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Lives of Extraordinary Women: Rulers, Rebels (and What the Neighbors Thought)

Lives of Extraordinary Women: Rulers, Rebels (and What the Neighbors Thought)
By Kathleen Krull

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Product Description

Not all governments have been run by men. Lives of Extraordinary Women turns the spotlight on women who have wielded power, revealing their feats--and flaws--for all the world to see. Here you'll find twenty of the most influential women in history: queens, warriors, prime ministers, first ladies, revolutionary leaders. Some are revered. Others are notorious. What were they really like?
In this grand addition to their highly praised series, Kathleen Krull and Kathryn Hewitt celebrate some of the world's most noteworthy women, ranging from the famous to those whose stories have rarely been told.
Features twenty extraordinary women, including:
Cleopatra
Joan of Arc
Elizabeth I
Harriet Tubman
Eleanor Roosevelt
Eva Perón


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #118159 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-09-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 96 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Just in time for Women's History Month comes the Audio Bookshelf adaptation of Lives of Extraordinary Women: Rulers, Rebels (and What the Neighbors Thought). The latest book in the excellent Lives of... biography series by Kathleen Krull, illus. by Kathryn Hewitt, comes to colorful life via Melissa Hughes's sharp performance. From Cleopatra to Eleanor Roosevelt, concise profiles provide fun and fascinating facts about notable female role models from around the globe.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
Grade 4-8-As with other titles in this nicely thought-out series, Krull whets readers' appetites with brief biographies of some amazing individuals. Most of these women will be familiar to students, but a few obscure figures are introduced. The writing tends toward gossip in places. (Isabella I of Spain reportedly took only two baths in her lifetime.) Like gossip, each chapter is enticing. A full-page caricature of the subject opens each chapter. The stories are arranged chronologically, beginning with Cleopatra, who reportedly spoke eight languages, and concluding with Guatemalan leader Rigoberta Mench#, who fights for native Indian rights. "Ever After" sections reveal aftereffects of each person's contribution to history. The gaps left by the absence of Margaret Thatcher and Benazir Bhutto are filled by the more obscure likes of Nzingha, Gertrude Bell, and Aung San Suu Kyi. Don Nardo's Women Leaders of Nations (Lucent, 1998) aptly complements Extraordinary Women. The jacket art offers evidence of the fun inside-Queen Victoria looks not amusedly at Marie Antoinette toying with her riches. Catherine holds an "I AM GREAT" sign. Joan of Arc chats with Eleanor of Aquitaine. And Cleopatra walks like an Egyptian. A captivating browsers' delight and a jumping-off point for report writers.
Anne Chapman Callaghan, Racine Public Library, WI
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Gr. 5-8. Krull continues her Extraordinary Lives series, this time focusing on women in history from Cleopatra to modern-day powerhouses such as Burma's Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, and Rigoberta Menchu, the Guatemalan leader who drew the world's attention to Indian rights. It's much easier for Krull to maintain her usual sly wit when she's talking about Spain's Isabella I (who only bathed twice in her life) than about San Suu Kyi, who is a virtual prisoner in her home. Consequently, there's a slightly discordant tone to the text. It's Kathryn Hewitt's always intriguing, amusingly detailed, full-page caricatures that draw the compendium together. The range of subjects--from Joan of Arc and Nzingha, fierce leader of present-day Angola, to Golda Meir and Wilma Mankiller--is wide, but the two or so pages devoted to each individual contain only enough for short reports, and the information is sometimes vague (how, for instance, did Eleanor of Aquitaine manage to marry the king of the England after leaving the king of France only two months earlier?). Children who want to know more can look to the selected bibliography; there are no source notes. Ilene Cooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Customer Reviews

Author does what she criticizes2
Criticizing the treatment women usually get from authors, Krull writes, "Traditionally, historians have talked most often about what powerful women looked like." Unfortunately, she then proceeds to share with us that Cleopatra wore pastel robes of filmy silk, Isabella took only two baths in her life, Elizabeth was a flirt, Catherine the Great rubbed her face with an ice cube, Marie Antoinette was passionate about feathered headdresses... Each chapter, about one woman of significance in history, is broken into the main section that gives very little insight into the woman's character or why the author considers her significant; the meatiest information is in smaller type at the end of a chapter, whimsically titled "Ever After." The author does take care to present women from more cultures than most authors do. But overall, I was disappointed in this book.

Lives of Extraordinary Women: Rulers, Rebels1
"Well-behaved women rarely make history," a quote by Laural Thatcher Ulrich, American Historian, are the first words of this book. That may very well be, but I don't think we have to try so hard to show children just how shocking some of our famous women were! Lives of Extraordinary Women is a compilation of twenty short biographies of important women in the world's history: such well-known names as Joan of Arc, Marie Antoinette, and Harriet Tubman, as well as lesser-known individuals such as Nzingha, Gertrude Bell, and Aung San Suu Kyi. Although it looks like biographies, there is really little intellectual value to the book. It is merely a hodgepodge of trivia and unrelated gossip. The first chapter is called "Cleopatra: Life at the Library." Now, you would think that this would explore her love of reading and dertmination to build a world-famous library in Alexandria. Instead, it is all about her numerous love-affairs, particularly the one with herself, experimenting with hairstyles, make-up, and perfume. The author tells us, "...she coped with the required marriage to her ten year-old brother. He turned up drowned, and another one was poisoned." There is a chapter on Nzingha - a West African queen. Some important aspects of her life we just must know are: "Rumor had her also murdering her nephew - and eating his heart," and "...she kept fifty young men as bodyguards...she made her favorites wear women's clothes." It gets even better! We simply can't live without knowing that Catherine the Great's husband, Peter, "heaped abuse on her, tortured their dogs...and brought his toy soldiers to bed, forcing her to participate in mock military maneuvers." If the purpose of this book is to sensationalize the names of women in history, then it has met it's mark. I'm not against books that attempt to amuse kids with humorous or unbelievable-but-true anecdotes. I think the problem with this, however, is that today's educators are grabbing quickly for resources about women. After ceturies of learning about history through the eyes of men, society is realizing that a big piece has been missing. As educators, we are making a conscious effort to locate and use resources about women in history. Because of this book's striking cover, catchy title, boldly illustrated caricatures, and interesting table of contents, we might be fooled into thinking this is a good book for our classrooms. A careful reading of the pages will tell you a different story. In the introduction, the author says, "Here are twenty women who wielded significant political power. Each of these extraordinary women triumphed over attitudes and conditions that couldn't have been more adverse." These statements make us think that they are women to look up to. And, although she also says, "Not all of these women are role models," in the next sentence she says, "Their stories are offered here to inspire awe at the power of women throughout history - and ever after." If these behaviors are the best we have to inspire awe at the power of women, our role in history is doomed for another twenty centuries! A fun book of trivia, perhaps. A book to enlighten and impart knowledge, I guess not.

Fun caricatures and other colorful illustrations.4
Not just for girls, this oversize readable volume presents an overview of the biographies of 20 remarkable women throughout history, from Cleopatra to women still living today. Listed for "ages 8-12," it's up to you whether you want your 8-year-old reading the one or two questionable -- and reallay unnecessary -- passages I found referring to their more intimate proclivities. But this is an important book for kids who need to find heroes (and who doesn't) and go on to read more about them. The reading list in the back is disappointingly short -- but hey! Thank goodness for amazon.com and its incredible "search" program! I must admit, there were a couple of women here I knew nothing or next to nothing about. So I was pleasantly surprised to learn about them. Therefore, it's not just for kids.