When the Horses Ride By

Children in the Times of War
By Eloise Greenfield, Jan Spivey Gilchrist
Paperback: $14.95

Through these graceful and eloquent poems, written from the child’s perspective, readers will experience this resilience, this optimism, and understand that it is possible to get through difficult and unsettling times while holding onto one’s hopes and dreams for a better, more peaceful future. 

Description

WE ARE THE HELPERS

We tend the farm,

help to make the food grow,

Somewhere there is fighting,

but we are here, helping the sun

and the rain and the rich earth

bring forth the plants of life.

Wars have occurred throughout history, in all parts of the world, and they continue today. In spite of the hardship and suffering of wartime, children often find ways to see beauty and hope – in the natural world, in the love of family and friends, and in the ordinary activities of childhood. Through these graceful and eloquent poems, written from the child’s perspective, readers will experience this resilience, this optimism, and understand that it is possible to get through difficult and unsettling times while holding onto one’s hopes and dreams for a better, more peaceful future.

About the Creators

Eloise Greenfield

Eloise Greenfield is a celebrated poet and the author of more than forty books of fiction, poetry and biography for children, including the Coretta Scott King Award winner Africa Dream, The Coretta Scott King Award Honor books Mary McLeod Bethune and Childtimes: A Three Generation Memoir, co-written with her mother. Greenfield is the recipient of the Hope S. Dean Award from the Foundation for Children's Literature, and the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. She has received the Hurston/Wright Foundation's North Star Award for Lifetime Achievement, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Moonstone Celebration of Black Writing, and has an Honorary Doctor of Education Degree from Wheelock College in Boston. Greenfield has also been inducted into the International Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent. She lives in Washington, D.C.

Jan Spivey Gilchrist

Jan Gilchrist was a fine artist and art educator for nearly twenty years before she entered the children's book field in 1988, with Children of Long Ago. Since then, she has illustrated more than fifty books for children, including many by Eloise Greenfield. Their book, Nathaniel Talking, won the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award and an Author Honor. Gilchrist was inducted into the International Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent in 2000 and the Society of Illustrators in 2001. A native of Chicago, she lives in Olympia Fields, Illinois. Visit her online at Jan Spivey Gilchirst.

Awards

  • Notable Books for a Global Society

    International Literacy Association (ILA)

  • CCBC Choices

    Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)

Reviews

  • "The rhythmic connections in words and pictures will move peace activists, old and young."

    - Booklist
  • "Wars as far back as ancient China and as current as this century's conflict in Iraq are viewed from a child's perspective. Brief, but thought-provoking, free verse poems are mirrored by evocative collage illustrations. A gentle way to begin a dialogue on a very serious subject."

    - School Library Journal

Paperback

  • ISBN 9781600604546
  • Publication Date Jun 01, 2006
  • Trim Size 8.5 × 10.5 in
  • Weight 0.5625 lbs
  • Page Count 40
  • Hardcover

  • ISBN 9781584302490
  • Publication Date Jan 01, 2100
  • Trim Size N/A
  • Weight 0.4375 lbs
  • Page Count 40
  • Interests

  • Audience Children
  • BISAC Category 1 JNF / History / Military & Wars
  • BISAC Category 2 JNF / Social Topics / Emotions & Feelings
  • BISAC Category 3 JNF / Poetry / General
  • Themes African / African American / Black, Asian / Asian American / AAPI, Childhood Experiences and Memories, Coping with Death, Courage, Cultural Diversity, Discrimination, Dreams & Aspirations, Empathy / Compassion, Families, Geography, History & Civics, Home, Identity / Self Esteem / Confidence, Immigration, Indigenous / First Nations / Native American, Informational / Expository Nonfiction, Latinx / Latino / Hispanic, Middle Grade, Multiple Ethnicities Represented, Nonfiction, Overcoming Obstacles, People In Motion, Persistence / Grit, Poetry, Self Control / Self Regulation, Similarities and Differences, Tolerance / Acceptance, United States History, War
  • Reading Levels

  • Age Range Ages 7 - 11
  • Grade Range Grades 2 - 6
  • Guided Reading Q
  • ATOS Book Level 3.4
  • DRA 40
  • Interest Level Grades 2 - 6
  • Lexile Code NP
  • Reading Level Grades 3 - 4
  • Bebop Reading Fluent
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