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When Birds Could Talk & Bats Could Sing
by
Virginia Hamilton
The wonderful stories in this book are
based on African American folktales told in the South during the
Plantation Era. In the 1880s, Martha Young, a journalist,
collected these stories and created many of her own, publishing
them in newspapers and then in several books of folktales. Like
the popular Bruh/Brer Rabbit stories, these tales are among the
most lively and entertaining in all of American folklore. Born out
of terrible hardship, they stand as a testament to the indomitable
human spirit. |
Way far back, when birds could talk and
bats could sing, feathered folks just naturally fussed and
squabbled among themselves. They were full of pride and
foolishness, same as human folks are now—and they were just as
full of fun and cleverness.
Come along as Newbery Medalist Virginia Hamilton
and National Book Award winner Barry Moser take a leisurely stroll
back in time to the fields, ponds, and moonlit nights of a
long-ago place where shade trees grow tall, and every
storyteller's magic begins by the fence corner. |
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Now Available In Paperback |
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A School Library Journal
Best Book of the Year
A Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year
An American Bookseller Pick of the Lists
A 1996 Capital Choice
An ALA Notable Book
Reading Level 3 Ages 6-9
Illustrated by Barry Moser
First Scholastic Paperback
Printing,
January 1999
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The Blue Sky Press
An Imprint of Scholastic, Inc.
Illustration © 1996 by Barry
Moser (95kb)
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