Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Thomas Paine, author of the pamphlet Common Sense, which rallied the colonists to break from England, gets a strong, smart treatment here. Paine was born the son of a corset maker and undergarments were to be his future. But a love of reading gave him a way with words, and a thirst for adventure brought him to America in 1774, just as the colonies were trying to decide their fate. Common Sense, which was published in 1776, contained the shocking word independence. The Founding Fathers took note, the public snapped up copies, and the pamphlet was reprinted multiple times and became one of the things the Revolutionists rallied around. In her debut, Marsh does a fine job of mixing the personal and public elements of Paine's life; he comes across as not just a historical figure but a fully realized fellow with hopes and dreams, enthusiasms and disappointments. She also makes note of Paine's abolitionist views, an integral but often forgotten part of his story. Her lively text is complemented by Fotheringham's artwork, hand-drawn on a digital device, which sets the mood on every page. Though his palette is rather somber browns, golds, and greens his cast springs to life and have almost a Disney appeal. The back matter offers lots more information, especially about Paine's surprising end.--Cooper, Ilene Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
"Nobody expected much of young Thomas Paine," begins Marsh in this buoyant story of Paine's often-turbulent development as a Revolutionary-era writer and political activist. Though Paine attended school as a youth, he was forced to withdraw to work in his father's corset shop. Nevertheless, as Paine is quoted as saying, "The mind once enlightened cannot again become dark." Marsh recounts difficult passages in Paine's life-failed businesses, bankruptcy, the death of his first wife and separation from his second-demonstrating how his love of the written word and dogged persistence (along with a fortuitous meeting with Benjamin Franklin) led to his eventual fame. Once in America, Paine channeled his outrage over the injustice of slavery and advocacy for American independence into his magnum opus, Common Sense. Fotheringham (A Home for Mr. Emerson), in his distinctive digital art featuring inky, dotted lines and infused with vivacity, depicts the struggles and triumphs of an unlikely revolutionary. Describing Paine as "America's first best-selling author," Marsh pays tribute to this inspiring historical figure. Ages 6-10. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review
Corset maker. Sailor. Tax collector. Husband. Thomas Paine fails at all these pursuits. But what he can do is write and persuade, and when in 1774 he immigrates to the American colonies, he finds employment as an editor of Pennsylvania Magazine and thus begins his career as a political editorialist. The outspoken and opinionated Paine writes compellingly of the political situation in the colonies, and equally strongly of other injustices, such as slavery. Still, there is one word even Paine hesitates to use in his early writings: independence. His passion rises when writing his magnum opus Common Sense, however, and he boldly employs that revolutionary word twenty-two times. As author Marsh comments in an afterword, Common Sense went viral; six months after its publication, Congress approves the Declaration of Independence. The power of the pen resonates both in the narrative and in illustrations depicting Paine brandishing a quill pen that grows in size as his words capture the imagination of the colonists. Making the point that words matter, Fotheringham flings hand-lettered words, phrases, and written documents across the pages marking a turning point in Paines life. This stirring biography moves along briskly, with the momentum for severing ties with Great Britain paralleling Paines literary output. But Marshs clear prose style and short, declarative sentences allow readers to follow events easily--and even to slow down and think about them. Appended with three authors notes, a bibliography, a timeline, and documentation for quotations. betty carter (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.