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First of all, I should be honest and say that Dr. Carver is one
of my heroes, and I am completely biased about any book on him,
his life, and his work. That said, this book about Dr. George Washington
Carver is positively delightful! The story is about a little girl
named Sally who, along with her classmates in rural Alabama, had
the privilege of spending a day being taught about plants and nature
by Dr. Carver. He shows them how to listen to the plants to understand
what they need to grow. The children spend the day drawing insects,
birds, flowers, worms, and stones using paints they mixed themselves
and learning the names of all of them. They plant a garden and
have a picnic lunch made out of plant recipes developed by Dr.
Carver.
Any homeschool parent looking for a living science book will be
completely satisfied with this one. Each page is filled with learning
through the eyes of the children in the story and their teacher,
Dr. Carver. Along with a short biography on the life of Dr. Carver
and some activities that would be easy to deduce from the story
(making paints from milk, making fertilizer, planting an edible
vegetable plant, creating unique recipes from peanuts or sweet
potatoes, etc) you would have a complete study that would solidify
the work and genius of Dr. Carver in the mind of a child forever.
As compelling as the story are the adorable watercolor illustrations
on each page, and the front and back inset pages are as educational
in themselves as the rest of the book! They are filled with watercolor
illustrations of dozens of nature objects and their common and
Latin names. This book would be an inspiration to a family wanting
to start nature journals or just wanting to jump-start an interest
in botany, entomology, or the life of George Washington Carver.
Product review by Kim Kargbo, The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine,
LLC, December 2010
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