MY AMERICAN SCIENTIST
LOG IN! REGISTER!
SEARCH
 
RSS
Logo
HOME > ON THE BOOKSHELF > Bookshelf Detail

NANOVIEW

One Tree at a Time

Anna Lena Phillips

From%20Planting%20the%20Trees%20of%20Kenya%3A%20The%20Story%20of%20Wangari%20Maathai%20by%20Claire%20A.%20Nivola.Click to Enlarge Image"The earth was naked. For me the mission was to try to cover it with green." These words begin a new picture book about the woman who wrote them, Nobel laureate, environmentalist and human rights activist Wangari Maathai. Wangari's Trees of Peace: A True Story from Africa (Harcourt, $17, ages 3 to 8) tells the story of Maathai's efforts to reforest Kenya and empower Kenyan women. Award-winning writer and illustrator Jeanette Winter's clear text and bold paintings (right) make it easy to imagine the story of Maathai and the women of the Green Belt Movement she started.

These women's efforts in the face of develop­ment insensitive to the land, and as part of a popu­lation in need of food, firewood and water, are also brought to life in Planting the Trees of Kenya: The Story of Wangari Maathai, by Claire A. Nivola (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $16.95, ages 5 to 10). There's plenty to discover in the intricate pen-and-watercolor illustrations (right); the text is more detailed and will engage older children. Nivola's book is especially good at showing the hard work of the movement—replanting when seedlings died, digging deep holes to find water for the trees.

Both Winter and Nivola convey some of Maathai's struggle, including time she spent in prison, without making it too scary. And the publishers have both seen fit to print these books on 100 percent recycled paper. Children will be inspired by the story of how one woman and one action—planting a tree—raised awareness, started a movement and changed the physical and social landscape of a nation. With their simple narratives and riveting artwork, these books suggest the question, If she could do it, why not me?—Anna Lena Phillips



» Post Comment

 

Feynman:
An Excerpt from a New Comic Biography

Read an excerpt from the new graphic-novel-style biography of Richard Feynman in an American Scientist slide show


Pizza Lunch Podcasts

About once a month at Sigma Xi headquarters, we liven up the lunch hour with an American Scientist Pizza Lunch talk. In these informal lectures, scientists describe new research to nonscientists. The series is light on jargon but heavy on solid science. Each Pizza Lunch offers an in-depth look at its subject, whether it's bedbugs or the smart grid. Click below to read about and download these talks -- and to subscribe!



Indexes

Year-end indexes in PDF format:

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010


EMAIL TO A FRIEND :

Of Possible Interest

Book Review: Sneaky Silk Moths

Book Review: Well-connected Brains

Book Review: Do I See What You See?

Subscribe to American Scientist

Sites of Interest

Duxbury Ventures Website Investments

Social Justice

Find Websites Worth

München Fair Hotels

ABC Fundraising

Promotional Products

Business Cards

Car Hire

Get a Gold Ira at Regal Assets.

Online Shopping