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Jean Fritz (1915–2017)

Author of And Then What Happened, Paul Revere?

66+ Works 41,924 Members 294 Reviews 13 Favorited

About the Author

Jean Fritz was born in Hankow, China on November 16, 1915. She received a bachelor's degree in English from Wheaton College in 1937. She wrote picture books and historical fiction before focusing on historical nonfiction. Her first book, Bunny Hopewell's First Spring, was published in 1954. Her show more other books included And Then What Happened, Paul Revere?; Will You Sign Here, John Hancock?; Can't You Make Them Behave, King George?; Shh! We're Writing the Constitution; Traitor: The Case of Benedict Arnold; Where Do You Think You're Going, Christopher Columbus?; Who's That Stepping on Plymouth Rock?; The Double Life of Pocahontas; and George Washington's Mother. Homesick: My Own Story, a collection of linked narratives, traces her life from her girlhood in China to her longed-for yet uneasy passage to America. It won a National Book Award and was named a Newbery Honor Book. She received the Regina Medal by the Catholic Library Association, the National Humanities Medal, and the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award and the Knickerbocker Award for Juvenile Literature for her body of work. She died on May 14, 2017 at the age of 101. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Jean Fritz

And Then What Happened, Paul Revere? (1973) 3,646 copies, 27 reviews
Shh! We're Writing the Constitution (1987) 3,591 copies, 14 reviews
The Cabin Faced West (1958) 2,977 copies, 16 reviews
What's the Big Idea, Ben Franklin? (1976) 2,723 copies, 14 reviews
Homesick: My Own Story (1982) 1,980 copies, 21 reviews
Can't You Make Them Behave, King George? (1977) 1,896 copies, 6 reviews
George Washington's Breakfast (1969) 1,823 copies, 14 reviews
Bully for You, Teddy Roosevelt! (1991) 1,648 copies, 12 reviews
Will You Sign Here, John Hancock? (1976) 1,545 copies, 10 reviews
The Double Life of Pocahontas (1983) 1,473 copies, 7 reviews
Where Was Patrick Henry on the 29th of May? (1975) 1,454 copies, 11 reviews
Why Don't You Get a Horse, Sam Adams? (1948) 1,417 copies, 7 reviews
The Great Little Madison (1989) 1,379 copies, 7 reviews
Just a Few Words, Mr. Lincoln: The Story of the Gettysburg Address (1993) — Author — 1,227 copies, 9 reviews
You Want Women to Vote, Lizzie Stanton? (1995) 1,200 copies, 12 reviews
Traitor: The Case of Benedict Arnold (1981) 1,016 copies, 3 reviews
George Washington's Mother (1992) 1,009 copies, 3 reviews
Brady (1960) 984 copies, 5 reviews
Who's That Stepping on Plymouth Rock? (1975) 941 copies, 3 reviews
Early Thunder (1967) 653 copies, 4 reviews
Make Way for Sam Houston (1986) 524 copies, 3 reviews
Why Not, Lafayette? (1999) 495 copies, 3 reviews
Stonewall (1979) 486 copies, 3 reviews
Leonardo's Horse (2001) 476 copies, 11 reviews
Alexander Hamilton: the Outsider (2011) — Author — 396 copies, 10 reviews
The Lost Colony of Roanoke (2004) 267 copies, 14 reviews
The World in 1492 (1992) 227 copies, 1 review
China's Long March (1988) 225 copies, 1 review
Fish Head (1951) 223 copies, 1 review
Champion Dog Prince Tom (1958) 222 copies, 4 reviews
Brendan the Navigator (1979) 198 copies, 2 reviews
The Man Who Loved Books (1981) 143 copies, 2 reviews
China Homecoming (1985) 92 copies, 1 review
The Good Giants and the Bad Pukwudgies (1982) 89 copies, 4 reviews
I, Adam (1963) 52 copies
Surprising Myself (1992) 33 copies, 1 review
San Francisco (1962) 29 copies
How to Read a Rabbit (1970) 24 copies, 3 reviews
Bunny Hopwell's First Spring (1954) 21 copies, 2 reviews
Magic to Burn (1964) 21 copies, 2 reviews
So This Is Spring! (1954) 18 copies
121 Pudding Street (1955) 6 copies, 1 review
Back to Early Cape Cod (1981) 5 copies
The Late Spring (1957) 3 copies
Surprise Party (1965) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Perilous Road (1958) — Introduction — 1,171 copies, 10 reviews
The Big Book for Peace (1990) — Contributor — 960 copies, 16 reviews
Flight: The Journey of Charles Lindbergh (1991) — Introduction — 558 copies, 12 reviews
Winter Danger (1990) — Introduction — 226 copies, 2 reviews
The Buffalo Knife (1968) — Introduction — 197 copies, 1 review
Flight (Make it Work! Science) (1995) — Introduction — 169 copies, 1 review
Flaming Arrows (1957) — Introduction — 122 copies, 1 review
Worlds of Childhood: The Art and Craft of Writing for Children (1990) — Contributor — 98 copies, 1 review
Open Your Eyes: Extraordinary Experiences in Faraway Places (2003) — Contributor — 46 copies, 2 reviews
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 5, No. 7, March 1978 (1978) — Contributor — 6 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Discussions

