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Are you looking for literature to support classroom instruction about Tall Tales? Check out Our Editorsâ Choices for titles recommended by the Education World team. Then it's your turn to share books that you enjoy or use in your classroom in the Our Readersâ Voices section below. With your help, we will build the best list on the Internet of Best Books for teaching about Tall Tales. |
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by Mary Pope Osborne
This oversized volume presents nine all-American figures whose overblown exploits take them from coast to coast and through all manner of occupations and preoccupations. Osborne has chosen familiar fictitious characters -- Pecos Bill, Paul Bunyan, Febold Feboldson -- and actual people, such as Johnny Appleseed and Davy Crockett, and relates episodes that stress the individuals' human weaknesses as well as strengths. She has melded several legendary characters into a single heroine, Sally Ann Thunder Ann Whirlwind, who more than holds her own in such grand company. (School Library Journal)
by Sid Fleischman
When Josh McBroom learns that the 80 acres of Iowa farmland he's purchased are all stacked up on top of each other at the bottom of a muddy little pond, he thinks he's been bamboozled. But McBroom knows he's got the better of the bargain when the pond dries up to reveal an acre of soil so rich that seeds spring up into full-grown plants in no time and even nickels grow into quarters.
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by Peter Sis
One hundred years ago a young man named Jan Welzl left his home in Europe and headed for the Far North. He rode off in a horse-drawn cart, traded the cart for a sled pulled by reindeer, and was gone for 30 years. Like Robinson Crusoe, he turned adversity into adventure and the wilderness into a dream, where anything could happen and anyone could be a hero. Mixing fact with legend, Peter Sis paints the fascinating story of a little-known explorer and the native people who became his teachers and his friends.
by Steven Kellogg
Do you know how the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River were first formed? How about the Great Plains and the Grand Canyon? Some people think these wonders were established by the forces of nature, but those folks clearly haven't heard of Paul Bunyan. Paul and his pal, Babe the Blue Ox, were responsible for creating all those geographic features as they worked their way west with their unusual lumber crew. Paul's adventures begin when he is just a baby (who can lift a cow over his head) and continue as he grows into the biggest lumberjack in the world.
Add your voice to our list of books for teaching about Tall Tales.
The Education World Editorsâ Choices above represent just a handful of the fine books that might be used to support classroom instruction about Tall Tales. Now weâre waiting for you to add to our list. Simply send us your review of a favorite book in 100 words or fewer and we will add it to the Readersâ Choices below.
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