Rating: Summary: Timeless Review: I first read du Bois' work in sixth grade I believe, and I was captivated by his storytelling. In all fairness, I seldom have ever read fiction, but this book has a unique plot about it and offers fascinating elements of a story. At 19, I'm tempted to pick it up again as a refreshing escape from Macroeconomics and Brief calculus.The Twenty-One Balloons is an excellent read at the surface. However, it also offers up serious literary excellence. Any middle school English teacher, who would have their students read this book, would talk endlessly about the merits of the book. Foreshadowing, dynamic characters... it all flows evenly to produce a work easily readable for younger crowds but intense while still somehow whimsical for older kids. Overall, you won't be able to put the book down, and that's a serious assertion.
Rating: Summary: Can't Go Wrong with a Book Like This Review: I have just about every Newbery Award winning book on my bookshelf and I've read most of them. But not all. In particular, many of the ones written before 1950 or so still need my attention. So, periodically, I try to pick up one I haven't read and give it a go. Having just finished reading Simon Winchester's Krakatoa, where he gives such a glowing report of this book, I pulled it down from the shelf. This is a fun book. It tells the story of a retired math teacher, William Waterman Sherman, who builds a balloon to help him get away from it all by spending a year floating through the skies. Instead, he quickly finds himself downed on the island of Krakatoa where he finds a secret colony of people living quite comfortably. He joins them. Unfortunately, in a couple days, Krakatoa erupts, destroying the island almost completely. Fortunately, the colony had prepared for the chance of eruption and everyone is saved. Published in 1947, this book is filled with a little interesting science and a lot of fantasy. If it has a weakness, it is that this book feels a little more dated than some of the other older Newbery winners. It doesn't feel dated because of its content, however, just its prose style. Its a little formal and relates a post-Victorian view of the world which many young people probably will not understand very well. Still, I enjoyed this story and the drawings by Mr. DuBois very much. When it comes right down to it, you can hardly go wrong with a Newbery winner. Still one of the best signs of excellence in the world of fiction--for children or no.
Rating: Summary: Verne in Krakatoa Review: I read this wonderful story a few years after it was originally published, when I was eleven years old. I liked it so much that I read it again when I was twelve, and again at thirteen. I went on to read several other stories by the same author, but they have gone out of print, and only this story has lived. It is a masterpiece that (as nobody seems to have noticed in their reviews) is based on Jules Verne's Five Weeks in a Balloon. I strongly recommend this story for all kids who love adventure and Verne's brand of science fiction. The illustrations are great.
Rating: Summary: Amazing. Review: My definition of a good fiction book is that it's able to persuade you that the story can really happen, even though it seems totally impossible. By the end of this book, I was convinced for a second that Krakatoa, with its diamond mines and 'Gourmet Government' really existed. And that's pretty sad, considering that I should be too old for that kind of stuff. THE 21 BALLOONS follows the adventures of Professor William Waterman Sherman as he tries to escape his old life of school days and bad kids. (He was a math teacher at an all-boys school. I pity him.) He sets out in a balloon, one that has a sort of mini-house as the basket. He spends a few days happily flying around the Pacific ocean, until one day a seagull makes a hole in his balloon. He throws everything overboard, and aims to land on a small island. The island's name? Krakatoa. He is received into the Krakatoan society, and given a share in the HUGE diamond mines that each of the twenty families on the island own. (By the way- I love the way that the society is described in the book. Very detailed. And the naming system, too... though I don't think that I would like to be called something like 'K-2'.) The families live in great wealth and comfort, and they have a society totally based on food. Each day of the month, a different family cooks, and they all have equal shares in the mines. But everything isn't perfect... There's a volcano on the island, one that is REALLY active. It causes the island's earth to continually move up and down in waves... a sort of blessing, and a curse, because it keeps the other people of the world away. Professor Sherman is the first person that had been to their island other than themselves, EVER. And, of course, while Sherman is on the island, the volcano erupts. Luckily, the families all have an escape plan; a huge platform with twenty balloons attached that lifts everyone up and away from the island. Again, problem; they only have 80 parachutes. So Sherman has to try and land the huge platform... As I said, I love this book. One of the best children's fiction stories that I've read, ever... and the magnificent sketches by Mr. du Bois that describe the island really make everything come together more.
