Review Detail
4.1 14
Middle Grade Non-Fiction
804
Beautifully told historical fiction/poetry
Overall rating
5.0
Writing Style
5.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
0.0
Learning Value
0.0
Reader reviewed by HawkeyeRob
Karen Hesse's Out of the Dust is a beautifully written story of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl, a time when the Great Depression and the dust blew into Oklahoma like a Midwestern snowstorm.
I recently recommended this book to my daughter, who had just returned a Dear America book to the library without finishing it, something she rarely does. "Don't you like historical fiction?" I asked her.
"Not really," she told me. "I don't like diary books much either."
I convinced her to try Out of the Dust by telling her about Hesse's descriptions of the dust storms, which makes them seem a lot like the blizzard we had just experienced in Iowa a few days before. She loved it. "It was sad," she told me, "but it was so good. What else has she written?"
Can there be any better compliment for a writer than a reader finishing her book, then wanting to read more of her work?
Karen Hesse's Out of the Dust is a beautifully written story of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl, a time when the Great Depression and the dust blew into Oklahoma like a Midwestern snowstorm.
I recently recommended this book to my daughter, who had just returned a Dear America book to the library without finishing it, something she rarely does. "Don't you like historical fiction?" I asked her.
"Not really," she told me. "I don't like diary books much either."
I convinced her to try Out of the Dust by telling her about Hesse's descriptions of the dust storms, which makes them seem a lot like the blizzard we had just experienced in Iowa a few days before. She loved it. "It was sad," she told me, "but it was so good. What else has she written?"
Can there be any better compliment for a writer than a reader finishing her book, then wanting to read more of her work?
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