Patricia’s Vision – Perfect Picture Book Friday

Title: Patricia’s Vision: The Doctor Who Saved Sight

Author: Michelle Lord

Illustrator: Alleanna Harris

 Publisher: Sterling Children’s Books, January 2020

Ages: 6-9

Themes: mighty girls, female doctors, ophthalmology, invention, laser eye surgery, following a dream, equality, African American Women, Black History Month, patents, STEM, Harlem, perseverance

Genre: biography

Opening:

Harlem, New York City, late 1940s.
Young Patricia Bath was curious. She peered at a man begging
for coins. Folks in her neighborhood strolled past him, but
Patricia watched and wondered . . .


Why are his eyes cloudy?
How did it happen?
She shut her eyes and pondered,
What’s it like to live in the dark?

Synopsis:

The inspiring story of Dr. Patricia Bath, a groundbreaking ophthalmologist who pioneered laser surgery—and gave her patients the gift of sight. 

Born in the 1940s, Patricia Bath dreamed of being an ophthalmologist at a time when becoming a doctor wasn’t a career option for most women—especially African-American women. This empowering biography follows Dr. Bath in her quest to save and restore sight to the blind, and her decision to “choose miracles” when everyone else had given up hope. Along the way, she cofounded the American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness, invented a specialized laser for removing cataracts, and became the first African-American woman doctor to receive a medical patent. 

Why I like this book:

I have just checked, and I am sorry to report that Dr. Bath died in San Fransciso on May 30, 2019 after a brief illness. She was 76 years old. But I am delighted to see her courage, ingenuity and contribution to science honored in this lovely biography. We need so many more biographies of African American women and men that do not focus on slavery/persecution (though of course, we need these too.)

Lord reveals that this Harlem born woman, from a family of modest means, achieved a ton of feats and firsts in her extraordinary life. She was the first African American to complete a residency in ophthalmology; the first woman to chair an ophthalmology residency program in the United States; and the first African American female doctor to secure a medical patent. She also co-founded the American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness. And in 2001, she was inducted into the International Women in Medicine Hall of Fame.

With key life moments, Lord shows how Dr. Bath persevered with her compassionate vision in a not-so-welcoming man’s world, to serve poorer segments of society. She was a pioneer paving the way for black female ophthalmologists, and this pioneer spirit comes across strongly through the scattered direct quotes that Lord includes. Aimed at a slightly older demographic than some picture books, I appreciate the scientific detail in this biography as well as the focus on attitudes as much as accomplishments. No dumbing down here. And for many readers, this may be their first exposure to the concept of patents.

The illustrations, including a couple of more scientific ones of the eye, perfectly support the text without ever detracting from the words.

The narration felt very personal and so I was not surprised to read at the end that the author had conducted a series of telephone interviews with Dr. Bath. This is a great addition to Black History Month books in your school library and has several STEM applications too.

Activities/resources:

The book includes a timeline, author’s note, selected works cited, and additional reading about other women in STEM.

The American Optometric Association have a good page on How Your Eyes Work.

Each week a group of bloggers reviews picture books we feel would make great educational reads. To help teachers, caregivers and parents, we have included resources and/or activities with each of our reviews. A complete list of the thousands of books we have reviewed can be found sorted alphabetically and by topics, here on Susanna Leonard Hill’s website.

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Big Breath – Perfect Picture Book Friday

Title: Big Breath, A Guided Meditation for Kids

Author: William Meyer

Illustrator: Brittany R. Jacobs

 Publisher: New World Library, Aug. 2019

Ages: 4-7

Genre: Nonfiction

Themes: meditation, relaxation, breathing

Opening:

Find a comfy spot,
Maybe on a squishy cushion, or a comfy blanket.

Synopsis:

Each page invites readers to notice the present moment without judging what is or changing it to something else.

Why I like this book:

I returned to meditating a couple of years back when I was going through a very stressful time in my life, and honestly, even as an adult, I could have used this gentle message to get me going again. I love the calming tone of the words. It feels natural, easy to follow, and inviting.

Does your breath sound like ocean waves? Like the wind before a storm or a breeze at the start of spring? Can you feel it all the way down to the tips of your toes?