Rating: Summary: Captures the wonder and adventure of lighter than air flight Review: Professor William Waterman Sherman is a burned out teacher who wants to get away from it all. So he builds a giant balloon that can hold him and a years supply of food. Then one day he sets off from San Francisco across the Pacific Ocean. 5 weeks later a ship finds him out in the mid-Atlantic surrounded by wreckage & 20 large balloons. How did he get there? Where did he get the other balloons? The answers to these questions are the subject of this book. Written in 1948, the story takes place at the end of the 19th century when balloonists were on the cutting edge of science, this book captures the wonder and adventure of lighter than air flight at that time. It is illustrated with delightful drawings by the author and won the Newberry Award.
Rating: Summary: Creative and Imaginative Review: Professor William Waterman Sherman leaves San Franciso and takes off in a journey to fly around the world in a hot-air balloon. But he doesn't know what adventures he will find... He crashes into the Pacific Ocean and is washed ashore the mysterious island of Krakatoa, where people dress like millionaires. They have exotic houses from all over the world and amazing inventions. But best of all there a millions of dollars of diamonds laying in the mines. The professor is told he can't leave the island for the rest of his life for numerous reasons. A man called Mr.F tells Professor Sherman all about the intereseting history of the Krakatoans and all about the diamonds. Basically this book is about the island Krakatoa. William Pene du Bois must have had a very big imagination. The book was very creative and original, at least a lot different from all of the other books I've read. The only reason this doesn't get five stars is because the plot was too rushed and it should have been a bit longer. I reccomend this book to everyone who wants to read a very fun and imaginative book. Luckily he includes some pictures about certain things (some complex).
Rating: Summary: The Twenty One Balloons Review: The Twenty One Balloons William Pene du Bois Reviewed by S.Ali Period 6 Professor William Waterman Sherman leaves San Franciso and takes off in a journey to fly around the world in a hot-air balloon. But he doesn't know what adventures he will find. He crashes into the Pacific Ocean and is washed ashore the mysterious island of Krakatoa, where people dress like millionaires. They have exotic houses from all over the world and amazing inventions. But best of all there a millions of dollars of diamonds laying in the mines. I liked and enjoyed this book. I liked the book mostly. His adventures take you to an Island that is really different. Just a fun book with inventions. A hot air ballon ride across the world.That's full of danger anf mystry. I kind of dislike the book. For only one reason. That reason is because i think that the whole story seems rushed. But, other than that one thing. The story was a creative one. My favorite part in this book. Is when Professor William Waterman Sherman's hot-air balloon pops. And he ends up on this island he never heard of. Where there are dimaond mines that are worth millions of dollars. And, he gets to share the diamonds that the Krakatoas collected. I enjoyed this book.
Rating: Summary: Balloons, Balloons ,And More Balloons Review: The Twenty-One Balloons by William Pe'ne Du Bois is a very good book. It starts with W. Waterman Sherman, a schoolteacher in San Francisco, who wants to get away from it all for one full year in a hot air balloon. Just going any where the great winds took him. He thought he would have a nice long ride, and then something went (perfectly) for the better. Back to Sherman, in a heap of wood, barrels, and twenty large balloons almost drowning! But, his story starts when he goes in one huge balloon (the Globe, a huge one room apartment in the sky) across the ocean and is attacked by seagulls. With that, he lands on an island, not any ordinary island though. He lands on the island of Krakatoa, that island is a volcanic island. Though this book leaves you hanging a little too much, it describes this island place very well. This fiction book is set far back, for me, in time (1960's) and is funny. On Krakatoa there are lots of people like Mr. F, Mrs. F, F1, and F2. Every one is named that way on the island, from Mr. A to T2 every letter is there. Also on the island there is one thing that always helps the islanders, the largest and vastest diamond mines that are under the volcano!!!! This book is very good at pulling you in and never letting go. I would like to thank Mrs. Shaffer, the great teacher that told me that this is a great book and then made me read it, thanks. This book is great for kids 8-14 because it has a lot of neat things most people dream about. Also because it is kind of like a fairy tale but, a adventurous one. I would recommend this book to any one so, happy reading every one! KRAKATOA!!
Rating: Summary: Nice illustrations, but... Review: This book is OK. The premise held promise: a turn-of-the-century balloonist lands on Krakatoa and finds a fanciful civilization. But there was just something about all the lengthy descriptions of impossible inventions that struck me as not quite whimsically surreal, but rather just plain annoying. The illustrations were fun, but overall I just couldn't get into it.
Rating: Summary: Chris's review Review: This book was very interesting and you always wanted to keep reading this book.
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