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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Linda Booth Sweeney , Shawn FieldsPublisher: Tilbury House,U.S. Imprint: Tilbury House,U.S. Volume: 0 Dimensions: Width: 29.00cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 23.90cm Weight: 0.582kg ISBN: 9780884486435ISBN 10: 0884486435 Pages: 64 Publication Date: 03 September 2019 Recommended Age: From 8 to 12 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsTo whom would you recommend this book? Students who are interested in art will find this interesting. Anything you didn't like about it? No. It's beautifully illustrated and inspiring! Who should buy this book? Elementary and middle school libraries Where would you shelve it? nonfiction -- Laura Gardner, Dartmouth Middle School, Dartmouth, MAhttps://ysbookreviews.wordpress.com/2019/07/25/monument-maker-daniel-chester-french-and-the-lincoln-memorial-linda-booth-sweeney-illustrated-by-sha - Youth Services Book Review The environment that nurtured Daniel Chester French is given loving treatment by Sweeney and Fields. Sculptor French was a largely self-taught artist when he fashioned the embattled farmer that stands in Concord, Massachusetts, to commemorate the opening salvoes of the American Revolution. The work made French's name a household word, but he had plenty of experience with art before that. As Sweeney ably tells his story, French loved the outdoors, where he would sketch birds and the like. He tended the family farm, working his artistry into the plowing of the fields and repairs to the fences and outbuildings. Having grown up during the Civil War, he was influenced by the event and its idealistic aspects, especially those espoused by his Transcendentalist neighbors. As Sweeney traces French's way in the world, French goes on to create numerous statues of Civil War heroes, including the epic sculpture of Abraham Lincoln enshrined in his memorial. A timeline and author's note fill in various gaps in the text, and Fields' drawings are both powerful and graceful, just as French would have wanted, depicting a largely white cast but including some figures of color, including one of the two modern children who observe the story. They are modeled in color while French and his times are represented in vigorously crosshatched black and white. Both bracing and winning, a fine tribute to the sculptor and his world. (Picture book biography. 8-12) -- Kirkus Reviews The environment that nurtured Daniel Chester French is given loving treatment by Sweeney and Fields. Sculptor French was a largely self-taught artist when he fashioned the embattled farmer that stands in Concord, Massachusetts, to commemorate the opening salvoes of the American Revolution. The work made French's name a household word, but he had plenty of experience with art before that. As Sweeney ably tells his story, French loved the outdoors, where he would sketch birds and the like. He tended the family farm, working his artistry into the plowing of the fields and repairs to the fences and outbuildings. Having grown up during the Civil War, he was influenced by the event and its idealistic aspects, especially those espoused by his Transcendentalist neighbors. As Sweeney traces French's way in the world, French goes on to create numerous statues of Civil War heroes, including the epic sculpture of Abraham Lincoln enshrined in his memorial. A timeline and author's note fill in various gaps in the text, and Fields' drawings are both powerful and graceful, just as French would have wanted, depicting a largely white cast but including some figures of color, including one of the two modern children who observe the story. They are modeled in color while French and his times are represented in vigorously crosshatched black and white. Both bracing and winning, a fine tribute to the sculptor and his world. (Picture book biography. 8-12) -- Kirkus Reviews VERDICT A good, simple biography on a lesser-known creator of a very famous landmark. -- Elizabeth Nicolai, Anchorage Public Library, AK - School Library Journal To whom would you recommend this book? Students who are interested in art will find this interesting. Anything you didn't like about it? No. It's beautifully illustrated and inspiring! Who should buy this book? Elementary and middle school libraries Where would you shelve it? nonfiction -- Laura Gardner, Dartmouth Middle School, Dartmouth, MAhttps://ysbookreviews.wordpress.com/2019/07/25/monument-maker-daniel-chester-french-and-the-lincoln-memorial-linda-booth-sweeney-illustrated-by-sha - Youth Services Book Review The environment that nurtured Daniel Chester French is given loving treatment by Sweeney and Fields. Both bracing and winning, a fine tribute to the sculptor and his world. (Picture book biography. 8-12) -- Kirkus Reviews Starred Review The book's broad pages offer plenty of space for the lucid main text and lively illustrations, which work together well. The writing features vignettes such as a memorable account of a turnip-carving experience that revealed French's aptitude for sculpture as well as an informative account of the Lincoln Memorial project, its central statue, and its place in American life.Strong, graceful, and expressive, Fields' artwork captures the period setting while making even unnamed people look like individuals. Though color is used here and there, most of the illustrations are large,beautiful crosshatched pen-and-ink drawings in black and white. Appended information, notes, and photos conclude this engaging tribute to French and the Lincoln Memorial. -- Carolyn Phelan - Booklist VERDICT A good, simple biography on a lesser-known creator of a very famous landmark. -- Elizabeth Nicolai, Anchorage Public Library, AK - School Library Journal This new release book is the perfect history lesson and fascinating biography of Daniel Chester French, the sculptor who created the Lincoln Memorial. Daniel was just a farm boy until creation of the Lincoln Memorial, so perhaps your children know of the memorial but do they know Daniel Chester French? Dan taught himself to sculpt and launched his career with the famous Minuteman Statue in his hometown of Concord, Massachusetts. Now history, of a man assassinated, lives on with a rich history non-fiction story for children and how you never know when your gift will become something this amazing. After all, he was just sculpting for the love of sculpting and had no idea his masterpiece would become such a national tribute visited by so many to come. -- Erin Sluka - Parenting Healthy * To whom would you recommend this book? Students who are interested in art will find this interesting. * Anything you didn't like about it? No. It's beautifully illustrated and inspiring! * Who should buy this book? Elementary and middle school libraries * Where would you shelve it? nonfiction -- Laura Gardner, Dartmouth Middle School, Dartmouth, MAhttps://ysbookreviews.wordpress.com/2019/07/25/monument-maker-daniel-chester-french-and-the-lincoln-memorial-linda-booth-sweeney-illustrated-by-sha - Youth Services Book Review The environment that nurtured Daniel Chester French is given loving treatment by Sweeney and Fields. Both bracing and winning, a fine tribute to the sculptor and his world. (Picture book biography. 8-12) -- Kirkus Reviews Linda Booth Sweeney is a truly great author and Shawn Fields her uniquely talented partner in crime. Together, they've turned something as seemingly mundane as the act of creating the Lincoln Memorial into a true work of American history. It acknowledges the good, the bad, and the complicated. It makes no excuses, just hands over the facts. It avoids almost all fake dialogue and accounts for direct quotes in its backmatter. It's a delight to read and remember. This marvelous book is deserving of your love. See to it that your love is worthy of it. -- Elizabeth Bird - School Library Journal Blog, FUSE8Production Starred Review The book's broad pages offer plenty of space for the lucid main text and lively illustrations, which work together well. The writing features vignettes such as a memorable account of a turnip-carving experience that revealed French's aptitude for sculpture as well as an informative account of the Lincoln Memorial project, its central statue, and its place in American life.Strong, graceful, and expressive, Fields' artwork captures the period setting while making even unnamed people look like individuals. Though color is used here and there, most of the illustrations are large,beautiful crosshatched pen-and-ink drawings in black and white. Appended information, notes, and photos conclude this engaging tribute to French and the Lincoln Memorial. -- Carolyn Phelan - Booklist Author InformationLinda Booth Sweeney is an accomplished writer and an educator specializing in the exploration of living systems. Shawn Fields studied art at the School of Visual Arts, the Arts Student’s League, and the New York Academy of Art. His work has been exhibited at ArtBasel Miami, Forbes Gallery NYC, Arcadia NYC, and is collected worldwide. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |