A historical novel based on the story of Phillis Wheatley - the first African American female poet. It presents an intriguing and moving story of a young girl kidnapped from her home in Senegal and sold, in 1761, as a slave to the wealthy Wheatley family of Boston.
Ann Rinaldi Libri
Ann Rinaldi crea narrativa storica per giovani adulti, portando il passato in vita con autenticità avvincente. Le sue opere, spesso ambientate in epoche cruciali della storia americana, offrono approfondite intuizioni sulle vite di coloro che hanno plasmato il passato. Rinaldi ha il dono di trasportare i lettori in tempi e luoghi diversi attraverso narrazioni coinvolgenti e personaggi vividi. La sua scrittura è una celebrazione della storia e dello spirito umano.




To escape an abusive father and an arranged marriage, fourteen-year-old Sarah, dressed as a boy, leaves her Michigan home to enlist in the Union Army, and becomes a soldier on the battlefields of Virginia as well as a Union spy working in the house of Confederate sympathizer Rose O'Neal Greenhow in Washington, D.C.
History as you have never heard it - cartoons and amusing text and illustrations give readers the lowdown on what life was like in ancient Greece and in England under Roman occupation.
Numbering All the Bones
- 186pagine
- 7 ore di lettura
It is 1864. The Civil War is coming to an end, and Southern slaves are slowly gaining their freedom. But for 13-year-old Eulinda, a house slave on a plantation in Kentucky, it is the most difficult time of her life. Her yonger brother, falsely accused of stealing, has been sold. Then her older brother Neddy runs away. And Eulinda is left alone in a household headed by a cruel mistress--and a master who will not acknowledge that Eulinda is his daughter. With her trademark attention to detail and historical accuracy, Ann Rinaldi weaves a gripping tale of a girl caught between two worlds.