FICTION

Henry and the Cannons: An Extraordinary True Story of the American Revolution

illus. by author. 32p. bibliog. Roaring Brook. Jan. 2013. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-1-59643-266-6. LC 2012013450.
COPY ISBN
RedReviewStarGr 1–4—As the American Revolution was getting underway, George Washington knew he needed cannons to defeat the British. Unfortunately, he was camped outside British-held Boston, and the nearest big guns were 300 miles away at Fort Ticonderoga, New York. They were thought to be impossible to retrieve, until Henry Knox agreed to try. Brown employs a light touch in telling this exciting true story. Moving 120,000 pounds of artillery in winter involved dragging the pieces, sailing, sledding, and even retrieving them from freezing water when the ice broke under their weight. Readers will be fascinated by the various methods employed to keep the cannons moving, including poles, ropes, and chains to help the sleds scale steep heights. Amazingly, Knox and his group arrived without losing a single piece of weaponry. Quotations integrated into the text are not directly attributed, but a bibliography is included. Watercolor illustrations are given weight by black outlines. A palette of blues, whites, and browns reinforces the winter tone. Full spreads interspersed with panels vary the pace and allow for certain images to be spotlighted. A nicely composed three-panel page shows the changing weather (clear to rain to snow) as Knox begins his quest. This entertaining tale will be great to use along with studies of George Washington and the Revolutionary War.—Lucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher's School, Richmond, VA
In Let It Begin Here! (rev. 1/09), Brown described the start of the siege of Boston in April 1775, and in this picture book he depicts how that campaign ended eleven months later. Young bookseller Henry Knox's mission to bring heavy cannon from forts on Lake Champlain provides the book with a pleasing narrative shape. Stylized watercolors heighten the drama and occasional humor of Knox's trek without turning into cartoons. From the "relishing" meal Knox shared with Native Americans in New York to the 250 (mostly damaged) cannon the British military left behind, the text hews closely to the historical record -- except for one important fact. Early on Brown states, "Washington ached for cannon…But Washington had none"; period documents show that the Continental Army had dozens of artillery-pieces around Boston. This common error didn't originate with Brown but is an unfortunate exaggeration of an otherwise "true story." Map; bibliography. j.l. bell

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