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Rating:  Summary: A GREAT book Review: I am almost nineteen years old and in college, and you would think I would find a book for younger girls boring. Not at all. This book is wonderful for girls of any age. Isabel's story not only is wonderul to read, but it also gives girls the wonderful gift of telling them that they can be anything they want and the best thing to be is themselves. I loved the American Girl books from Pleasant Company when I was younger and the Girls of Many Lands series is right up there with them :)
Rating:  Summary: Moral-filled story Review: I've always heard that in many cultures and countries, boys are given so much more freedom than girls, and they get so many more privleges. I really think that's extremely unfair. Isabel: Taking Wing reiterates that boys are not better than girls. She has to stay at home all day while her brother, Robert, gets to go be an apprentice to a blacksmith. But whe Isabel goes to her aunt's place, she and I realized how great it is to help other people. Isabel also realized that she can't let a petty thing like how her other aunt is mean to her stop her from being adventurous. I admire her aunt so much for dedicating her life to helping others. It's an amazing book full of morals and lessons for life.
Rating:  Summary: A GREAT book Review: Isabel: Taking Wing is a VERY good book. It tells about her life as a twelve-year-old in England in 1592. She becomes friends with Meg, a servant girl. But when she an Meg go to a theater alone, they end up staying too long, and they steal a boat that almost sinks. When Isabel returns home very late, her strict aunt tells her father what she's done, and she's sent away to her Aunt de Vere's country estate. When she finally returns home, her father forgives her after she saves her baby sister from dying. The only bad part in this book is when Meg dies from the plauge. This is a fantastic book.
Rating:  Summary: Isabel: Taking Wing...... Review: Isabel: Taking Wing proved to be a good book. While it started a little slow and boring, it picked up very quick. The book is about 12-year-old Isabel Campion, the third eldest child and second eldest daughter to a wealthy merchant in Elizabethan England. Isabel begins to feel lonely and longs for adventure after learning of her older sister's plans to marry and her older brother Robert's plans to travel to India. Isabel is unhappy about the prospect of keeping house with her overbearing Aunt Elinor. As a result, she befriends one of the household servants, a girl named Meg, and the two go across the river to the Rose theater to watch a play. But Isabel stays for too long and is caught. Her punishment is to go to her Aunt de Vere's, but along the way, she and her escort are attacked by Brigands--the servant is killed and all of Isabel's posessions and horse are stolen. Luckily, she meets up with the performing group she met at the Rose theater. Isabel is accepted into the group--and is disguised as a boy. Once delivered to her Aunt de Vere's house, Isabel finds that she has a lot to learn about her kind Aunt, who teaches her many things. But when something terrible happens at home, Isabel finds out that she is needed after all, and that she can make a difference. The book includes a section on England during the Elizabethan era and the England of today. If you are a big fan of The American Girls Collection and the Dear America series, I highly recommend this book!
Rating:  Summary: Marvelous Addition to the 'Girls of Many Lands' Series Review: The year is 1592, and twelve-year-old Isabel Campion is living under the strict rule of her Aunt Elinor in an upper-class neighborhood located in London. Isabel, unlike other 12-year-olds, wants nothing more than to escape the "conformist" society she is forced to grow up in. She doesn't want to spend her days cleaning stains out of shirts, or learning how to sew perfectly; but rather longs to explore the world, and become an actor like the boys she sees perform at the playhouse. Unfortunately, that's another thing Isabel is unable to do. Perform. For girls are not actors, and even the roles of females are played by males. When Isabel is sent to her Aunt de Vere's home, she becomes lost, and joins a group of boys who accept her as one of their own, and allow her to become an actor like them. But maybe acting isn't what Isabel was after all. Maybe there's nothing in the world that is perfect for her.
As a fan of the GIRLS OF MANY LANDS series, as well as sixteenth-century London, I found that ISABEL: TAKING WING was a perfect addition to the collection. Isabel is a spirited young girl, who is brave, and kindhearted, and will easily keep readers enthralled from the first page to the very last. Filled with many informational tidbits regarding sixteenth-century life, as well as information about London-born girls of today, Annie Dalton's effort will be cherished.
