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Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World

Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World

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Author: Jane Yolen
Creator: Christine Joy Pratt
Publisher: Charlesbridge Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $18.95
Buy New: $12.31
You Save: $6.64 (35%)



New (21) Used (5) Collectible (2) from $12.31

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 330347

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 112
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.7 x 7.6 x 0.6

ISBN: 1580891314
Dewey Decimal Number: 910.45
EAN: 9781580891318
ASIN: 1580891314

Publication Date: June 15, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Throughout the ages, women from all classes and walks of life turned to pirating out of necessity, desperation, or greed. Acclaimed author Jane Yolen examines the contradictions of these bold women's lives and times. Meet Artemisia, the admiral-queen of Persia in 500 BC; Grania O'Malley, the Irish "pirate queen" who challenged Queen Elizabeth I's British ships; Madame Ching, who sailed the South China Sea in the early 1800s; and then other female pirates on their ships, in battle, and in disguise.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Good for the women!   September 2, 2008
This title highlights those women we seldom discuss: PIRATES! The stories are well written and very useful for everything from Women's history month to unusual biographies. This volume draws the young girl readers into the whole pirate scene. It's a fun read for everyone. Not enough information for reports but definitely great for catching interest to search out more information. Good for school and public libraries and personal collections.


4 out of 5 stars Remember the ladies   July 13, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Do you remember that whole Girl Power craze roundabout ten or so years ago? It was the oddest thing. Girls were supposed to seek empowerment in an era of Spice Girls and Ally McBeal on the one hand while appreciating Buffy the Vampire Slayer on the other. The term "Girl Power" has long since faded, but the quest continues to find books for our future female leaders that contain ladies with pizzazz. Now the publishing industry is more than willing to churn out a million pretty pink princess books on the one hand and biographies of people like Harriet Tubman and Jane Goodall on the other. That's all well and good, but you know what the problems with these books are? They're all about the GOOD girls. The ones who took on the bad guys and kicked some serious tuchis (metaphorically, usually). I'm all for strong female characters that are pure as newly driven snow, but what about all the bad girls? Is there something to be gained from reading a book about ladies who killed, robbed, and broke the law with impunity? I think so. If boys get their fare share of true life pirate titles, it should be no different for the fairer sex. So gals, if you want to go out and lead a crew of rough and tumble men across the seven seas to fame and infamy, take a gander at "Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World", and see how it's done. Just bear in mind that aside from all the moral implications, nine times out of ten you'll reach a nasty, sticky end.

Thirteen female pirates of varying infamy, villainy, and tenacity are presented in Jane Yolen's chronological listing of various deeds and misdeeds. After clearing up some piratical misconceptions and truths about the women who worked in that particular field (ballads, clothing, vocabulary, etc.) we launch into Artemisia Admiral-Queen (Persia: 500-480 B.C.) and it's smooth sailing from there on in (so to speak). Each section considers the rumors and legends of the pirate women, considering the truth and the things we can never know for sure. Illustrator Christine Joy Pratt fills the book with scratchboard illustrations that resemble woodcuts. The book actually clocks in at a mere 103 pages, and with its large font and copious pictures, sidebars, and notes of text it's actually ideal for kids reading early chapter books who aren't quite ready for 400 page non-fiction titles. A roundup of other female pirates, a five page Bibliography (including websites), and an Index finish up the book.

Jane Yolen is no stranger to the world of female piracy. From her 1963 Pirates in Petticoats to her 1995 picture book The Ballad of the Pirate Queens (both books about Ann Bonney and Mary Reade) to Commander Toad and the Space Pirates . . . wait . . . maybe scratch that last one. In any case she's clearly tread this ground before. What she hasn't done before is research some of the other cutlass bearing lasses out there. Plus I appreciated that at the beginning of this book Ms. Yolen took time to tell us where these "facts" came from. As she points out, few pirates wrote about their own adventures. "But there are trial documents, logbooks of navy captains, and depositions from captured pirates and their victims," which, such as they are, are as close to fact as we're going to get here. With its continual efforts to separate truth from fiction, the fear with this kind of book would be that you'd have a herky-jerky narrative that keeps you guessing. You might worry that the end result would leave you not knowing what, if anything, to believe. Fortunately Yolen has, in a sense, simplified these stories enough that rumors and facts go hand in hand. For example, the section on Charlotte de Berry of England contains a sidebar called "Truth or Fiction?" that draws attention to the fact that not only is this pirate potentially fictional, but may well have begun life as a penny dreadful. The proper text is filled with references to "Another version of the story" and what "supposedly" happened in her life. Kids will have no difficulty distinguishing out the real from the fun stories. The trick is that Yolen trusts them to understand the difference.

The real trouble with sticking to the facts is that you can't go about making stuff up. Looking at it, that is probably one of the more obvious statements I've ever written. But it's true! I mean, I sure do wish there were more women pirates in this book, but facts and the lack thereof make that just bit impossible. Yolen has actually created a Roundup of other women pirates "about whom little is known" which sates my curiosity to some extent. These include everyone from Gunpowder Gertie, the Pirate Queen of the Kootenays to Rusla the Norwegian princess. So while I would have liked to have seen a couple more ethnically diverse women pirates in this book, doggone reality keeps getting in my way.

When Charlesbridge thought about bringing an illustrator into this project I wonder if art that could look like woodcuts was a given right off the bat. The pictures featured in scratchboard format here seem a well suited fit to a swashbuckling work of non-fiction such as this. As for illustrator Christine Joy Pratt, she has several books under her belt but is still a relative newcomer to the world of children's books. Some of her best work has been on such kid-friendly periodicals as "Cricket Magazine" and "Spider Magazine." There are some sections that are a little random, of course. For example, a bit on Illyrian Boats contains a picture of a very odd boat made up primarily of what look to be peculiar triangles and spares. I'm not quite sure what's going on in that picture. But while the illustrations in this title don't have the realism of, say, Dan Burr's work on the book Pirates, in this context and within this format they are nine times out of ten an ideal match.

Jane Yolen makes admirable work of immoral women. I don't know how your female pirate section of the library is looking these days, but mine's a tad skimpy. Backing up her sources all the way, Ms. Yolen's words coupled with Ms. Pratt's pretty pics render this a very readable, visually informative and fun piece of informational... uh... info. If you've a gal or two (or even a guy for that matter) prone to thwacking seafarers (read: siblings) with swords of their own making, perhaps a bit of female piratical knowledge is just what the doctor ordered. A glimpse into a world that will have you wanting more. Arrrrr!


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