Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (2024)

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  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (1)Jovita Wore Pants: the Story of a Mexican Freedom Fighter by Aida Salazar and Molly Mendoza

    Jovita dreamed of wearing pants! She hated the big skirts Abuela made her wear. She wanted to scale the tallest mesquite tree on her rancho, ride her horse, and feel the wind curl her face into a smile When her father and brothers joined the Cristero War to fight for religious freedom, Jovita wanted to go, too. Forbidden, she defied her father's rules - and society's - and found a clever way to become a trailblazing revolutionary, wearing pants!

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (2)There Was a Party for Langston by Jason Reynolds, Jerome Pumphrey, and Jarrett Pumphrey

    Back in the day, there was a heckuva party, a jam, for a word-making man. The King of Letters. Langston Hughes. His ABCs became drums, bumping jumping thumping like a heart the size of the whole country. They sent some people yelling and others, his word-children, to write their own glory. Maya Angelou, Amiri Baraka, and more came be-bopping to recite poems at their hero's feet at that heckuva party at the Schomberg Library, dancing boom da boom, stepping and stomping, all in praise and love for Langston, world-mending word man. Oh, yeah, there was hoopla in Harlem, for its Renaissance man. A party for Langston.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (3)The Indestructible Tom Crean by Jennifer Thermes

    At the turn of the twentieth century, Antarctica is the last unexplored continent. The ice is unforgiving. It can break the human spirit. It takes many men willing to face hardship, danger, and years away from home to journey to this uncharted end of the earth. This is the story of one. His name is Tom Crean.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (4)Rooting for Plants by Janice N. Harrington and Theodore Taylor III

    As a botanist and teacher, Charles traveled the United States, searching for new species of plants and fungi. After discovering the source of the disease killing peach and apricot trees, Charles was offered a job at Howard University, the famed historically Black college where he taught the next generation of Black scientists--men and women--to love plants and fungi as much as he did.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (5)On the Tip of a Wave: How Ai Weiwei's Art Is Changing the Tide by Joanna Ho and Catia Chien

    As conditions for refugees worsened, Ai Weiwei was inspired by the discarded life jackets on the shores of Lesbos to create a bold installation that would grab the attention of the world.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (6)Rock, Rosetta, Rock! Roll, Rosetta, Roll! by Tonya Bolden and R. Gregory Christie

    An inspiring true story about the life, career, and impact of 20th-century blues and gospel singer Sister Rosetta Tharpe, who was a trailblazer for rock-and-roll.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (7)Rumi: Poet of Joy and Love by Rashin Kheiriyeh

    Even the greatest poet was once a child. And so it was with Rumi. When he was young he was enchanted by birds and books. He later became a scholar, but it was the loss of his best friend, Shams, that inspired Rumi to his most important realization: Love is in us and everywhere. The Persian mystic and poet Rumi is one of the best known and most widely read poets in the world.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (8)Song after Song by Julie Hedlund and Ilaria Urbinati

    This picture book biography explores the early life of film star, theater performer, singer, and published author of children's books Julie Andrews, and how she found her voice and her love of music.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (9)Ellen Takes Flight by Doreen Rappaport and Oliver Dominguez

    Young Ellen loved to learn. Encouraged by her mother, she graduated at the top of her high school and college classes, and studied electrical engineering in graduate school. An accomplished engineer by age 30, with three patents to her name, she kept learning and trying new things. When NASA began accepting women and people of color to the astronaut program, Ellen found herself drawn to this exciting and demanding career. On her first mission, she was the only woman aboard the shuttle Discovery and the first Latina to reach outer space. After four space flights, she became the first Latina director of the Johnson Space Center and has received numerous distinctions and awards.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (10)Autumn Peltier, Water Warrior by Carole Lindstrom and Bridget George

    It was a soft voice, at first. Like a ripple. But with practice it grew louder. Indigenous women have long cared for the land and water, which in turn sustains all life on Earth--honoring their ancestors and providing for generations to come. Yet there was a time when their voices and teachings were nearly drowned out, leaving entire communities and environments in danger and without clean water. But then came Anishinaabe elder Grandma Josephine and her great-niece, Autumn Peltier.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (11)We Dream a World: Carrying the Light from My Grandparents Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King by Yolanda Renee King and Nicole Tadgell

    The granddaughter of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King delivers a stirring tribute to her grandparents that speaks to children everywhere about her hopes for a new future.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (12)Holding Her Own: the Exceptional Life of Jackie Ormes by Traci N. Todd and Shannon Wright

    Jackie Ormes made history. She was the first Black woman cartoonist to be nationally syndicated in the United States. She was also a journalist, fashionista, philanthropist, and activist, and she used her incredible talent and artistry to bring joy and hope to people everywhere. But in post-World War II America, Black people were still being denied their civil rights, and Jackie found herself in a dilemma: How could her art stay true to her signature "Jackie joy" while remaining honest about the inequalities Black people had been fighting?

