I think this is a great book! Definitely a good read when you can‘t find a book.
I think this is a great book! Definitely a good read when you can‘t find a book.
September #BookSpinBingo
There are some really amazing stories in the books I read this month, with the tagged probably being my favorite new read of the month.
#ReadingStats #MonthlyStats
I‘m not much of a sports person, but this book was phenomenal. It discusses history of residential schools for Native Americans, relates the history of the development of American football, and clearly describes tense and exciting moments of football games that happened over 100 years ago. It is much more than simply a biography of Jim Thorpe, although it provides plenty of detail about his life.
#nonfiction #audiobook #YA
A biography of the Carlisle School for Indians and their innovative football team, including Jim Thorpe - the first world-famous athlete of color. Don't know about football's early history? OR don't know about the US Govt's cultural annihilation of Native Americans under the pretense of boarding schools? You'll learn something either way! Both are unqiuely American, and both shape modern American life, for better and for worse. #dw2020reads
So far Undefeated is a pretty good book, the start is a little rough and long but from what I‘ve read it‘s a pretty good book. Would definitely recommend to people who like football and even sports in general.
This book is about the first football players and who they were. It has a lot of descriptive gore parts in the book.
Steve Sheinkin is a master of YA nonfiction. As in Most Dangerous, he examines a small moment to draw larger conclusions about the U.S. In this case, Sheinkin's focus is a early 1900s football team that came both to revolutionize football and to communicate much about the place of Native Americans in modern America. Jim Thorpe, the star of the team, had been removed from his family as part of the greater cultural attempt (continued in comments)
I started this book on July 10th. The next day I found out we would be having a conversation on 7/12 with hospice care for my dad 😢 By 3:00 am July 14 my dad passed peacefully.
I‘m liking this #Caudill2019 title very much but I just can‘t seem to read more than a chapter at a time. So it‘s time to move on. I‘m going to try a title by one on my dad‘s favorite MG/YA authors.
#yawednesday This book is a great #ya #nonfiction for anyone interested in football or American history! Whether you know next to nothing about the subjects or consider yourself an expert, you‘ll learn something new here. Plus, it‘s compulsively readable— this is definitely novelistic in a lot of ways.
Great coverage of footballs beginnings. Very good book for middle grade readers who are fearful of nonfiction.
I'm enjoying this book much more than I anticipated, considering how very little I know or care about football. But Jim Thorpe is a fascinating person, I lived in Carlisle for a bit, and the Indian schools that sought to "civilize" students are too little discussed today. This is great YA nonfiction, which I read too little of.
Plus, is this not the most fall thing ever? Chili, cornbread, football, and a beer?
I wanted a more in-depth story of the suffering of thousands of Native Peoples that took place at Carlisle Indian School and the other schools like it. I wanted more of that history rather than Pop Warner and Eisenhower. But in the end, the final chapter the author touched on this and many issues that still exist today so I decided to give this the five stars that it deserves. (Continued below)
Overall:
++More about Carlisle football, & less about just Thorpe, than I'd expected; I dug it.
++EXCELLENT rec for anyone interested in football--the things the Indians pioneered are amazing.
++I've learned that many Education students I work with have made it to senior year completely ignorant of the residential schools; this is forthright.
--However, saving "but the school was horribly abusive" for bits at the beginning & end felt insufficient.
Nonfiction, doin' it's job! Appropriate context for teen & adult readers about stereotypes and unquestioning media consumption!
There are three boys whose faces got sucked into the margin of this book. ☹️ (You can see two half-faces; the arrow is pointing at the ear of the third boy, who is almost totally gone. Publishers: plan ahead!)
Amazing book. Absolutely great for sports fans or for those who love reading about overlooked figures in history. I find it amazing the now-standard football things that were invented by the Carlisle Indians. A must read for teens who like football or American history or both. It's obvious that Sheinkin made a real effort to get this one right culturally speaking. #readharder #weneeddiversebooks
Took today off and have spent it shopping and cleaning. Now to relax with Task 1: Read a book about sports. #ReadHarder #WeNeedDiverseBooks
And under the tree for me? A brand new Kindle Paperwhite from my loving husband!! 😍📚🎄👍❤