Rosemary Zibart is an award-winning playwright and children’s book author. Her charming picture books include “I have a Grandma who…” (for passionate boomer grandmas) and Kit Coyote: A Brave Pup (for foster children). Her first two middle grade novels, True Brit and Forced Journey, featured youths dislocated by World War 2, and both won the New Mexico Book Award for historic fiction and a Silver Nautilus Award for historical fiction. An upcoming book in this series, Beatrice, focuses on a Japanese Internment Camp built outside Santa Fe which angers locals. Ms. Zibart lives in Santa Fe with her husband and family. Learn more about her at www.rosemaryzibart.com. George Lawrence is an illustrator living in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He received a bachelor's degree in Architecture from Auburn University and worked as a designer in New York City for twelve years. Since relocating to Santa Fe in 1991 he has specialized in architectural illustrations, as well as natural and cultural history subjects for interpretive exhibits. George has recently completed illustrations for a children's book on the scientific discoveries of Charles Darwin. He is also working on a series of illustrations of New Mexico city plazas.
The story is simple but engaging, as appealing for adults as it is
for children. The portrayal of Santa Fe in the 1940's is
reminiscent of Richard Bradford'sRed Sky at Morning, with its
entrancing mix of people and cultures that existed in the city
before the advent of urban sprawl. - - The New Mexican
What makes Rosemary Zibart's True Brit most engaging is the
attention to detail, from descriptions of mud homes and pinon trees
to "A-okay" American slang. Beatrice's journal entries add more
insight into her evolution from a privileged girl to the beginnings
of a modern woman. The first in a series, this fresh take on the
era will continue with more stories about displaced children during
World War II. - - Bookpage
True Brit - Beatrice: 1940" achieves what a historical novel should
achieve. It informs and entertains and the two elements combine to
make the learning lasting. - - Tumbleweeds Magazine
There is nothing more terrifying than having one's child in a
warzone. True Brit: Beatrice, 1940 is a historical novel drawing
from history of many British people who sent their children away to
Santa Fe and other places in the United States for safety, to keep
them from the vicious war that would be fought in the skies over
London. Terrifying for the children and parents being faced with a
whole new world and concern over the home the left behind, True
Brit is a fine read for younger readers that is educational as it
is entertaining. - - Midwest Book Review
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