Picture of author.

Sarah Fabiny

Author of Where is the Amazon?

31 Works 3,362 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: via Creativeinterviews.com

Series

Works by Sarah Fabiny

Where is the Amazon? (2016) 572 copies, 1 review
Who Was Frida Kahlo? (2013) 557 copies, 3 reviews
Where Is Antarctica? (2019) 461 copies
What Is NASA? (2019) 440 copies
Who Was Rachel Carson? (2014) 287 copies
Who Was Beatrix Potter? (2015) 191 copies, 1 review
Who Was Jane Austen? (2017) 191 copies
Who Is Gloria Steinem? (2014) 118 copies, 1 review
Who Was Ida B. Wells? (2020) 110 copies, 2 reviews
Who Was Norman Rockwell? (2019) 92 copies
What Are Castles and Knights? (2022) 78 copies, 1 review
Who Was Fidel Castro? (2017) 65 copies
Who Was A. A. Milne? (2021) 47 copies
Where Is the Sahara Desert? (2023) 31 copies
Who Was Georgia O'Keeffe? (2022) 30 copies

Tagged

19th century (10) 20th century (11) 8 (9) Amazon (10) animals (29) Antarctica (9) art (18) artist (10) artists (14) biography (144) chapter book (11) children's (17) civil rights (14) ecology (15) feminism (9) Frida Kahlo (10) geography (25) grade 5 (40) history (75) middle grade (13) non-fiction (145) painting (9) Q-R (40) racism (9) science (38) to-read (12) Where Is Series (10) Who Was Series (24) women (12) writers (9)

Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
I read this with my daughter because we knew a few basics about Wells (e.g. she was a journalist and an activist for women's suffrage) but wanted to learn more. Admittedly, at 6yo, my kid is a little young to learn about lynching (which Wells wrote about extensively in order to document the atrocities), but she really latched on to the idea that Wells was fighting for the rights of Black people *way before* the Civil Rights Movement. Ida B. Wells was active from the 1890s until her death in show more 1931, so she lived through the broken promise of Reconstruction and the pain of Jim Crow. She saw women get the right to vote, but she didn't see the end of legal segregation.

I also appreciated that this book called attention to how some white women suffragists were openly racist. They did not want the women's suffrage movement to include Black women like Wells. This opened up a conversation about intersectional feminism (though that phrase doesn't appear in the book).
show less
I chose “Who Was Frida Kahlo?” for the conversation we had about biographies. I believe that learning about others relies heavily on connection. The story of Frida Kahlo, a Mexican artist who believed strongly in all that she did in life, is easily connected to with many different kinds of people and children in our classroom. As Dr. Hayes said, I should not limit myself to sharing this story with only children who are Hispanic or women. Just because that is what draws me to this story show more does not mean that other students should be limited simply because they do not fit this demographic. I would recommend this to children who are interested in art, Hispanic history, Communism, or just Frida in general. I could include this biography in a lesson about any of the subjects mentioned above or for a special month on artists, Hispanics, etc. While this book does do an excellent job of informing us about Frida’s life, it lacks one of the main messages that Frida strongly believed in: fight against “the man” and capitalism. By selling these books, profit is being made in vain, as Frida would hate to have her face plastered everywhere. I would supplement this text with the research I have found about this, especially if I were a 5th-7th grade teacher that could go a bit more in depth with this. Scholastic Book Wizard has identified this as a Grade 3-7 level book. I give this a 3/5 due to the missing message, but still liked this biography a lot. show less
Who Was Frida Kahlo? by Sarah Fabiny is a wonderful book and I learned so much I didn't know. I didn't realized what a painful,( physically), her life had been and why. I didn't study her at all in school or in college so this was all new to me. I just knew her art because I am an art nut but I knew about some of the great artist that I liked and her art didn't strike me so I never looked her history up. Wow, what a history. Wonderful info and great illustrations. I got this book from the show more library. show less
The book retells the life story of famous Mexican artist Frida. Her story is of misfortunes and great accomplishments. After being involved in a vehicle accident Frida begins the journey of self reflection and artistic career. She was confined to bed because of disability and it is where she teachers herself to paint and draw. She finds that the best therapy is her painting from confinements of bed. The struggle is not only about her physical limitations but that of being a female artist in show more a male dominated world.
She marries Diego Rivera, Mexican muralist. Illustrations are cartoonish but none the less great for what the content is revolving.
Gender, artist, disabled, culture, expression are some topics of discussion.
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Dede Putra Illustrator

Statistics

Works
31
Members
3,362
Popularity
#7,585
Rating
4.1
Reviews
9
ISBNs
168
Languages
1
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs