| Key Details | | Author: | Russell Freedman | | Language: | English | | Publisher: | Sandpiper | | Format: | Paperback | | ISBN-10: | 0547480350 | | ISBN-13: | 9780547480350 |
| Additional Details | | Edition Description: | Reprint |
| Size | | Length: | 118 pages | | Thickness: | 0.5 in | | Weight: | 16.8 oz |
Publisher's Note
As he did for frontier children in his enormously popular Children of the Wild West, Russell Freedman illuminates the lives of the American children affected by the economic and social changes of the Great Depression. Middle-class urban youth, migrant farm laborers, boxcar kids, children whose families found themselves struggling for survival . . . all Depression-era young people faced challenges like unemployed and demoralized parents, inadequate food and shelter, schools they couldn’t attend because they had to go to work, schools that simply closed their doors. Even so, life had its bright spots—like favorite games and radio shows—and many young people remained upbeat and optimistic about the future.
Drawing on memoirs, diaries, letters, and other firsthand accounts, and richly illustrated with classic archival photographs, this book by one of the most celebrated authors of nonfiction for children places the Great Depression in context and shows young readers its human face. Endnotes, selected bibliography, index.
Industry Reviews "Freedman is a master of the photo-essay, and this is one of his best. More wide-ranging than most histories of the era, this tells, in clear and simple prose, the story of dust storms, soup kitchens, Hoovervilles, kids at work, kids on trains, popular culture and the beginning of WWII." Kirkus Reviews (12/01/2005)
"Few authors are as well suited as Freedman to present a clear and understandable outline of this period. His prose is straightforward and easily comprehensible, making sense of even the complexities of the stock-market crash...A wonderful, informed, and sympathetic overview...." School Library Journal (12/01/2005)
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