quiz) (Fantasy. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.