Kids’ chapter book set in China in Name that Book (October 2018)
Children's chapter book about kid on the Yangtze in Name that Book (February 2013)

Reviews

319 reviews
I'm not saying everyone should learn about the writing of the United States Constitution through this book. However, being the frustrated student in American history that I was as a kid (I could never memorize names, places, or dates), I found this a terrific book. I think it is especially relevant to the present because I see so many challenges to the Constitution that I feel it is important to learn as much about it as I can.

I didn't seek this book out. It found me! It came as a donation show more to my Little Free Library. As I was about to release it to children in my neighborhood, I was interested enough in the book title and the amusing cover art of patriots in their black and white garb (and some with wigs) that I thought I'd browse through its pages. That didn't happen. Instead, I sat down to read the whole book. I'm glad I did. The story of the statesmen who came together to write the Constitution was an educational read, but also quite a lot of fun with excellent and often funny pictures by Tomie dePaola (whose artwork I knew from the days when my own kids were small) and tidbits of interesting information to complement the main thrust of the story.

This book not only provided me the incentive to read the Constitution, it also provided a full copy of the Constitution itself for me to read. I read it out loud so that I could understand it more fully. I think this may have been the first time that I actually ever read the entire U.S. Constitution, and I am seventy years old now. It was about time! Thank you, Jean Fritz and Tomie dePaola.
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Distinctive Jean Fritz narrative. Fun and informative. Tomie de Paola illustrated a lot of her books and was a good choice with this and others.

There are end notes and the whole text of the Constitution at the back of this 64 page children's book. Fascinating that the convention took so long to write so little.

As ever, Fritz regales us with some fascinating details. Some delegates checked out books from the Philadelphia library and did not return them at all, much less on time. In the middle show more of the convention, Washington got a chance to go fishing; the illustration of his brief vacation is in lighter, happier colors. At the beginning of the book which is the end of the war he looks terrible; dressed in black, bags and shadows under his eyes, grim. show less
Jean Fritz was born in China and lived there until 1927, when she was twelve. Young Jean had spent her entire life in China, but her parents' memories of home and letters from relatives in Pennsylvania made her feel that she was American--and homesick for a place she'd never seen!

Family photographs and illustrations by Margot Tomes show us the real people behind Jean's vivid and unforgettable stories--memories of picnics on the Great Wall, pranks, holidays in the foreign compound, rebellious show more moments at her British school. close ties to Chinese friends, and how it felt to be called a "foreign devil" and spat upon in the streets of a turbulent China on the eve of revolution. When her family embarks upon its long journey home, Jean is thrilled, but she wonders: When she arrives in America at last, will she fit in after growing up on "the wrong side of the world?" show less
Prolific children's author Jean Fritz, who has explored the lives of many historical figures in her titles - What's The Big Idea, Ben Franklin?, Can't You Make Them Behave, King George?, You Want Women to Vote, Lizzie Stanton? - here turns her attention to the little-known tale of the horse that Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci created for the duke of Milan. That is to say, the horse he meant to create for the duke, but which (despite a clay model being made) was never cast, and which show more haunted him until his death. Turning from the sad day in 1519, Fritz moves on the 1970s, when American Charlie Dent, having stumbled upon the story, sets out to create Leonardo's horse at last, as a gift from the people of America to the people of Italy.

An engaging tale - and one with which I was completely unfamiliar! - Leonardo's Horse is part biography and part human interest story, offering young readers an introduction to one of the most important figures of the Italian Renaissance, while also highlighting, through the story of Dent's (and then sculptor Nina Akamu's) quest to finish da Vinci's project, the impact that his work still has, these many centuries later. That idea - that contemporary people still feel passionately enough about da Vinci's legacy that they will go to great lengths to honor it - is the best thing about this book, although illustrator Hudson Talbott's accompanying artwork is also very appealing. All in all, an appealing book, one I would recommend to young artists and dreamers, and to any young reader interested in Leonardo da Vinci.
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Statistics

Works
66
Also by
13
Members
41,924
Popularity
#413
Rating
3.9
Reviews
294
ISBNs
527
Languages
6
Favorited
13

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