Police & Law Enforcement, Careers & Employment - General & Miscellaneous, General & Miscellaneous - Law Enforcement
Log in to track your reading progress.
Overview
Illus. in full color. "The drama of natural disasters provides prime
material to entice young independent readers. In this volume, the account of
the eruption of Mount Vesuvius describes village life 2,000 years ago, the
eruption itself and its aftermath, and the excitement when the buried town is
rediscovered centuries later. A lively and factual glimpse of a devastating
moment in history, in an accessible, attractive package."βPublishers Weekly.
A young girl describes some of the things that her father and other police officers do each day on the job.
Editorials
School Library Journal
K-Gr 3 A flawed attempt at conveying a complex historical subject to inexperienced readers. Information about Pompeii is conveyed in one long narrative arbitrarily divided into three chapters. There is a brief description of what a volcano is and how it works, followed by a fictionalized account of what the people in Pompeii were doing on the day of the eruption and what happened to the inhabitants when Vesuvius blew up. The final chapter gives some information about the rediscovery of Pompeii and its excavation by archaeologists. In an attempt to simplify the ideas in the book, Kunhardt has oversimplified the prose. Sentences are choppyalmost joltingand reminiscent of a basal reader. Pronunciation guides are given in the text in a jarring manner: ``These pictures are called mosaics. Say: mo-ZAY-iks.'' The cartoonlike illustrations are colorful and attractive, but they are not clearly drawn or labeled. This book doesn't work as a picture book or as nonfiction. Libraries would do better to wait for better quality easy history books to come along. Ellen Loughran, Brooklyn Public Lib .Book Details
Published
October 1, 1995
Publisher
Scholastic
Pages
32
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780590254854