Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims: Time-Travel Adventures with Exceptional Americans
Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims: Time-Travel Adventures with Exceptional Americans
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2013--
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Just the Series: Rush Revere   

Series and Publisher: Rush Revere   

Annotation: Substitute middle-school history teacher Rush Revere takes his students back in time to experience American history as it happens aboard the Mayflower and on Plymouth Plantation.
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #90915
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Copyright Date: 2013
Edition Date: 2013 Release Date: 10/29/13
Pages: 212 pages
ISBN: 1-476-75586-8
ISBN 13: 978-1-476-75586-1
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2013034119
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

There are a lot of things wrong with Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims. But, first, the good news: mostly th some exceptions tes, names, and places aren't a problem. Context, however, is in the eyes of the beholder. But let's begin with the opening author's note. After offering a wide-ranging definition of American exceptionalism that begins with the statement that the U.S. is a "land built on true freedom and individual liberty, and it defends both around the world," Limbaugh goes on to explain that the Founders believed all people were born to be "free as individuals." Really? All people? That should give anyone pause who knows something about history. Then it's on to the narrative. The book's premise is that a substitute history teacher, Rush Revere, who dresses like his hero, Paul, along with his talking horse, Liberty, can go back in time. This takeoff on the Magic School Bus and Magic Tree House series has none of their charm. The text is wordy, and many of the pages are spent on the banter between Rush and Liberty, occasionally amusing but mostly just filling space, as do the tedious explanations of the way time travel works. The actual historical episodes are marked by commentary. For instance, Rush Revere watches the passengers on the Mayflower and notes that "the hardship they experienced . . . is something modern-day people will seldom, if ever, experience. . . . They hadn't been spoiled by wall-to-wall carpets, central heating and microwave ovens." The fact that many modern-day people do experience incredible hardships, albeit different from the Pilgrims, seems not to have occurred to Limbaugh. And let's not forget the cross-branding. The images of Rush Revere throughout the book are the same as Limbaugh's logos used on his Two if by Tea website, where he sells, yes, tea. The book ends with the first Thanksgiving. Apparently, the turnaround for the struggling colony came "when every family was assigned its own plot of land to work." Rush Revere drives home the point that it was after the Pilgrims stopped sharing the profits that success was ensured. Even Squanto adds, "No more slaves to the Common House." As for factual inaccuracies, Paul Revere never said, "The British are coming!" That was Mr. Longfellow. Despite the book's numerous shortcomings history, as fiction, as comedy will generate demand in some libraries, thanks to the author's celebrity. Order only as that demand dictates.

Kirkus Reviews

Supercool substitute teacher Rush Revere and his time-traveling horse, Liberty, take two students to 1620 to meet such exceptional Americans as William Bradford and Squanto. In a series of jumps, the amiable Rush takes football player and closet nerd Tommy and pretty, soft-spoken, dark-skinned Freedom (possibly Native American) to such significant moments as the Mayflower's embarkation from England, its landing at Plymouth and the first Thanksgiving. In their encounters, they learn about the Pilgrims' quest for religious freedom, the difficult conditions they faced both onboard and in the New World, and how the fledgling colony's relations with the local Native Americans were established. The presentation of history adheres to the standard narrative presented in classrooms for decades throughout the 20th century. Readers looking for Limbaugh's politics won't have to search hard. Tommy and Rush school Bradford in the values of competition and individualism, while Bradford and Squanto give thanks to God for seeing them through adversity. The storytelling that carries history, adventure and politics is breathtakingly inept. The rules governing both time travel and Liberty's remarkable powers are both inconsistent and so arbitrarily convenient they feel as though they were made up as the author went along. Rush and the children's interactions with historical figures are thoroughly wooden and elide the basic rules of the genre; Bradford never questions Rush's late-18th-century getup, for instance, and is stupendously incurious about their monthslong absences. The prose never rises above amateurish and often reads as though written by the middle school students Rush teaches: "Tommy plopped down on a random desk…." Although the faux parchment pages catch the eye, illustration, design and even proofreading (Samoset is consistently misspelled "Somoset" in the text though not in captions or the author's note) are as rudimentary and slipshod as the prose. The ever hungry Liberty provides needed, if lame, comic relief. A closing quiz leads readers to the website twoifbytea.com for answers. Exceptionally bad. (Fantasy. 8-12)

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Word Count: 43,169
Reading Level: 5.4
Interest Level: 3-6
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.4 / points: 7.0 / quiz: 163160 / grade: Middle Grades
Lexile: 740L

From America’s #1 radio talk-show host and multi-million-copy #1 New York Times bestselling author, a book for young readers with a history teacher who travels back in time to have adventures with exceptional Americans.

MEET RUSH LIMBAUGH’S REALLY GOOD PAL, RUSH REVERE!

Okay, okay, my name’s really Rusty—but my friends call me Rush. Rush Revere. Because I’ve always been the #1 fan of the coolest colonial dude ever, Paul Revere. Talk about a rock star—this guy wanted to protect young America so badly, he rode through those bumpy, cobblestone-y streets shouting “the British are coming!” On a horse. Top of his lungs. Wind blowing, rain streaming...

Well, you get the picture. But what if you could get the real picture—by actually going back in time and seeing with your own eyes how our great country came to be? Meeting the people who made it all happen—people like you and me?

Hold on to your pointy triangle hats, because you can—with me, Rush Revere, seemingly ordinary substitute history teacher, as your tour guide across time! “How?” you ask? Well, there’s this portal. And a horse. My talking horse named Liberty. And—well, just trust me, I’ll get us there.

We’ll begin by joining a shipload of brave families journeying on the Mayflower in 1620. Yawn? I don’t think so. 1620 was a pretty awesome time, and you’ll experience exactly what they did on that rough, dangerous ocean crossing. Together, we’ll ask the pilgrims all our questions, find out how they live, join them at the first Thanksgiving, and much more.

So saddle up and let’s ride! Our exceptional nation is waiting to be discovered all over again by exceptional young patriots—like you!


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