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (13)Celia Planted a Garden by Phyllis Root, Gary D. Schmidt, and Melissa Sweet

    Celia Thaxter grew up on a desolate island off the coast of Maine, where her father worked as lighthouse keeper. Amid the white and gray of the sea, the rocks, and even the birds, young Celia found color where she could: green mosses and purple starfish and pink morning glories by the shore. And she planted her first garden, tucking bright marigolds between rocky ledges. When she was twelve, Celia's family moved to nearby Appledore Island, where her father built a large hotel, and Celia planted a bigger, ever-growing garden with nearly sixty types of flowers, from asters to wisteria. Guests flocked to the hotel from around the world, among them such writers as Longfellow, Whittier, and Hawthorne. Celia had been writing poems about the island, her garden, and the sea, and they would be printed in magazines and books, making her a foremother of writing about nature.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (14)Game of Freedom by Duncan Tonatiuh

    Although it is debated when and where capoeira--an art form that blends martial arts, dance, acrobatics, music, and spirituality--originated exactly, one thing is certain: in the early 20th century, Brazil was the only country in the world where capoeira was played, and it was mainly practiced by people of African descent. In 1890, two years after Brazil officially abolished slavery, the game was outlawed. Wealthy, lighter-skinned society feared and looked down on capoeira, seeing it as a game for malandros--what people in power called the poor Black communities they disdained. But in the early 1920s in the city of Salvador, a man called Bimba advocated for capoeira, and those who practiced it, demanding they be treated with dignity and respect.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (15)The Fire of Stars by Kirsten W. Larson and Katherine Roy

    Astronomer and astrophysicist Cecilia Payne was the first person to discover what burns at the heart of stars. But she didn't start out as the groundbreaking scientist she would eventually become. She started out as a girl full of curiosity, hoping one day to unlock the mysteries of the universe.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (16)Chef Edna by Melvina Noel and Cozbi A. Cabrera

    Edna loved to cook. Growing up on a farm in Freetown, Virginia, she learned the value of fresh, local, seasonal food from her Mama Daisy; how to measure ingredients for biscuits using coins; and to listen closely to her cakes to know when they were done. Edna carried these traditions with her all the way to New York, where she became a celebrated chef, who could infuse traditional French food into her signature Southern style. The author of several cookbooks and the recipient of numerous awards, Chef Edna introduced the world to the flavors of her home.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (17)Good Books for Bad Children by Beth Kephart and Chloe Bristol

    In this lively, lyrical picture book biography, meet the groundbreaking, outspoken, legendary editor of the best-loved books for children, and see how she inspired Maurice Sendak, Margaret Wise Brown, and others to create Where the Wild Things Are, Good Night Moon, and many more classics.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (18)Christo and Jeanne-Claude Wrap the World: the Story of Two Groundbreaking Environmental Artists by G. Neri and Elizabeth Haidle

    Their projects made people smile or made them mad. They made people see again. When they first met, Christo was a poor refugee, and Jeanne-Claude knew nothing about art, but they were both rule-breakers and kindred spirits. Christo's innovative creations--everyday objects wrapped to make people reconsider them--sparked Jeanne-Claude's imagination. Thus began their lifelong partnership as husband and wife, and as artistic collaborators whose once-in-a-lifetime public installations captivated viewers and asked: What is art? Who does it belong to? And how can it help us reimagine the world around us?

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (19)A Grand Idea by Megan Hoyt and Dave Szalay

    There was once a place in New York City that had a tennis club, movie theater, and art gallery--all in the same building! It also had a secret passageway, a huge library, and even a ski slope. This astounding building is Grand Central Terminal, and it was the work of one brilliant man: William J. Wilgus. When William, an experienced engineer, wanted to create a new electric-powered train system, he knew he needed to house this special fleet somewhere exceptional. His grand idea of a solution An underground multilevel train station that would become an iconic New York landmark, and one that is still an integral part of the city over a century later.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (20)Coretta's Journey by Alice Faye Duncan and R. Gregory Christie

    This book introduces readers to the woman behind the veil--a girl full of spunk and pluck, bravery and grit. Much more than just a wife, Coretta Scott King was Martin's partner in the fight for justice. It wasn't always easy. From an early age, she stood strong against white violence toward her family in the South, and against discrimination as a music student in the North. Coretta found her voice as a classical singer, but she struggled mightily to speak out as an activist in the face of men who thought she should be seen and not heard. But she never wavered. When Martin died, it was Coretta who carried on the struggle, and preserved his legacy so that his voice would be heard by future generations. This important story, told in poetry and prose, is a riveting introduction to an important and instrumental figure in the history of activism and civil rights.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (21)Loud and Proud by Lesa Cline-Ransome and Kaylani Juanita

    Shirley Chisholm was born in Brooklyn, New York, where her immigrant parents scraped and saved while Shirley learned all the love in the world couldn't pay the rent. Her father encouraged her ambition early on, telling her, "God gave you a brain, use it." Shirley worked hard and landed a full scholarship to Brooklyn College where she started advocating for people like her by starting a club for Black women. When her political science professor told her she should go into politics, Shirley paid attention.

  • Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (22)Everywhere Beauty Is Harlem by Gary Golio and E. B. Lewis

    Follow Roy through 1940s Harlem, as he takes out his camera, pops in a roll of film, and opens his eyes to the beauty all around him. There's a little boy drawing on the sidewalk with chalk. SNAP! A young man at the bus stop with a baby in his arms. SNAP! Kids playing in an open fire hydrant. SNAP! Looking at them all, Roy sees beauty everywhere in Harlem, and so do the people who look at his photos.

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Chapin LibGuides: Summer Reading 2024: Lower School: biography (2024)

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