

Tasteful and accurate.
Wonderful, full of facts and life

Disney Favorites

Excellent PresentationMany times these types of books have effects, which are made from token stock sounds. Not these, they are very faithful to the movie presentation.
My daughter went back to this day after day.


nice comic book

Learning From Each Other Hands Across the Water

Disney Animation

Playful Pocahontas Seeks PeaceIn Level Two: There are information boxes filled with fun facts, an index and longer sentences with increased vocabulary.
So, what did I learn?
That Pocahontas was given the English name Rebecca!
Pocahontas is a nickname that means "playful" and her real name was Matoaka
What children might not enjoy learning?
That she didn't marry John Smith, yet there is a surprise ending.
Children will learn that Pocahontas helped encouraged peace between the settlers and Indians and that a statue now stands in Gravesend, England where Pocahontas is buried.


A Really Good Book :o)

A Surprising Impact: Pocahontas in Virginia and EnglandJust ten when the Jamestown settlers arrived in 1607, she became early known for her cheer and joy in seeking friends amongst the colonists. But clashes came, and her aging father sought to expel the settlers, and almost succeeded, with the help the colonists' starvation and disease. Three years after their arrival, the colony was abandoned, the departing ships at the mouth of the James waiting for the morning tide to carry them to England.
The relief ships pulled into view at that instant, a miraculous event, and Jamestown survived, and in time established a firm foothold in Virginia. Clashes with the Powhatans continued, however, and the colonists captured Pocahontas as a hostage against the relief of the Indian-held English captives. In her captivity, which seems to have been a friendly one, she was converted to Christianity-- the stories of her memorizing the various church liturgies are dear-- and married the young colonist John Rolfe. Her father agreed to abandon his war against the settlers, and indeed touchingly sent a string of fresh water pearls for her wedding and deeded land to Rolfe. There were to be eight years of peace following their union.
The Virginia Company saw advantage to her traveling to London with her new husband, and by then young Thomas Rolfe, their child. They arrived in England in 1616, and she was received as royalty by King James and Queen Ann, and met many of the English notables of the day. But the climate took its toll, and she succumbed to tuberculosis or smallpox on the very eve of their departure for Virginia. She died in Gravesend in Kent County, and lies today in the little St. George's Churchyard there.
Her monument is the peace which allowed the English the final foothold in Virginia, in spite of its eventual price on the Indians. Barely twenty when she died, she is recalled as a sprightly girl, an evocation of an America long gone.
Woodward's book is filled with details and documentation, and well worth a five-star read! What she omits, however, is that Pocahontas is survived by thousands of American descendants today, each carrying her memory in their blood as the 400th anniversary of that first north American colony nears.


Pocahontas used as both racist and anti-racist symbolHere's another interesting quote from Tilton:
"...for many base wretches amongst us take up with negro women, by which means the country swarms with mulatto bastards, and these mulattoes, if but three generations removed from the black father or mother, may, by the indulgence of the laws of the country, intermarry with the white people, and actually do every day so marry. Now, if instead of this abominable practice which hath polluted the blood of many amongst us, we had taken Indian wives in the first place, it would have made them some compensation for their lands. ...We should become rightful heirs to their lands and should not have smutted our blood..."
The Rev. Peter Fontaine of Virginia, 1757.
Why do even the "liberals" among us accept the idea that one can be "white" and partially American Indian but tacitly accept the ridiculous notion that a white person with the same amount of black ancestry is only "passing for white"? Is it really because Indians had land and blacks had nothing? This book gives you plenty to think about.