The Librarian of Basra by Jeanette Winter: Book Cover

    The Librarian of Basra: A True Story from Iraq by Jeanette Winter

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    (Hardcover)

    • Age Range: 4 to 8
    • Pub. Date: January 2005
    • 32pp
    • Sales Rank: 37,120
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      Reader Rating: (4 ratings)

      Detailed Rating: "Realism" See All

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      • Overview
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      • Customer Reviews

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: January 2005
      • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
      • Format: Hardcover, 32pp
      • Sales Rank: 37,120
      • Age Range: 4 to 8
      • Lexile: 640L 

      Synopsis

      A hopeful and inspiring true story about a librarian in Basra, Iraq.

      Publishers Weekly

      Relaying the same story told in Alia's Mission (reviewed below), Winter (September Roses) deftly pares down for a picture-book audience the events surrounding Alia Muhammad Baker's courageous book rescue mission in Basra, Iraq, in spring 2003 (see Children's Books, Dec. 13). She portrays the Basra library as a place where the community comes together not only to read books but to "discuss matters of the world and matters of the spirit." In a typically lyrical passage, the author notes, "Alia worries that the fires of war will destroy the books, which are more precious to her than mountains of gold." As spare yet penetrating as the narrative, Winter's boldly hued, acrylic and pen illustrations depict the frantic book salvaging effort against a bright orange and burnt sienna backdrop of bomb- and gunfire-lit skies and the subsequent, heartbreaking library fire. A clever cross-section image of Alia's house shows the library volumes (which, readers learn in a concluding note, amounted to an astounding 70 percent of the collection) piled on every available surface. Graphically and textually shifting tone from the real to the idyllic, subsequent pages reveal Baker in a serene, dove-filled setting, where she waits for the war to end and dreams of peace and a new library. Winter, ever aware of her audience, mentions Alia's stroke only in the endnote, keeping her story to specifics that youngest readers can appreciate. All ages. (Jan.) FYI: A portion of the proceeds from the book's sales will be donated to a fund administered by the ALA to help rebuild the collection of Basra's Central Library. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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      Biography

      JEANETTE WINTER has illustrated many books for children, including Day of the Dead by Tony Johnston and her own Calavera Abecedario: A Day of the Dead Alphabet Book, My Name Is Georgia, and Josefina. She lives in New York City.

      Customer Reviews

      A Great Storyby stephaniejo

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      October 13, 2009: This book was an amazing story about a true librarian who loved her books. It shows the lengths that she would go to save her books from the destruction of war. She felt that her books were very valuable and had meaning behind them. The books were in many languages and she had one book that was over seven hundred years old. She keeps all the books at her house and waits for the war to end. This story will open your eyes to the impact that the war is having on the people of Iraq. Here in America we do not see buldings being bombed and on fire because of the war.

      A book with a political agenda!!!by Anonymous

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      November 07, 2006: This book has a good base story, however do not be fooled. There is a depiction of a U.S. Army soldier going into a restaurant and asking the owner why he has a gun. The restaurant owner replies, 'to protect my business'. Then the Soldier just walks out. This depiction gives the idea that our troops are in Iraq, terrorizing the business owners, and that the Librarian fears for this as well. The Library that the librarian is in fear of losing to the destruction of war is lost to a fire, but it is not said how. With the previous pages pictures depicting U.S. planes dropping bombs though, the children make the connection that it was bombed by the U.S. Army. No matter what side you stand politically, this book plants the seeds of confusion in the children?s minds of our own U.S. soldiers. I am an elementary school teacher, and I literally had kids reading this book in our library, (because our Librarians recommend it to our elementary kids), and asking me why our soldiers are bombing Library's and hurting people?s homes that are not in the United States. That is the job this author wants to accomplish.


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