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Title: Circle Unbroken
ISBN: 0312376030
Author:
Margot Theis Raven
Publicate Date: 2007-12-26 Publish: 2007-12-26
List Price: $6.99
Average Customer Rating: 5.0
Format: Paperback
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Amazon Lowest New Price: $3.27
Amazon Lowest Used Price: $3.00
Amazon Merchant Price: $6.99
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| Customer Review: |
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1: Beautiful book
This is a great way for young and old to lean about sweet grass basket making! Perfect for late elementary school students.
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2: beautiful book
This book was very nice: lovely pictures, gentle storyline that was also informative. I enjoyed it very much.
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3: DR. Beck's Class
The book's illustrations were very interesting and creative. The story line was an accurate dipiction of slavery and the history behind it. It connected strong family ties from generation to generation with the beautiful basket weaves and family customs. Those who are associated with the geography of the book can make a strong personal connection to the atmosphere of the book. For teaching purposes, it relates the importance of family history and bonds throught the generations. It also shows how far we've developed as a society. It would be part of our text set for slavery in our classroom.
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4: The best children's book on Charleston
If I were making a very short list of books to remember Charleston by, this would be on it. The language is lyrical and wonderful to read aloud. The illustrations are gorgeous. Both Raven and Lewis do a superb job of sharing the meaning of family ties across generations, as well as sharing the Gullah culture. I'm a newcomer to the Low Country, and I don't have any African heritage, but still, something in this story really resonated with me. Highly recommended!
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5: A moving history of a dying art
We love the South Carolina Low Country, and are proud to own a number of sweetgrass baskets, most made by the same lady. This book was a wonderful find to share with my daughter, who is almost 4. The pictures are lovely, and the history is honest without being too brutal for younger listeners. Older readers will certainly get the depth of the slave history, while it serves as a good introduction for the younger. I found it to be a poetic and lyrical read, and a good explanation of how the art of Low Country coil basket weaving (also known as Charleston sweetgrass basket weaving) has been passed down.
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