Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is a New York Times bestselling author and one of the nation's leading environmental activists. He is past president of Waterkeeper Alliance, the world's largest clean water advocacy group; founder of the Pace University Environmental Litigation Clinic; a former Senior Attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council; and a former Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan. He also is founder of Children's Health Defense, a nonprofit global advocacy group. He has written three children's books and many books for adults, including the New York Times bestsellers Crimes Against Nature, The Riverkeepers, and The Real Anthony Fauci. Mr. Kennedy was named one of TIME magazine's "Heroes for the Planet" for his success helping Riverkeeper lead the fight to restore the Hudson River. Kennedy is a master falconer and former president of the New York State Falconry Association.
"Grade 1–4–Kennedy's passion for nature and lifelong connection to
this saint are evident in both the narrative and introduction, in
which he reveals his personal convictions. The book paints Francis
in glowing terms (with some fictionalized dialogue), weaving
together the major threads of his life: his early kindness to
beggars in his family's fabric shop; his call to and ultimate
rejection of a military career; his estrangement from his wealthy
father; and his ministry to lepers, the impoverished, and animals.
The famous prayer, "Lord, make me an instrument of Your Peace…," is
printed across the bottom of the pages. Nolan's oil paintings
render realistic figures in carefully staged scenes. The
architecture and landscape of Assisi are accurately captured,
although the New Age angel depicted at the conclusion is
anachronistic. While much of the information overlaps with that
found in Guido Visconti's Clare and Francis (Eerdmans,
2004), the telling and aesthetic are quite different; the books
will appeal to vastly different audiences." —School Library
Journal
"Gr. 2-4. Sharing the middle name of Francis with his father,
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. felt especially close to St. Francis while
growing up, and the gentle saint continues to play an important
part in his personal and family life. Here Kennedy offers a
straightforward telling of Francis' life that, nonetheless, seems
imbued with the splendor of the saint's mission. As Kennedy notes
in his introduction, Francis' life was so full that not everything
about it could be included. But his well-told biography, which
introduces Francis as a frivolous yet charming King of Youth and
follows him to his welcoming "Sister Death," also describes
incidents such as Francis' reconciliation with the wolf of Grubbio
and his relationship with St. Clare, who started an order of nuns
similar to the Franciscan brothers' order. The book is illustrated
with full-page, realistic paintings, which, while technically
adept, have little sense of wonder or mystery. It's the words
(including Francis' Canticle of the Sun on the back cover) that
paint the pictures in this book." —Booklist
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