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A Sea of Sorrows: The Typhus Epidemic Diary of Johanna Leary

by Norah McClintock

Series: Dear Canada (1847)

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472545,039 (4.33)1
A young girl tells of the Irish people who were forced to watch their loved ones die of hunger when arriving in Canada.
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» See also 1 mention

Showing 2 of 2
  HelenKubiw | Nov 7, 2012 |
The Good Stuff

Intriguing heroine - well developed character for the time period
Another one where I cannot lie -- I was totally bawling my eyes at time
Really impressed with these series from Scholastic - they really do give kids a glimpse into the lives of everyday people during various periods of history. So much more relevant and interesting than just memorizing dates and facts about history
Perfect for class discussions on prejudice
Scholastic website for each of the titles in the series have bonus content including activities and teaching resources
Encourages kids to learn more
thoroughly well researched
Sensitively written
As mentioned in previous review - these books make history relevant to the intended audience as they are written in the words of kids their age and their thoughts and experiences which make the reader relate to
Extremely realistic

The Not So Good Stuff

A tad repetitive
May be a struggle for sensitive readers with the harsh reality of small children dying
Made me miss my wonderful Irish neighbor in Bolton even more

Favorite Quotes/Passages

"Just thinking about sizzling sausage makes my mouth water, even though I have never eaten it. Sizzling is such a fine word. I think anything that sizzles must taste delicious."

"I knew for myself that the sheds were filled with many decent people who had never needed any charity until they were forced to watch their loved ones dies of hunger."

"Da had always supposed that everything would be different across the ocean. But I am beginning to think that things are a misery for the least fortunate no matter where they may find themselves."

Who Should/Shouldn't Read

A must have for all middle school libraries
would be a good addition to classroom collections as well
fabulous for middle school history classes - like I also mentioned in previous review - history teachers please remember to stop focusing so much on dates and facts and deal more with what we can learn and how these events effected people - far more important
Good for reluctant readers too

4.25 Dewey's

I received this from Scholastic in exchange for an honest review ( )
  mountie9 | Sep 8, 2012 |
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A young girl tells of the Irish people who were forced to watch their loved ones die of hunger when arriving in Canada.

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