From Booklist:
Gr. 4-8. Here's a book for girls that will make them jump for joy! It's a hodgepodge celebration of Double Dutch, the "queen of jump rope," which over the years has become a magnificent team game. Double Dutch is quite a sight to see. It's not like sissy old jump rope. It's the awesome WACK! WACK! WACK! of double ropes, the amazing jumping of the girls, and the familiar rhyme-calls used to keep the cadence. Chambers offers a miscellany of Double Dutch history, interviews, great photos, rhymes, poems, and stories, including how a black female student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute created her childhood dream: the automatic Double-Dutch Machine. There's also a section on Japanese teams, who now come to the contests--and often win. Display this with Sharon Draper's recent novel, Double Dutch [BKL S 1 02], for immediate response. Jean Franklin
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From School Library Journal:
Grade 4-6-A book that is as snappy and fresh as its subject. Chambers introduces readers to the world of jump roping through personal reminiscences, wonderful action photos, and factual narratives. The book looks like a vibrant collage; a clean typeface is interspersed with pictures and inserts of the rhymes themselves. From it, readers learn not only the history of double Dutch (jumping between two twirling ropes dates back to the ancient civilizations in Phoenicia, Egypt, and China) and its current state, but also experience some of the joy of jumping. Joanna Cole has compiled jump rhymes in Anna Banana (Morrow, 1989), but Chambers re-creates the vibrant context in which they live.
Kathleen Whalin, York Public Library, ME
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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