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Reviews for Tim Mcgraw

 Tim Mcgraw magazine reviews

The average rating for Tim Mcgraw based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2011-11-04 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 5 stars Jamie Bear
This book outlines the life of George Washington Carver. George grew up as a slave, but left home when he was young because he wanted to go to school. He loved learning. George eventually because a professor at a college where he taught classes about science and crops. He was one of the first scientists to realize how important crop rotation is. George Washington Carver is called the peanut scientist because he was the first person to use peanuts as food. He shared this idea with business men who agree to buy these peanuts from farmers. I really enjoyed reading this book. It is fairly short, but is full of information. It is broken up into chapters, which is very nice. Each chapter tells about a different time in Carver's life. At the back there is a glossary, timeline, and section that gives you more books about Carver. This would be a great book to use in your elementary classroom. Students can easily see what it would be like to read a biography.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-08-09 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 3 stars Shane Brule
Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn are among the best-known and most-loved characters in American fiction. As everyone remembers, Tom and Huck camped out on an island, got lost in a cave, and visited an old graveyard at midnight; they even attended their own funeral! The adventures of these two mischievous boys were based upon the author's real boyhood experiences along the Mississippi River. Thus, most people are at least somewhat familiar with the career and work of Mark Twain. But did you know that Twain's real name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens? In this fascinating biography, writer Sterling North, whose Rascal was a Newbery Honor book, traces Mark Twain's life from 1835, when his birth was heralded by Halley's Comet, to 1910, when the comet returned upon his death by author. As in his other biography recently republished by Puffin, Young Thomas Edison, North focuses most of his attention in the book on Twain's younger years, covering his later life briefly in the last couple of chapters. There are a few references to drinking whiskey and smoking a pipe, but it would be hard to discuss Mark Twain without at least mentioning these habits of his. Otherwise, this well-written account of Twain's famous life, which is written on a level for older children, is sure to keep their attention while teaching them some interesting history.


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