
Biographies and
Autobiographies
One of the best ways to teach
children about history is to point them toward quality biographies and
autobiographies. But there's more gold to be mined in this genre.
The stories of people's lives are
not only educational, enriching and entertaining, but they teach children what
NOT to do in certain situations. Indirectly, by reading these life stories,
they can learn from the mistakes made by others. They also can witness how
those people overcame their own mistakes, and societal obstacles, to achieve
success.
Here are some good biographies and
autobiographies that may appeal to the child in fifth through eighth grades or
thereabouts:
An American Childhood, Annie Dillard
A Girl from Yam Hill, Beverly Cleary
Black Ice, Lorene Carey
Circle of Quiet, Madeleine L'Engle
The Summer of the Great-grandmother,
""
Two-Part Invention, ""
Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank
Gifted Hands, Ben Carson, M.D.
Lives of the Writers (20 of note)
One Writer's Beginnings, Eudora Welty
"Surely You're Joking, Mr
Feynman!" Richard Feynman
Under the Eye of the Clock,
Christopher Nolan