Archive for the ‘press’ Category

Booklist Review of Women Making America

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

“Although there are a number of books that trace the history of women in the U.S., this is an exceptionally fine compilation that looks at the lives of American women in general and in particular. The introduction covers the role women had in building the country and explains the areas on which the authors have chosen to focus: health, paid work, home, education, beauty, amusements, and the arts. The book then proceeds in chronological fashion, beginning with the Revolutionary War. Throughout, it is filled with fascinating anecdotes about individual women and the lives they led, but it also sets these lives against the sweep of U.S. history. Consequently, this can be likened to a quilt, where both the individual pieces and the whole demand attention. This is an attractive offering as well, with historical art and photographs-color and black-and-white-enlivening each page. Most readers probably won’t read this hefty tome from beginning to end, but the material is so interesting, a few just might.” Cooper, Ilene.

School Library Journal reviews Women Making America

Friday, August 7th, 2009

Gr 6 Up—This hefty volume surveys the role of women in American history from 1770 to the present, focusing primarily on health issues, paid work, home, education, beauty, amusements, and the arts. Each chapter includes a brief summary of historical events and then examines the common threads. Photographs, reproductions, and numerous sidebars convey information on pages filled with bright colors and lively layouts. Quotes, biographical information, facts, and vignettes place women in the context of the times. Outstanding highlights are the “Did you know?” and “Have you heard of…?” sections. There is good racial, ethnic, and age diversity in the text and in the illustrations. The bibliography offers general histories and specific chapter references. The book concludes with the authors addressing their female readers by asking “How will your passion and hard work pave the way for those still to come?…The next chapter of American history belongs to you and your children and grandchildren. What will that story be?” The book’s innovative and direct approach is sure to capture the attention of young women. Classroom teachers can utilize the plethora of facts to liven social studies and history lessons, and the format is appealing enough to attract browsers.—Patricia Ann Owens, Wabash Valley College, Mt. Carmel, IL June 1, 2009

Internet Radio Interview

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Our interview with Pamela Varkony on Voice America is posted here:

http://www.modavox.com/voiceamerica/vepisode.aspx?aid=38135

Radio Interview

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Catch us today from 4-5 (Eastern) for an interview about Women Making America.

www.1370WPAZ.com

Jo Freeman Reviews Women Making America

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

It is our honor to have Women Making America reviewed by the awesome Jo Freeman. Freeman is one of the founding mothers of second wave feminism and a founder of Chicago’s West Side group, probably the first Women’s Liberation group in the nation. She is an attorney, well-known feminist scholar, speaker, and author. Her most recent book is We Will Be Heard: Women’s Struggles for Political Power in the United States. Political buttons from her private collection appear in our book.

http://www.seniorwomen.com/articles/freeman/articlesFreemanMaking.html

That “Chaperone” Was a Civil Rights Hero

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

One morning a few weeks ago, I choked on my cereal as I read the morning paper. I called up Heidi, and the following letter to the editor of the Washington Post came about. You can find it on the Post’s website or read it below:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/02/20/AR2009022003374.html

Saturday, February 21, 2009; Page A11

It doesn’t seem like too much to ask that women be recognized as co-participants in historical events. Yet omissions such as the one in your photo caption for “The Next Chapter” [Style, Feb. 12] reinforce the idea that it is men who make history and women who help them.

The photo showed Thurgood Marshall and some of the Little Rock Nine on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court. The caption said that the woman to Marshall’s right in the picture is the teenagers’ “chaperone.”

Chaperone? The woman is Daisy Bates, who recruited the young people who made the stand at Little Rock Central High School.

Bates was an activist, the president of the Arkansas NAACP and a newspaper reporter who accompanied the Little Rock Nine into their personal hell of integrating the high school. Her courage and perseverance led to threats on her life.

According to Ernest Green, the first black graduate of Little Rock High, “Daisy Bates was the poster child of black resistance. She was a quarterback, the coach. We were the players.”

Bates, who died in 1989, deserves acknowledgment of her integral part.

– Heidi Hemming & Julie Hemming Savage

Below:  Daisy Bates in action