Njinga "The Warrior Queen"
By (Author) Janie Havemeyer
Illustrated by Peter Malone
Goosebottom Books Llc
Goosebottom Books Llc
1st September 2012
United States
Children
Non Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: History and the past
966.02
Commended for Independent Publisher Book Awards (Multicultural Nf Teen/YA) 2012
Hardback
32
Width 228mm, Height 215mm
326g
Njinga, the Warrior Queen, fought fiercely to keep her people from slavery. Yet she engaged in slave tradingherself, performed human sacrifices and - somebelieved - evenmurdered her nephew, feasting on his heart. WasNjinga a terrifying tyrant or a freedom fighterGorgeous illustrations and a smart, evocative story bring to life a dastardly dame who did whatever it took to winand protect her kingdom.
Janie Havemeyer has worked as a museum educator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, an elementary school teacher in the San Francisco Bay Area, and a social studies curriculum designer. For the past six years, she has been working as a literacy tutor. She writes narrative, nonfiction picture books for children, and is busy thinking about the next eccentric character whose story she wants to tell. Janie is the author of Catherine de' Medici "The Black Queen," and Njinga "The Warrior Queen," both in The Thinking Girl's Treasury of Dastardly Dames. Peter Malone has illustrated over twenty children's books for such publishers as Chronicle, Knopf, Putnam, Running Press, and Scholastic. In addition to creating gorgeous illustrations, he wrote the book, Close to the Wind, about the use of the Beaufort scale for measuring wind force at sea. School Library Journal called it "informative and utterly charming." He lives in Bath, England, with his wife, a restorer of paintings, and their two grown daughters.