This is an excellent introduction to a lesser-known but fascinating adventurer.–Donna Cardon, Provo City Library, UTα(c) Copyright 2010. Roca uses minimal background detail and skillfully arranges scenes to focus attention on the emotions and faces of the characters while still maintaining historical and geographical accuracy. Realistic oil illustrations are similar in style to those in Muhammad Ali, Champion of the World (Random, 2007). The page-long endnote explains her research and sources. Brown's narration is fluent, engaging, and full of dialogue. Smith lived to a ripe old age, and, according to an endnote, much of the book is based on interviews the author had with her before she passed away in March 2010. Unlike the stories of Amelia Earhart and Harriet Quimby, this book has a happy ending. The climax of this picture-book biography is when Smith achieved acclaim as the first person to fly a plane under all four of New York City's bridges. At 16, she was the youngest person in the U.S., man or woman, to earn a pilot's license. Elinor Smith began talking flying lessons in 1921 when she was only 10 years old. Gr 3-6–Everyone has heard of Amelia Earhart, but she was not the only young woman fascinated by flight in the early 1900s.
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