Michael Fitzgerald
Goodreads Author
Born
in The United States
Website
Genre
Member Since
June 2007
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Rat Race Blues: The Musical Life of Gigi Gryce
by
7 editions
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published
2002
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
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Michael Fitzgerald
rated a book really liked it
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Michael Fitzgerald
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Michael Fitzgerald
marked as picture-books
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"I never liked Harriet. She's so mean to everyone, and she sneaks around spying on people so that she can criticize them and write mean things about them in her notebook. She's horrible."
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Michael Fitzgerald
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"After his father is crucified by the Romans, Daniel swears to get revenge and joins a band of Jewish zealots in the mountains. They claim to be fighting against Rome for the freedom of Israel, but they are really just bandits, even stealing from thei"
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I wish Ibbotson wrote more of these and fewer of the monster books! I feel that many other authors can (and have) done that sort of thing quite adequa
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"How did I never write a review of this?! Delightful, literate, charming, hopeful, funny. This is the third I’ve read of hers after THE STAR OF
KAZAN and JOURNEY TO THE RIVER SEA and I’m astonished by how good they are. These are children’s books that a" Read more of this review » |
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Michael Fitzgerald
rated a book it was amazing
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Provides so much insight into the young boy mind, including how decisions are affected by outside influences - both good and bad. One can easily find analogies for the situations of early 1900s Colorado in the present day. I'm worried for Ralph - I h ...more | |

“Well," Mamma began, "there are some people who think we are different from them. They don't understand what scientists have taught us, that all the peoples of the world are one family and that all human blood is the same. They don't realize that we all have the same Heavenly Father, and they forget that this country is for all people to have an equal chance.”
― Bright April
― Bright April

“The child cannot too early learn to be a good citizen? I think this is questionable: citizenship is an adult affair. Let school and home teach the child to respect the laws and institutions of his country. For the time being that should suffice. To use the juvenile novel or biography to turn the child into an internationalist or an advocate of racial tolerance may be high-minded, but I would suggest that the child first be allowed to turn into a boy or girl. Pious Little Rollo is dead; the Good Little Citizen is replacing him. The moralistic literature of the last century tried to produce small paragons of virtue. How about our urge to manufacture small paragons of social consciousness?”
― Party Of One
― Party Of One
“It is natural if you feel as strongly as most decent people do about racial discrimination to welcome books that give it short shrift; but to assess books on their racial attitude rather than their literary value, and still more to look on books as ammunition in the battle, is to take a further and still more dangerous step from literature-as-morality to literature-as-propaganda—a move toward conditions in which, hitherto, literary art has signally failed to thrive.
("Didacticism in Modern Dress" from Only Connect (2nd ed., 1980).”
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("Didacticism in Modern Dress" from Only Connect (2nd ed., 1980).”
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“Another danger is that—as is already happening to some extent—authors and editors run scared and go to absurd lengths to avoid giving offence. (An American editor rejected Polar, a picture book about a toy polar bear which is published in England by Andre Deutsch, on the ground that the text, written by Elaine Moss, states explicitly that the bear is white). A demand to avoid stereotypes can easily become in effect a demand for a different stereotype: for instance that girls should always be shown as strong, brave and resourceful, and that mothers should always have jobs and never, never wear an apron. And books written to an approved formula, or with deliberate didactic aim, do not often have the breath of life. Some members of women’s groups in North America have published their own anti-sexist books, featuring such characters as fire-fighting girls or boys who learn to crochet. Good luck to them; but those I have seen are far below professional standard.
("Are Children's Books Racist and Sexist?" from Only Connect, 2nd ed., 1980)”
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("Are Children's Books Racist and Sexist?" from Only Connect, 2nd ed., 1980)”
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“Reading to younger children has come to be more or less an accepted thing, but reading to older children or to a family group is done less today with all the other attractions taking the time. Reading to a group provides a unity, a cohesion, that is wonderful. It is common bond of interest. It brings up plenty of things for family talk and discussion. A child who has been read to shows results in his speech and wider experience with languages. And definitely, if the reading is of good books, it is the beginning of good taste in literature.”
― The Proof of the Pudding: What Children Read
― The Proof of the Pudding: What Children Read

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