The next president The unexpected beginnings and unwritten future of America's presidents

Kate Messner

Book - 2020

A quick introduction to the U. S. Presidents using a unique reference of time.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Picture books
Published
San Francisco, California : Chronicle Kids, Chronicle Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Messner (author)
Other Authors
Adam Rex (illustrator)
Physical Description
41 pages : color illustrations ; 25 x 31 cm
Audience
Grades 4-6.
Ages 8-12.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 40-41).
ISBN
9781452174884
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Who will be the next president? As political analysts debate contenders, the odds are that at least 10 of our future presidents are alive today. And three are probably kids right now! While most children's books about presidents are a rundown of isolated facts, this clever informational picture book makes connections among presidents and their successors who were alive at the same time in 1789, 1841, 1897, and 1961. For instance, when John F. Kennedy was elected in 1961, the next 10 presidents were also alive. Realistic, digitally enhanced illustrations and short text boxes with plenty of surprises reveal that Gerald Ford was serving in Congress; Ronald Reagan was working as a TV host; Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Donald Trump were all teenagers attending school; and Barack Obama was newly born. Between each section is additional lesser-known but engaging presidential trivia, from Abraham Lincoln's Mississippi riverboat stint to Calvin Coolidge's pet pygmy hippo. In the end, Messner returns to readers with a hopeful vision, underscoring that while historically presidents have been wealthy, white, Protestant men, anyone from a variety of backgrounds--including YOU--might be the next president. Rex's final illustration, featuring individuals of different ages, races, religions, and sexual orientations, emphasizes the point. An ingenious exploration of presidents that will encourage children to consider their own futures.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Messner (Chirp) and Rex (Pluto Gets the Call) open with a flyleaf bookplate that reads not "This Book Belongs to" but rather "This Country Belongs to." It's emblematic of their core idea that "the presidents of tomorrow are always out there somewhere." Ingeniously structured around inaugural years, the book's softly textured digital vignettes are montaged to give a sense of events unfolding in many places and lives at once: "At the time of Washington's inauguration... Presidents 8, 9, and 12 were all kids." Two spreads illustrate that when William McKinley (the 25th president) took office in 1897, Teddy Roosevelt (26th) was assistant secretary of the Navy, Herbert Hoover (31st) was running a gold mine in Australia, while Dwight D. Eisenhower (34th), age seven, was helping out in the family creamery and playing baseball. Throughout, this timeline treatment shows how some future presidents have clearly and intently waited in the wings, while others could not seem further from the Oval Office. By the time the authors wrap with a variously inclusive spread reading "at least ten of our future presidents are probably alive today," readers may be convinced that the future is wide open--presidentially speaking. Ages 8--12. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2--5--Messner leads a delightful march through our nation's presidents, focusing on where they were and what they were doing at various points in history. She emphasizes that there are "presidents of tomorrow" already living among us today. The time line begins with George Washington and describes what the nine presidents who were alive during his tenure were doing. The text discusses the list of leaders and their early lives through the presidency of John F. Kennedy, including the information that presidents 42--45 were still children. The book ends with a call to future generations. Messner's writing maintains a buoyant tone throughout the narrative. Most of her factoids are interesting, though they become dry by the time readers get to later presidents. Messner seems to show a bit of bias in her inclusion of a negatively toned fact about Donald Trump, combined with prominent inclusions of Hillary Clinton. Most other facts are lighthearted. With the exception of Clinton, the book does not feature any other presidential nominee who lost. However, this does not detract from the overall quality of the text or Rex's beautiful illustrations. VERDICT A vivacious exploration of the early lives of the leaders of the free world; an excellent nonfiction addition that will engage young history buffs.--Brittany McMahon, Westernport Elementary School, MD

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

No matter who holds the job right now, the presidents of tomorrow are always out there somewhere. There are picture books aplenty about United States presidents, but make way for this breath of fresh air. Messner presents brief profiles of each one through a particular lens: starting in 1789 with George Washington, she makes her way down the timeline to the current day, looking at which future presidents were alive when each predecessor served and what they were doing at the time. For instance, when Washington served, nine future presidents were already alive, though Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison, and Zachary Taylor were still children. We often see more than one president at a time as we move through decades, while text boxes impart relatable or little-known facts about them. Rex breathes life into these illustrations, showing the humanity absent from most official portraits. Each president pictured is tagged with a number on these busy but never cluttered spreads so that we always know whos who. And Messner doesnt sugarcoat or whitewash history: Most [of Americas earliest presidents] were wealthy, white, Protestant men, she states; and she notes that while Thomas Jefferson wrote that all men are created equal, he himself owned slaves. The mood turns to awe-inspiring at the close, when we read that at least ten of our future presidents are probably alive today, the art here showing an inclusive group of children and adults at a portrait gallery of presidents, gazing hopefully into the unknown, getting ready to lead. Back matter includes a substantial bibliography. Julie Danielson March/April 2020 p.105(c) Copyright 2020. 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

What did presidents do before being elected? Tour a gallery of presidential portraits and find out!There is always just one president at a time, but the presidents to comemaybe 10 or morewill be out there somewhere. When John F. Kennedy was elected as the 35th president in 1961, the next 10 presidents were alive. What were they doing? Lyndon Baines Johnson was Kennedy's vice president. Jimmy Carter was a peanut farmer. George H.W. Bush was president of an oil exploration company. Donald Trump was attending a military academy, "where his father had hoped he would learn some discipline." In his painterly art, Rex depicts a diverse group of people touring a gallery of presidential portraits. The tourists are multiracial and multiethnic, young and old. There's a woman wearing a hijab pushing a stroller and a woman using a wheelchair. But the faces on the wall are all of white men until No. 44, President Barack Obama. There is no portrait of President Trump, but there is one of Hillary Clinton, "a woman nominated by a major party for the highest office of the land"which, though true, is misleading in this context. Follow her gaze to an empty frame, No. 46, where the next portrait of a future president will be included. What are future presidents doing right now? The extensive backmatter is accessible and informative, and it includes reading suggestions for young readers. Clear, engaging, and fun (and just a little iconoclastic). (presidential birthplaces, presidential requirements, bibliography) (Informational picture book. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.