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Book cover of The Wright Brothers
Labor & Business Figures - Biography, Inventions & Inventors, Inventors - Biography, Airplanes, Helicopters & Aircraft, Astronauts & Space Flight, Engineers - Biography, Aviation - Biography, Aviation History - General & Miscellaneous, Scientists, Natural

The Wright Brothers

by George E. Sullivan
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Overview

This new biography of Orville and Wilbur Wright uses the brothers' own journals and drawings to tell the exciting story of the first time a person flew in a heavier-than-air machine.

"Success four flights Thursday..."

On December 17, 1903, Orville and Wilbur Wright sent a telegram to their father. Its simple message told of the brothers' historic flights at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. For the very first time, a person flew in a heavier-than-air machine. In the years that followed, the Wright brothers' fame grew as they shared their new invention with the world.

Readers will discover the Wright brothers' lives by reading and seeing Orville and Wilbur's own letters, notebooks, and diaries. Kids will hear the brothers' story as if they were really there!

A biography of the brothers responsible for developing the first airplane, featuring excerpts from their journal entries, letters and drawings.

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Editorials

School Library Journal

Gr 3-6-Another serviceable biography makes its appearance in time for the Wright centennial. This solid, if somewhat stodgy offering, with its up-front definition of primary and secondary sources, is useful for young researchers. Because the Wrights left so much behind in the form of letters, notes, and interviews, Sullivan, like other biographers, had much material to draw from. He methodically tells the story of these famous brothers in simple, straightforward language. Although he is all business, nice descriptive touches sneak in like this reference to Kitty Hawk: "Winter was now close at hand. Each morning the water in the washbasin was frozen." The text is liberally sprinkled with appropriate photographs and on every five or six pages a slight margin of handwriting appears-a reminder of the reliance on primary sources. A listing of museums that provide booklets and packets of information is appended. A good choice for reports, this book's traditional style makes it a plus for readers who could be distracted by too much glitz.-Harriett Fargnoli, Great Neck Library, NY Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2003
Publisher
Scholastic Reference
Pages
128
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780439263207

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