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220 pages, Hardcover
First published November 10, 2016
«C'era una volta, nella Francia centrale, una bambina che viveva in un convento, circondata da suore vestite di bianco e nero. Si chiamava Gabrielle Chanel»
Ci ho messo 6 mesi per leggerlo a mia figlia. Non perché noioso, ma per la sua struttura a racconti brevi. Trattandosi di storie di una pagina ciascuna, è stato letto quando mia figlia era un pò stanca per ascoltare molte pagine del classico libro della buonanotte che leggiamo abitualmente (ad esempio, in questo momento ). In ogni caso, questo è un libro dolcissimo con illustrazioni fantastiche. La vita di 100 grandi donne corredata da un bellissimo ritratto per ognuna di esse.
La cosa più bella: alla fine del volume c'è una pagina con delle righe vuote in cui inserire una nuova storia, ed una cornice vuota in cui disegnare un nuovo ritratto. E' lo spazio dedicato alle bambine che stanno leggendo, un modo simpatico di firmare quest'opera.
Voto: 8
«Once upon a time, in central France, there was a girl who lived in a convent, surrounded by nuns dressed in black and white. Her name was Gabrielle Chanel»
It took 6 months to read it to my daughter, and not because it was boring. This big amount of time was because the structure of the book: a lot of short novels. Since we are speaking about stories of about 1 page, this book was read when my daughter was tired to listen many pages of the standard bedtime reading (as an example, at the moment we are reading ). Anyway, this is a sweet and delicate book, with amazing drawings. The life of 100 great women is accompanied by 100 beautiful portraits.
The best part: at the end of the book there's a page with empty lines to write a new story, and an empty frame to draw a new portrait. It's the space dedicated to the kids that are reading, a nice way to sign this collection of stories.
Vote: 8
� Inventor Ann Makosinski, a fifteen year-old Canadian who won first prize in Google Science Fair for inventing a flashlight that doesn’t need batteries, wind, or sun--just body heat.Included with each biography is a full page color representation of the subject, and a quote of something they said or wrote. Next to the short bio of Misty Copeland, for instance, is a drawing of her in flight during a ballet performance with a quote that reads, “Dance found me.�
� Amna Al Haddad, weight lifter from the United Arab Emirates. She was a journalist and discovered she really enjoyed exercising! She began to work out in a gym with weights for the first time in her life as an adult. She was good at it and began training for the Olympics.
� Anna Politkovskaya, the Russian journalist who was murdered for reporting on the truth of what she saw in the brutal civil war in Chechnya.
� Jane Goodall is among the women to emulate for having her own mind and studying a subject so deeply that she became the expert.
� Hayshepsut was an Egyptian pharaoh who ruled Egypt long before Cleopatra became Queen. Records of her were destroyed after her death, but archeologists were able to piece together a record of her successful rule, the first (and only?) female pharaoh.