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Snowshoe Thompson: (I Can Read Book Series: Level 3)

AUTHOR: Nancy Smiler Levinson
ISBN: 0064442063

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         Editorial Review

Snowshoe Thompson: (I Can Read Book Series: Level 3)
- Book Review,
by Nancy Smiler Levinson

From Publishers Weekly
Beginning readers are introduced to the history of skiing in America through this lucid, concisely written story. Danny misses Pa and writes a letter ("Are you still digging for gold in Nevada?") asking him to come home for Christmas. Hearing that there will be no mail because the deep snow has made it impossible to cross the mountains, Danny feels hopeless. John Thompson, a Scandinavian immigrant, steps forward and tells the boy, "There is a way." The next day John shows Danny how to make skis and shortly thereafter embarks on a 90-mile journey through the Sierra Nevadas. "You can count on me," he says. Sure enough, five days later, John returns with a letter for Danny from Pa. Cool, earthy tones spattered with white breathe life into Levinson's enlightening tale. A map and an informative author's note flesh out the book. Ages 4-8. Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
Kindergarten-Grade 3-- This fictionalized account of John Thompson's first winter trek across the Sierra Nevada in the mid-19th century will captivate many beginning readers. When mail delivery is halted because of heavy snows, Norwegian-born Thompson (one of American's skiing pioneers) volunteers to deliver a young California boy's letter to his father in Carson City, Nevada. The boy, Danny, helps him make a pair of skis--splitting and sanding the wood planks, boiling the wood, and shaping the tips. Sandin's watercolor illustrations add to the understanding and emotion of the easy-to-read text. The rugged appearance of the pioneers, the work involved in making the skis, and the developing friendship between Thompson and Danny are revealed through the artwork. The snowstorm, with its white and grays, dominates and blends the colors. Although most of the townfolk think Thompson is foolhardy to attempt a crossing, the boy's faith is unfailing. This tale is especially appealing set against the background of Danny's loneliness for his father. Don't miss this warm bit of historical fiction set in a cold forbidding climate. (Unfortunately, the CIP classifies it as nonfiction.) --Gale W. Sherman, Pocatello Public Library, IDCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews
Based on a historical character, a Norwegian who came to 1850's California, a story about some of the earliest skis in the US. According to the author, ``Snowshoe Thompson'' used his skis to carry mail over the Sierra Nevada when the mountains were deep in snow. In Levinson's fictional story, Thompson manufactures his own skis after his young friend Danny learns that the mail service has stopped until spring; Danny is distressed because he was counting on getting a letter to his pa in the Nevada gold fields. Thompson carries the letter, brings back a reply, and hopes to go back for Pa, too--in time for Christmas. Older readers may wonder whether Pa will master skiing in rough terrain in time to make the journey; otherwise, an interesting vignette from the past. Sandin's cheerful, generalized illustrations, crisply silhouetted against the white pages/snow, add appeal. (Easy reader. 5-9) -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Book Description
Danny wishes his dad would come home from Nevada for Christmas and writes him a letter to tell him so. When snow cuts off the mail until spring, only postman John Thompson can get through the Sierra Nevada Mountains to deliver his letter. "Based on a true story, this is lively historical fiction with a nice sense of character and adventure, [and] the illustrations are packed with feeling and action." —BL. Notable 1992 Children's Trade Books in Social Studies (NCSS/CBC)

Card catalog description
Having reluctantly left her Kansas home and friends when her family moves to New York State, ten-year-old Aggie becomes increasingly fascinated by her family's new hexagonal house and the mystery which seems to surround it.

About the Author
Nancy Smiler Levinson has written many popular books for young readers, including Magellan and the First Voyange Around the World and the I Can Read Books Clara and the Bookwagon, illustrated by Carolyn Croll, and Snowshoe Thompson, illustrated by Joan Sandin. She lives in Beverly Hills, California.


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         Book Review

Snowshoe Thompson: (I Can Read Book Series: Level 3)
- Book Reviews,
by Nancy Smiler Levinson

Snowshoe Thompson: (I Can Read Book Series: Level 3)

ANNOTATION

One winter John Thompson skis across the Sierra Nevada Mountains and creates a path upon which mail and people may travel, thus earning his nickname "Snowshoe Thompson."

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Danny wishes his dad would come home from Nevada for Christmas and writes him a letter to tell him so. When snow cuts off the mail until spring, only postman John Thompson can get through the Sierra Nevada Mountains to deliver his letter. "Based on a true story, this is lively historical fiction with a nice sense of character and adventure, [and] the illustrations are packed with feeling and action." —BL.

Notable 1992 Children's Trade Books in Social Studies (NCSS/CBC)

Author Biography: Nancy Smiler Levinson is the author of Clara and the Bookwagon, an I Can Read Book illustrated by Carolyn Croll. She lives in Beverly Hills, CA.

Joan Sandin has illustrated many books for children, including From Anna, by Jean Little. She is also the author-illustrator of two I Can Read books, The Long Way to a New Land and The Long Way Westward. She lives in Tucson, AZ.

FROM THE CRITICS

Children's Literature - Trina Heidt

Danny's father is away digging for gold, and Christmas is almost here. Danny writes to his father imploring him to come home in time for the holiday but finds out that because of the snow, travel through the Sierra Nevada Mountains has become treacherous, hence no mail can go though until spring. One man, John Thompson steps forward and exclaims that he can make it and will deliver the mail. No one believes the feisty Norwegian, no one except Danny. Thompson, with Danny's help, fashions a pair of skis like the ones everyone uses in his native Norway. He sets off to cross the mountains and delivers the mail despite the doubting residents of Placerville and returns to the delight and amazement of those who called him "foolhardy." An I Can Read Book.


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