Pocahontas: Girl of Jamestown

by Kate Jassem

Other authorsAllan Eitzen
Paperback, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

B1595

Publication

Troll Communications (1998), Paperback, 48 pages

Description

A brief account of the life of the Indian princess who befriended Captain John Smith and the English settlers of Jamestown.

User reviews

LibraryThing member kprinc3
Pocahontas Girl of Jamestown is a biography that is presented like a story. Jassem cleverly combines elements of plot with Pocahontas’s life to tell a true, triumphant story of bravery. Having the biography read like a story presents all of the information in a way that does not overwhelm the
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reader. Often times a biography states so many facts that it can be tricky to find the main points of the subject’s life. This account of Pocahontas’s life was a wealth of information that will show how brave and revolutionary she was, but will still entertain the reader. I also really liked the ink illustrations included in the book. The pictures were accurate enough to what life would have been like on the Indian’s land and in Jamestown, but were not too graphic for children. When discussing and illustrating the violence between these two groups of people, there needed to be a line between historical accuracy and what was appropriate for a child. I think the illustrator did a great job of keeping a balance between the two. I really liked this book because it seemed to capture the essence of the time period and provide great details about who Pocahontas really was.
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Language

Physical description

48 p.; 9.1 inches

ISBN

0893751421 / 9780893751425

Barcode

5265
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