Erika Sorocco
Book Review Columnist for The Community Bugle Newspaper
Rating:  Summary: Summary of Isabel Taking Wing Review: This book provides for the reader a very accurate and correct description of England in the year 1592 while still providing and interesting read for a variety of age groups. Let's look at this book from the point in which you might want to read it and the different points of view of different people. If you wanted to read this book for information on the culture of England during the year 1592 there are several specific details which may be of special interest to you. First of all, the whole book, especially in the Then and Now part, have accurate descriptions of the clothing that was worn by women and girls in this time period. You learn about the different layers of their clothing and how clothes were used as a symbol of wealth and priveleage. You also learn of the accesorie called a pomander, which was important as it was supposed to ward off dieases such as plague. You also learn a bit about the hierarchy of birds and plays in that time. There are also hints about a women's place in society at the time. If your purpose in reading this book was to learn about plauge, you also have several important details. In the book, especially at the end, you can find the symptoms of plauge. These may not be written out and palced in a list so to speak, but if you look for them and are good at inferencing, you will easily find them. Also, in the Then and now Section, you find about the attempts made my doctors in those times to ward of plauge. You also find out about how plauge spread, when it happened, and what families did if plauge hit them. Of course, for many people, the reason they read this book was just to find an interesting book to read, and this book had details for them too. There are good descriptions in the book. Also, there are some parts in the story that are not necesseraly important to the overall plot, but form interesting, small sub-plots of their own, that make the book interesting and fun to read all around, although people who were reading this for specific information might have found those parts annoying. Many girls can connect to Isabel and her feelings, which are ones that we most likely have all experianced during our lives. Most of us can also probably imagine how it would be in this situation and if not you'd still might feel a bit saddened at first for Isabel. This book is also very well written. The desciptions are very colorful and entertaing but they still give us insight on life in 1592 England. The parts that are funny, entertaining, and don't completely relate to the overall plot do not take over the book as in some other novels that I can metion but would prefer not to. The grammer is also very correct and the sentence starters vary, thus keeping the book from being dull. In conclusion, this book is very informative, while still being interesting and entertaining. We can probably relate to it and it is extremely well written. I reccommend this to anyone of any age no matter what your reason for reading is.
Rating:  Summary: If you love adventure, take wing to this book! Review: This book, Isabel: Taking Wing, was written by Annie Dalton. It was set in the Elizabethan age in London, in the year 1592. It is the first of the five books in the series Girls of Many Lands, which tells about girls in history, how they are alike and different from girls today. Isabel: Taking Wing has about 180 pages and 12 chapters. Though the book was hard to get into at first, it became very exciting after the first few chapters. In addition to the story, the author put a section in the back of the book that tells what the women wore, as well as historical facts and pictures about Queen Elizabeth I and Shakespeare's theater. This book comes with a colorful Isabel bookmark where you can keep your place in the book. This book has a very colorful picture of Isabel on the front, but no pictures while you are reading the story. I don't like that about the book. But I do like how the author wrote the book in first person, where you can feel what Isabel felt. She really described Isabel's thoughts and dreams in an exciting, fun to read way. I love the way the author filled this book with happy, sad and exciting times that Isabel experienced in her life. Isabel is a 12-year-old girl growing up in a wealthy house in London. The author tells how Isabel grows tired of endless chores to prepare her for being a lady. So she sneaks out to see a Shakespeare play, but she is found out and banished to live at her aunt's house in the countryside. On the way there she is attacked by thieves. They leave her unharmed, but lost and alone. She then joins a band of actors, disguised as a boy, and finally gets a taste of the freedom she longs for. But it is not the freedom she imagined it to be. By the end of the book, though, she is reunited with her family, and discovers what freedom really means. This book has many historical details, as well as good humor. It tells how women were expected to run the household and men to earn the money, like trading overseas that was Isabel's father's job. As Isabel bluntly put it, "Women must stay indoors, sewing stitches so fine that no one will ever see them. Our work is only visible if we do it badly. But men's work is very visible if you do it wisely." Isabel also says, "Girls must always be good and stay at home. But when you are a boy the world can be your home." Isabel longs for adventure, and finds it in this book, and you will too!
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