
AWARDS
A School Library Journal
Best Book of the Year
A CHILD Magazine Best Book
of the Year
A San Francisco Chronicle
Best Book of the Year
ABA's Pick of the Lists
A Booklist Editors' Choice
A Bulletin Blue Ribbon Book
An ALA Notable Children's
Book
An NCTE Orbis Pictus Honor
Book
An Oppenheim Toy Portfolio
Platinum Award Winner
REVIEWS
From The New York Times
Book Review
"Captures the highlights
of Ederle's life in evocative images and telling details."-
From Child Magazine
"A story that reminds kids
that, with determination, anyone can be a champion." --
From The San Diego Union-Tribune
"Adler's story and Widener's
drawings are a triumph in themselves." --
From Publishers Weekly
The team behind The Babe
& I and Lou Gehrig: The Luckiest Man here abandons the baseball field
for the chilly, choppy waters of the English Channel, which Ederle swam
across in 1926.
The first woman to accomplish
this feat, Ederle also beat, by almost two hours, the existing men's record.
Widener's stylized acrylic
paintings again creatively evoke a bygone era, while Adler's direct yet
descriptive narrative establishes the historical context. He notes that
in 1906, the year of Ederle's birth,
women in most states could
not vote: "Many people felt that a woman's place was in the home," writes
Adler. "But Gertrude Ederle's place was in the water." Readers will warm
to the heroine,
a city kid who was taught
how to swim only after she, at age seven, fell into a pond and nearly drowned.
Text and art offer a compelling, in-depth account of the adult Ederle's
crossing of the
Channel, as she swam for
more than 14 hours from Cape Gris-Nez, France, to Kingsdown, England, despite
driving rain, strong winds, high waves, a powerful current--and her trainer's
directive to quit.
An exciting story, well
told; kids will dive right in. Ages 6-9. (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business
Information, Inc.-
From School Library Journal
Kindergarten-Grade 4-This
picture-book biography covers the life of Gertrude Ederle, highlighting
her world-record breaking, long-distance swims.
In 1926, women were thought
to be the weaker sex, but this indomitable young athlete broke the men's
record by two hours when she swam the English Channel.
Fascinating tidbits about
her 21-mile swim will entice readers: "She floated on her back and ate
chicken and drank beef broth.
" For her victory, she was
rewarded with a ticker-tape parade and a letter from President Coolidge
calling her "America's Best Girl."
More information about her
life is appended. In the acrylic paintings, characters with large bodies
and small heads, suggesting Depression-era art, are set on impressionistic
backgrounds.
The pictures of the swirling,
rough water add fluidity and motion, and the perspectives that show the
small figure of the swimmer in the vast sea capture the immensity of Ederle's
endeavor.
Attractive formatting and
large type make this story of achievement as effective and as inspiring
to read aloud as this team's Lou Gehrig: The Luckiest Man (1997) and The
Babe & I (1999, both Gulliver).
Jean Gaffney, Dayton and
Montgomery County Public Library, OH
Copyright 2000 Reed Business
Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
From Booklist
Adler and Widener, who previously
combined their talents in books about Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, turn to
the distaff side of athletics for their latest subject.
In simple, direct prose,
Adler introduces Gertrude Ederle, known as Trudy to her friends, and describes
her evolution as a swimmer.
After Trudy almost drowned
as a child, her father taught her to dog-paddle. As she grew older, she
found that swimming was her talent, and beginning at age 15,
she was winning competitions
and breaking records. In 1925 she decided to swim the English Channel.
A near miss made her even more determined to try a second time,
and in a text that is sure
and always interesting, Adler captures the drama of that exhausting, exhilarating
record-breaking swim. Widener's durable, strongly physical deep-hued
artwork displays the right
muscle for the biography. The two-page spread showing Ederle eating a chicken
leg while crossing the channel will make kids smile, and the picture
of her triumphant emergence
from the water captures both the effort and the energy that went into the
extraordinary swim.
An author's note is appended.
Ilene Cooper --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Kirkus Reviews
The author and illustrator
(The Babe & I, 1999, Lou Gehrig: The Luckiest Man, 1997) team up for
a third time in this engaging picture book biography of the first woman
to swim the English Channel.
Gertrude Ederle, born in
1906, learned to swim at age seven when, after falling into a pond and
nearly drowning, her father decided that teaching his daughter to swim
was essential.
It immediately became apparent
that Trudy had a great talent—she won her first big race at 15, swam from
lower Manhattan to Sandy Hook, New Jersey at 16 (breaking the men's record
along the way),
and won three medals at
the 1924 Paris Olympics. In 1925, Trudy made her first, albeit unsuccessful,
attempt to swim the English Channel and in 1926, on her second attempt,
she became the first woman
to successfully swim the
20-odd mile body of water. David Adler clearly places this biography in
its cultural context, reminding the reader that women and girls were expected
to stay at home in this era and
were excluded from many
activities. Women were deemed the weaker sex and to challenge this notion,
especially in the world of sport, took exceptional courage and unusual
determination.
he stylized illustrations
successfully evoke the period of the 1920s. A wide range of beautiful blues,
greens, and grays depicts the various forms of water—ocean, pool, pond—and
seem thickly applied,
deliberately contrasting
with the flatness of the human figures. A welcome addition to the growing
body of works about female athletes. (Picture book/biography. 5-9)
From Publishers Weekly
The team behind The Babe
& I and Lou Gehrig: The Luckiest Man here abandons the baseball field
for the chilly, choppy waters of the English Channel, which Ederle swam
across in 1926.
The first woman to accomplish
this feat, Ederle also beat, by almost two hours, the existing men's record.
Widener's stylized acrylic
paintings again creatively evoke a bygone era, while Adler's direct yet
descriptive narrative establishes the historical context. He notes that
in 1906, the year of Ederle's birth,
women in most states could
not vote: "Many people felt that a woman's place was in the home," writes
Adler. "But Gertrude Ederle's place was in the water." Readers will warm
to the heroine,
a city kid who was taught
how to swim only after she, at age seven, fell into a pond and nearly drowned.
Text and art offer a compelling, in-depth account of the adult Ederle's
crossing of the Channel,
as she swam for more than
14 hours from Cape Gris-Nez, France, to Kingsdown, England, despite driving
rain, strong winds, high waves, a powerful current--and her trainer's directive
to quit.
An exciting story, well
told; kids will dive right in. Ages 6-9. (Mar.) (Publisthers Weekly )
From Dayton and Montgomery
County Public Library, OH (School Library Journal )
Kindergarten-Grade 4-This
picture-book biography covers the life of Gertrude Ederle, highlighting
her world-record breaking, long-distance swims. In 1926, women were thought
to be the weaker sex,
but this indomitable young
athlete broke the men's record by two hours when she swam the English Channel.
Fascinating tidbits about her 21-mile swim will entice readers:
"She floated on her back
and ate chicken and drank beef broth." For her victory, she was rewarded
with a ticker-tape parade and a letter from President Coolidge calling
her "America's Best Girl."
More information about her
life is appended. In the acrylic paintings, characters with large bodies
and small heads, suggesting Depression-era art, are set on impressionistic
backgrounds.
The pictures of the swirling,
rough water add fluidity and motion, and the perspectives that show the
small figure of the swimmer in the vast sea capture the immensity of Ederle's
endeavor.
Attractive formatting and
large type make this story of achievement as effective and as inspiring
to read aloud as this team's Lou Gehrig:
The Luckiest Man (1997)
and The Babe & I (1999, both Gulliver). Jean Gaffney, Dayton and Montgomery
County Public Library, OH (School Library Journal ) --This text refers
to the Hardcover edition.