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The steadfast tin soldier / Hans Christian. [print]

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Danish Publication details: New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, (c)1953.Description: (unpaged) : illustrations ; 26 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0684125072
  • 9780684125077
Uniform titles:
  • Standhaftige tinsoldat. English
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • PZ8.A542.B879.S743 1953
  • PZ8.A544.S743 1953
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Awards:
  • Caldecott Honor Book, 1954.
Summary: After being accidentally launched on a dangerous and terrible voyage, a one-legged soldier finds his way back to his true love--a paper dancing girl.
Item type: Juvenile Book (10-day checkout)
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Juvenile Book (10-day checkout) G. Allen Fleece Library Caldecott Collection - Second Floor Fiction PZ8.A534.S743 1953 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Caldecott Honor,1954 31923001696026

After being accidentally launched on a dangerous and terrible voyage, a one-legged soldier finds his way back to his true love--a paper dancing girl.

Preschool. Kindergarten. Grade one. Grade two. Grade three. https://www.amazon.com/Steadfast-Tin-Soldier-Tor-Seidler/dp/1481476629/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=steadfast+tin+soldier&qid=1572546131&sr=8-1

COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:

Andersen was born on April 2, 1805, in Odense, Denmark. His parents were poor; his father worked as a shoemaker and his mother was a washerwoman. His father, who died when Andersen was 11, entertained him with old Danish legends and stories from The Arabian Nights. The people of Odense never knew what to make of the tall, awkward boy. When he recited long passages from plays or did a clumsy dance or insisted on singing, they could hardly help laughing. Everyone advised him to learn a trade, but this he would not do. He was forever saying that he was going to be famous. In 1819, Andersen moved to the capital city of Copenhagen, where he hoped to become an actor in the Royal Theater. Many people of the theater and wealthy families of the city tried to help him, without much success. His dancing master gave up, and so did his singing teacher. Directors of the Royal Theater sympathized with his efforts to write plays but finally concluded that Andersen needed an education. One of the directors raised money to send him away to school. The next few years were the unhappiest of his life. Andersen was much older than the other students, and the schoolmaster found endless ways to make fun of him. Finally when word of Andersen's plight reached his benefactors in Copenhagen, he was removed from the school and put into the hands of a private tutor. He later attended and graduated from Copenhagen University. After his schooling, Andersen spent many years traveling and writing poems, books, and plays, which met with some success. It was not until he was 30 that he wrote any fairy tales. His first small book of fairy tales became popular almost immediately, and from then on his fame grew rapidly, spreading from country to country. Andersen put many pieces of his own life into his fairy tales. He never forgot that his mother as a young girl had been forced to go begging. This led him to write "The Little Match Girl," a story full of compassion for the unfortunate ones of this Earth. And his own personal experiences are reflected in "The Ugly Duckling," which points out that sometimes the qualities that make you feel lonely, different, and out of place are the very qualities that, when properly used, can make you shine. In 1867 he returned to Odense to be honored by his country. Standing on the balcony of the hall where the ceremony was held, he saw below him the city square, full of people who cheered him, and bright with thousands of candles burning in the windows of all the buildings. Andersen published his last fairy tales in 1872, and after a long illness, he died in Copenhagen on August 4, 1875. Biography written by Danny Kaye for The New Book of Knowledge®. 2008. For more online resources, visit Grolier Onlinehttps://www.scholastic.com/teachers/authors/hans-christian-andersen/ .

Caldecott Honor Book, 1954.

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