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Hardcover The Century for Young People Book

ISBN: 0385327080

ISBN13: 9780385327084

The Century for Young People

Adapted from the #1 national bestseller especially for children 8-12! The twentieth century has been a time of tremendous change, the most eventful hundred years in human history. Join Peter Jennings... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Very Good Book

THE CENTURY for young people is a brillant book. With well taken pictures and interesting pages. I advise it for anyone. It told me many things I did not know about. Going form Panama Canal to the Prohibition. It shows the sad experiences of the Jewish people to the Great Depression. It is not all doom and gloom it shows landing on the moon to the fall of the Berlin Wall. Though it does show the Wars we had in the 20th century. In it there is paragraghs of people who ACTUALLY experienced it. Not many people were there when the Wright Brother made the first the airplane. It shows how diffrent our world is from the Great Depression to the death of Princess Diana. It is a very educational book. I advise it to adults too. Top notch. Hope you like it too.

Pictures tell a thousand words

Just as in the adult version of The Century there are many informative pictures that help students understand our history. We use the video series to introduce various decades in the 20th century. This book helps to reinforce the information presented. Students enjoy looking at the pictues and reading about them.

The Century-For Everyone

I own three timelines, and this is probably my favorite of the three. Unlike other reviewers, I don't find this book to be a chronicle of "gloom and doom" exclusively-anyone can see that events such as the invention of the car, the era of movie theaters, the 1969 Apollo flight, and the prosperity of the Fifties are covered as well in this book. The thing that I really appreciate about this book is the testimonies of people who really had a part in the events. I found it interesting to read an Indiana man's explanation of the appeal and seeming harmlessness of the Ku Klux Klan, and thought it enlightening to read a German girl's description how Hitler was allowed to "go as far" as he did in Germany. In between the numerous personal accounts of events are generous portions of factual writing. I think the authors did a great job of thoroughly describing important happenings without moving into too much overwhelming detail. This book really transcends its "ages 9-12" label-my whole family has enjoyed it and there is something new in it for everyone.

A trove of information & images kids won't find in textbooks

To relate a century's history and ideas cogently into 241 pages at a level that will involve kids is a tough task. To pull that off with photos and archival images AND first-person accounts is, to me, pretty astonishing. It would be easy to carp about what's left out, but I think this book is a square-on portrayal of the U. S. as it was. We read about the immigrant experience, the emerging technologies, the wars and injustices and what they taught us, the ascendance of movies and sports in our culture, style trends, space exploration, the dismantling of Communism. The authors take pains to show that along with the tragedies and triumphs came valuable lessons that have impact on our lives today. Events are intelligently organized and analyzed without sugar-coating. The photos and illustrations are extremely well-chosen (not the ones always trotted out in history books), and in some cases, breath-taking -- due no doubt to the authors' access to a wealth of news images. In this sense, I think the book benefits greatly from the joining of a major media figure with a respected journalist. My two boys, 9 and 12, find this endlessly fascinating, and we've had some spirited and sophisticated dinnertime conversations. This is valuable stuff and, I think, a brave book.That said, I've read some of the previous reviews and find them baffling. Kids enjoy reading about the conflicts and drama that have led to present-day life. My own awareness of the complicated horrors and triumphs of WWII as a child, through my father's stories and literature, opened my eyes to what society is capable at its best and worst, in a way my bland textbooks never did. I agree that some of the images and text might be strong for a 9-year-old. But as a parent, I've learned several lessons: (1) common sense must be exercised; it is always a good idea to pick up the book and look through it BEFORE buying it to determine appropriateness; (2) that the term "9-to-12" is a marketing category for booksellers -- to distinguish books from, say, picture books or YA material. To hold the book accountable for being appropriate for every child in this range is plain silly; and (3) if it ain't right, wait. A 9-year-old becomes 10, 11, 12 very fast.

Excellent.

This book is excellent. The hundreds of pictures in this book alone could vividly describe what the twentieth century was like in America. I especially enjoyed how the book contained descriptions of the events by the people that were affected by them. Jennings and Brewster also did a great job in describing the first and second World Wars.
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