Guys read True stories True stories /

Book - 2014

"Jon Scieszka's Guys Read anthology series for tweens turns to nonfiction in its fifth volume, True Stories. The fifth installment in the Guys Read Library of Great Reading features ten stories that are 100% amazing, 100% adventurous, 100% unbelievable--and 100% true. A star-studded group of award-winning nonfiction authors and journalists provides something for every reader, all aligned with the Common Core State Standards. Compiled and edited by real-life literature legend Jon Scieszka, Guys Read: True Stories is a mind-blowing collection of essays, biographies, how-to guides, and more, all proving that the truth is most definitely out there.Supports the Common Core State Standards"--

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j909/Guys Read
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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room j909/Guys Read Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Walden Pond Press, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2014]
©2014
Language
English
Other Authors
Brian Floca (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 242 pages, [14 pages] : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780061963827
9780061963810
  • Before we begin / Jon Scieszka
  • Sahara shipwreck / Steven Sheinkin
  • Tarantula heaven / Sy Montgomery
  • Hugh Glass : dead man crawling / Nathan Hale
  • A jumbo story / Candace Fleming
  • Uni-verses / Douglas Florian
  • This won't hurt a bit : the painfully true story of dental care / Jim Murphy
  • A pack of brothers / Thanhha Lai
  • Mojo, moonshine, and the blues / Elizabeth Partridge
  • A cartoonist's course / James Sturm
  • The river's run / T. Edward Nickens
  • About Guys Read and biographical information.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Ten terrifically told true stories demonstrate the wide range of subjects and formats available for young readers of nonfiction. This fifth anthology in the Guys Read series stars some of the best-known names in informational writing today. From Sibert-winning Steve Sheinkin's gripping tale of survival in the Sahara desert to outdoorsman T. Edward Nickens' celebration of extreme canoeing, there are thrills, gore, humor, and pathos enough to satisfy both eager and reluctant readers. Within these pages, you will find high-interest stuff like jungle tarantulas of French Guiana; a pack of brothers in Saigon, Vietnam; Jumbo the elephant; gruesome historical dentistry; and Hugh Glass, mauled by a bear and left for dead in the wilds of what would become South Dakota and each is explored in either narrative or graphic-novel fashion. But there are also topics not so high-octane: poems about science, a biography of a blues musician, and an autobiography of a cartoonist. Selected, edited, and neatly introduced by Scieszka, National Ambassador for Young People's Literature emeritus, these appetite-whetting accounts are accompanied by occasional illustrations by Floca (not seen). You certainly don't have to be a guy to appreciate these morsels of fact-based storytelling and then beg for more.--Isaacs, Kathleen Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

Nine writers for young people (and one wilderness journalist) contribute the selections in this volume of putatively boy-friendly nonfiction accounts. About half the chapters recount historical or personal adventures; other topics include dental history, Jumbo the elephant, and growing up with brothers. The book as a whole won't appeal to any one reader, but every reader (girls, too) will find something to like. (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A stellar lineup of nonfiction writers offers true stories, which, like the previous volumes in the Guys Read series, are written to appeal especially to boys. Steve Sheinkin leads off with a survival tale, as Capt. James Riley and his crew are shipwrecked off the coast of West Africa in the summer of 1815 and survive the Sahara desert by drinking their own urine and eating their peeling, sunburned skin. Enslaved, they are eventually saved by Muslim traders, and Riley joins the anti-slavery movement upon his return to the United States. Sy Montgomery writes a beautiful ode to the rain forest of French Guiana and profiles tarantulas and Sam Marshall, a scientist who studies them and who is featured in Montgomery's The Tarantula Scientist (2004). Jim Murphy delivers an unsettling history of dental horrors from 6,500 years ago to the present day (or at least his second visit to the dentist); Candace Fleming profiles Jumbo, the world's largest elephant; Elizabeth Partridge writes about Alan Lomax and Muddy Waters; and T. Edward Nickens is almost killed canoeing frigid Alaskan waters. The storiesprose, poetry and a graphic storyare full of action and lively, sometimes-gross details that make their subjects come alive. An unusually strong volumea smorgasbord for young nonfiction readers (both boys and girls) and a good pick for the classroom. (Short stories. 8-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.