Honest-to-Goodness Truth by Patricia C. McKissack: Book Cover

    Honest-to-Goodness Truth by Patricia C. McKissack, Giselle Potter (Illustrator)

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    (Paperback - Reprint)

    • Age Range: 4 to 8
    • Pub. Date: December 2002
    • 40pp
    • Sales Rank: 42,051
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      • Overview
      • Editorial Reviews
      • Customer Reviews

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: December 2002
      • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
      • Format: Paperback, 40pp
      • Sales Rank: 42,051
      • Age Range: 4 to 8

      Synopsis

      When Libby gets in trouble for lying to her mother, she resolves to start telling only the truth. She begins by letting everyone know that her best friend, Ruthie Mae, has a hole in her sock. Then she tells the teacher that Willie hasn't done his homework. Now it seems like everyone's mad at her, and Libby can't figure out what she's done wrong. Children will sympathize with Libby as she struggles to figure out that while telling a lie is always wrong, there's a right and a wrong way to tell the truth. Giselle Potter's expressive illustrations perfectly capture this warm, insightful story by acclaimed author Patricia C. McKissack.

      Annotation

      After promising never to lie, Libby learns that it's not always necessary to blurt out the whole truth either.

      Publishers Weekly

      "McKissack thoroughly examines a common childhood problem-discerning when the truth helps and when it hurts-with homespun language and accessible situations," wrote PW. "The intimate settings so integral to Potter's folk-art style provide a fitting complement to the author's cozy community." Ages 4-8. (Jan.)

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      Biography

      Patricia C. McKissack is the author of many highly acclaimed books for children, including Goin' Someplace Special, a Coretta Scott King Award

      winner; The Honest-to-Goodness Truth; Let My People Go, written with her

      husband, Fredrick, and recipient of the NAACP Image Award; The Dark-Thirty, a Newbery Honor Book and Coretta Scott King Award winner; and Mirandy and Brother Wind, recipient of the Caldecott Medal and a Coretta Scott King Honor Book. She lives in St. Louis, Missouri.

      Giselle Potter is the author and illustrator of The Year I Didn't Go to School, which is based upon her travels around Italy with her family's theater troupe at age seven. She is also the illustrator of The Brave Little Seamstress and Kate and the Beanstalk, both by Mary Pope Osborne, The Honest-to-Goodness Truth by Patricia C. McKissack, and Gabriella's Song by Candace Fleming. Ms. Potter lives in Rosendale, New York.

      Customer Reviews

      Honest-to-Goodness Truthby Anonymous

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      July 15, 2006: If you want to teach children the difference between bare-faced truth and tact, this is the book for you. My students and I love this book.

      Honest-to-Goodness Truthby Anonymous

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      April 27, 2003: In the book The honest-to-goodness truth was a great book. Libby shows that lying is wrong, but also finds that telling the truth sometimes can really be hurtful. Libby learns a lesson by hurting others she cares about because she thought that telling the truth was the right thing to do. Libby's mom tells her 'sometimes the truth is hold at the wrong time or in the wrong way, or for the wrong reasons. And that can be hurtful.' Libby learned her lesson that the honest to goodness truth is never wrong. I really enjoyed this book and I learned a good lesson from Libby about lying and telling the truth.


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