Szh ssearcha2cDi Site e Direct tsearchi Young o Site n Youngadultsite asearchu0t Naked isearche Site e
z Direct Szh csearchYsearchu Youngadultsite gsearchd Direct lsearchs Szh t Naked
n Youngadultsite ad Naked lsearchssearcht Young Direct searchd
l Site
A Site usearcht Direct n Youngadultsite e Adult rsearchhyojjzzse Szh rsearchhsearchindian%20young%20milfgsearchd Site lsearchssearchtesearchcaesearchrsearchhsearch, at Barnes and Noble at BookSense.com
Get More Information on: "Robert F. Kennedy: Crusader "
by Marc Aronson (Author), John W. Glenn (Author)
National Geographic Children's Books
“This splendid, exciting, beautifully illustrated account of the Age of Exploration relates events so dramatic that they would have been dismissed as implausible fiction if they hadn’t actually happened. Don’t think of this as `just’ a book for kids: children’s parents will find it equally gripping and informative.” - Jared Diamond professor of Geography at UCLA, and author of the best-selling Pulitzer-Prize-winner Guns, Germs, and Steel
Get More Information on: "The World Made New"
by Marc Aronson
Clarion Books
Marc Aronson's new book answers these questions, and more.
Get More Information on: "The Real Revolution: The Global Story of American Independence"
"Aronson has many gifts: an ability to take historical events and render them as if they were unfolding before us; a cold eye for the prejudices of partisan contemporary accounts; the wit to untangle the knot of conflicting intepretations.... Aronson is masterly at illuminating the reality of religious faith and the cataclysmic clash of beliefs that created fertile ground for ideas about democracy and equality.... The notes are a model of lucidity for any student wanting to find out more."
Get More Information on: "John Winthrop, Oliver Cromwell, and the Land of Promise"
by Marc Aronson
Simon & Schuster
"This is excellent history writing that involves the reader in the excitement of discovery and the thrill of recreating the past."
-- Kirkus Reviews
"Teachers should throw away other books they have been using for young adults and turn to this one."
--Bernard Rosenthal
author of Salem Story: Reading the Witch Trials of 1692
Get More Information on: "Witch-Hunt : Mysteries of the Salem Witch Trials"
by Marc Aronson
Rowman & Littlefield
"This excellent book should be required reading for anyone who cares about young adults and their literature."
-- School Library Journal
Get More Information on: "Beyond the Pale: New Essays for a New Era"
"As a YA publisher, editor, writer, and critic, Aronson is an eloquent, passionate advocate for high-quality YA books. The collection comprises 13 of his speeches and articles from the past six years, including "The Challenge and the Glory of YA Literature," which originally appeared in Booklist. He opens up the intense arguments about censorship, audience (how adult is young adult?), authenticity, popularity versus quality, and more."
--Booklist
Get More Information on: "Exploding the Myths: The Truth about Teens and Reading"
Winner of the Robert F. Sibert Medal
Winner of the Boston Globe Horn Book Prize
"The book chronicles Ralegh's rise from his country-bumpkin origins to Elizabeth's courtier and goes on to describe how his ambition pointed him toward the New World. It also reveals much about the intrigue at Queen Elizabeth's court, as well as the motives and machinations of those living in the Americas."
--Booklist
"This book is exemplary nonfiction and pure gold for libraries."
-- School Library Journal
Get More Information on: "Sir Walter Ralegh and the Quest for El Dorado"
A New York Times Best Book
"Ambitious yet accessible, this volume describes virtually every artistic movement challenging the social, political and cultural status quo from the 1830s to the present, each within its historical context from the bohemians of 19th-century Paris to the Generation Xers and cybertechies of today."
--Publishers Weekly
Get more information on Art Attack
Get More Information on: "Art Attack : A Brief Cultural History of the Avant-Garde"
He writes books, visits schools, teaches classes, and publishes books that affirm this belief. His mission is to inspire young people to ask questions, to look around, behind, inside of the stories the world tells us - whether that means being a detective, examining the clues history has left behind, or a reporter, telling the truth about the modern world.
A committed internationalist, Aronson has published two books that were selected as the best books in translation, and created Edge, an imprint designed to bring the voices of coming of age from around the world to American readers. It is his conviction that the mixing of genes, of ideas, of cultures, of networks of trade is the given of the world young people are entering. He is also a supporter of the Guys Read project who feels young males are often neglected by a reading world oriented towards females.
Aronson has a doctorate in American History - his focus was on William Crary Brownell, Edith Wharton's editor, and he published conclusions as a lengthy essay in the New York Times Book Review. He periodically reviews books for the Los Angeles Times Books Review, and the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, and publishes essays in journals devoted to reading and literature. He lives in New Jersey with his wife, the author
Aronson's book, John Winthrop, Oliver Cromwell and the Land of Promise (Clarion, 2004) continues the story of colonial America he began with Ralegh, and is the first book for young readers to show how the religious passions of the early Puritans can help us to understand the viewpoint of modern Islamic fundamentalists. His trilogy concludes with The Real Revolution, The Global Story of American Independence (Clarion 2005) an account of the run-up to the American Revolution viewed in a global perspective in which Robert Clive plays as large a role as George Washington, and events in London and India are as important as those in Boston and Virginia. He is currently working on the first global history of race prejudice written for younger readers.