Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition Quotes

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Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers by Jesse Sullivan
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“That’s when he started talking to God for the first time since he had been a young boy. He just wanted to see his family again. He was hungry, tired, and scared. He had been in the Amazon, alone for 8 days. But now he was determined to make it. He felt that he had God on his side.”
Jesse Sullivan, Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers
“He found a can of coke. With nothing else to drink, this can would save him. On the ocean floor, at least the boat was no longer getting knocked around by the storm. All of that was still going on 100 feet above him. It was much quieter on the bottom of the ocean, and much darker. Everything was pitch black. Wearing just his underwear, Harrison was COLD. With the storm still raging, there was little hope for a rescue, but for some reason, Harrison decided that he wouldn’t give up. He would do his best to keep going. He had nothing to eat. He only had a small pocket of air to breathe. Eventually, that air would run out. As well as being both lucky and stubborn, Harrison was also quite clever. He swam through the darkness into the captain’s quarters to try and grab things that might float which would help him tread water. This was not easy to”
Jesse Sullivan, Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers
“Juliana had learned at Gatorland that if you stick your fingers up an alligator’s nose when it’s biting you, it can’t breathe.”
Jesse Sullivan, Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers
“Beck Weathers was a Texan who worked studying diseases as a pathologist. He became fascinated with the act of mountaineering, or climbing tall mountains. He got really into it. Eventually, he found himself attempting to climb to the top of the tallest mountain on earth, Mount Everest. Unfortunately for Beck, he had eye surgery before his trip. As he kept getting higher and higher up the mountain, his vision kept getting worse. Although a blind person has made it to the top of Everest before, it’s really helpful to be able to see when you’re climbing mountains. Especially if everyone on your team isn’t expecting you to become blind up there. One wrong step can mean death on Everest. Rob Hall was a professional mountaineer. He was getting paid to take eight clients up the mountain and Beck was one of them. When you climb Everest, you do some of your climbing at night. As night fell, Beck’s vision got even worse. He knew that he wouldn’t be able to make it to the top. Rob told him that the safest thing to do was to wait where he was and the rest of the group would help him down after they had been to the top. They would meet back up with Beck on their way down. Beck was pretty grumpy about this but realized that he had no choice. His dream of getting to the top of the world’s tallest mountain would have to wait.”
Jesse Sullivan, Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers
“Kids Riding Tornados The Wizard of Oz is a famous movie that was made in 1939. Dorothy is the girl who is the main character and in the story, she is picked up by a tornado and carried off to the fictional land of Oz. A few years later, in 1955, a 9-year-old really did go for a ride in a tornado! But first she rode a horse. There’s not a whole lot around Bowdle, South Dakota. It’s a very rural part of the state. Sharon Weron was 9 years old and riding a horse home from a neighbor’s house. Her mom was following in her car and saw everything. Just as Sharon and her horse reached their house, the tornado was on them. They had very little warning. Sharon’s mom saw the tornado pick up her daughter (and horse), spin them around wildly, and carry them away. Sharon was wearing a blue shirt so her mom was looking for that in the tornado and could see her spinning. The tornado carried them around 1,000 feet, over several fences, and dumped Sharon in a ditch. She was wearing a leather jacket and pulled that up around her head during her flight. There was hail and all kinds of debris flying around inside the tornado with her. Sharon’s hands were badly bruised from being hit by the hail and who knows what else. She remembered hitting the ground and grabbing the grass so that she wouldn’t get sucked up again. As she looked around, she found her horse. He was just standing there not far from her. Both were a little beaten up but okay. That’s crazy, right? Their story got picked up by newspapers and spread all over the world. Reporters had no reason to doubt the story. As unbelievable as it seems, it still holds up as credible. Sharon’s ride was also witnessed by neighbors. The Guinness book of world records listed Sharon’s ride as the furthest anyone had ever ridden in a tornado until 2006. It’s remarkable that both Sharon and her horse lived through such a terrifying experience. That has to be the craziest horse story in the history of the world!”
Jesse Sullivan, Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers
“He couldn’t pull up the anchor but let out the anchor chain as deep as it would go and started the motor of the boat. The water that Howard and Sonny were in was perfectly still. When the wave got to them, it was a 100-foot wall of fast-moving water that would only get bigger. Howard pointed the boat at the wave. He thought it was certain death. But he threw a life preserver at Sonny and told him to start praying.”
Jesse Sullivan, Spectacular Stories for Curious Kids Survival Edition: Epic Tales to Inspire & Amaze Young Readers