By the time you open your eyes, you might just feel a little lighter, calmer, more relaxed.

This is a great book for teachers and caregivers for their children as we look for ways to bring calm and focus into a speedy world! This focus on mindfulness and meditation is really for all ages, for antsy as well as quiet kids. Brittany does an amazing job of enticing and soothing illustrations supporting a text that is obviously less active than many picture books. A winner.

Activities/resources:

Put this into praise with one child or a group. Join in yourself.

Each week a group of bloggers reviews picture books we feel would make great educational reads. To help teachers, caregivers and parents, we have included resources and/or activities with each of our reviews. A complete list of the thousands of books we have reviewed can be found sorted alphabetically and by topics, here on Susanna Leonard Hill’s website.

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Squanto’s Journey – Perfect Picture Book Friday (Thanksgiving)

Title: Squanto’s Journey, The Story of the First Thanksgiving

Author: Joseph Bruchac

Illustrator: Greg Shed

 Publisher: Silver Whistle, Harcourt Inc, 2000

Ages: 7-11

Genre: Nonfiction

Themes: Native American History, Native American Month, Thanksgiving, Squanto, Thanksgiving

Opening:

My story is both strange and true. I was born in the year the English call 1590. My family were leaders of the Patuxet people and I, too, was raised to lead. But in 1614 I was taken to Spain against my will. Now it is 1621 and I am again in my homeland. My name is Squanto. I would like to tell you my tale.

Synopsis:

In 1620 an English ship called the Mayflower landed on the shores inhabited by the Pokanoket people, and it was Squanto who welcomed the newcomers and taught them how to survive in the rugged land they called Plymouth. He showed them how to plant corn, beans, and squash, and how to hunt and fish. And when a good harvest was gathered in the fall, the two peoples feasted together in the spirit of peace and brotherhood.
Almost four hundred years later, the tradition continues. . . .

Why I like this book:

As Bruchac notes in his afterword to this excellent picture-book, this Thanksgiving story is seldom told from the Native American perspective, and is usually marred by gross historical and cultural inaccuracies. Squanto’s Journey is an excellent corrective for some of the misinformation currently available, telling of the life story of Tisquantum (Squanto), a member of the Patuxet nation, whose role in befriending the English settlers of Plymouth would prove so fateful.

Young readers will perhaps be surprised to learn that Squanto was kidnapped by an English captain, sold as a slave to the Spanish, and that, when he was finally able to return to his homeland having seen much of Spain and England and having learned both languages, discovered most of his people had been killed by diseases brought to the Americas by European settlers.

Despite this horrifying history, Squanto believed in the possibilities of peace and friendship, and when the settlers at Plymouth needed his help, he gave it freely. This moving story of a true pniese, or man of honor, who never allowed suffering to embitter him, is matter-of-fact and realistic, without being brutal. Accompanied by Greg Shed’s gorgeous gouache illustrations, Squanto’s Journey should be required reading for anyone who thinks that being thankful requires forgetting the truth..

Of course, this was not the first Thanksgiving, but the myth around these events proved part the inspiration in middle of the American Civil War, for President Abraham Lincoln, proclaimed a national Thanksgiving Day, to be celebrated on the 26th, the final Thursday of November 1863 to rally the Yankees. The only thing that I found myself wanting in this story was a little bit more emotion in the tone, but I am sure this was intentional on Bruchac’s part and is maybe indicative of Native American storytelling?

Activities/resources:

Recommended for older children above the ages of seven, as the narrative is substantial, dense, with much potentially novel vocabulary, not to mention that Squanto’s Journey will engender questions, discussions, debates and additional research (and Squanto’s Journey would also be a good and essential teaching resource for a unit on Thanksgiving or Native American history, yet another reason why I strongly do think a bibliography should have been included, as it would have very much increased the book’s teaching, learning and supplemental research value). 

I would pare this with The National Geographic nonfiction book, 1621, A New Look at Thanksgiving.

Each week a group of bloggers reviews picture books we feel would make great educational reads. To help teachers, caregivers and parents, we have included resources and/or activities with each of our reviews. A complete list of the thousands of books we have reviewed can be found sorted alphabetically and by topics, here on Susanna Leonard Hill’s website.

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