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    Artemisia of Caria

    by Shirin Yim Bridges, Albert Nguyen (Illustrator)


    Hardcover

    $18.95
    $18.95

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews


    Shirin Yim Bridges’ first book, Ruby's Wish, was a Publishers Weekly Best Children’s Book and won the Ezra Jack Keats award. It is on several state reading lists, has been translated into seven languages, and is now in its eleventh edition. The Umbrella Queen made TIME/CNN’s Top 10 Lists and was also named a Best Children’s Book by the Bank Street College of Education. Horrible Hauntings won an IRA/CBC Children's Choices Award. Mary Wrightly So Politely launched in April 2013 to starred reviews in both Kirkus and Publishers Weekly. To date, every book that Shirin has written or published has achieved national acclaim.

    Responsible for the pen-and-watercolor illustrations that bring our princesses to life, Albert Nguyen received his MFA from the Academy of Art in 2006. He grew up in Minnesota before moving to San Francisco. In addition to being fond of drawing, painting, comics, and cartoons, Albert has a special affection for chubby animals.
    The Thinking Girl’s Treasury of Real Princesses are his first children’s books.

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    Thousands of years ago, in the world of the Ancient Greeks where women were expected to obey their husbands in all matters, to play no part in public life, and to stay inside the house, a princess grew up to be not only a sailor and a ship’s captain, but a famous admiral. Her name was Artemisia, and among all the commanders fighting on the Persian side during the great Persian Wars, she alone dared to give Xerxes an honest opinion that could have saved his entire fleet. This is the story of a real and remarkable princess whose spirit prompted the Persian Great King, Xerxes, to declare, "My men have become women, and my women men!"

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    Children's Literature - Danielle Williams
    Little is known of Artemisia save that she was a princess and gained enormous power in a time when women were viewed as possessions, even within their own families. It is not clear how she came to hold the power that she had, but her intelligence and passion earned her the respect and trust of Xerxes, who listened to her ideas and praised her intelligence during the Persian War with Greece. The lack of information about Artemisia makes this a very brief text, but the colorful illustrations, as well as the brief asides throughout the text, add depth and insight to Artemisia's life and times. It is clear that Bridges has tremendous knowledge about Ancient Greece, and especially about how women lived during the era. This text, which is part of "The Thinking Girl's Treasury of Real Princesses," is a suitable starting point for the study of Ancient Greece and the study of strong women throughout history. Reviewer: Danielle Williams
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