The great Chicago fire : rising from the ashes
(Graphic Novel)
J/GRAPH 977.311 HANNI
1 available
Copies
Location | Call Number | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|
Cherrydale - Kids Graphic Novels | J/GRAPH 977.311 HANNI | Checked Out | June 7, 2025 |
Westover - Kids Graphic Novels | J/GRAPH 977.311 HANNI | Available | |
Westover - Kids Graphic Novels | J/GRAPH 977.311 HANNI | Checked Out | June 7, 2025 |
Westover - Kids Graphic Novels | J/GRAPH 977.311 HANNI | Checked Out | June 18, 2025 |
Westover - Kids Graphic Novels | J/GRAPH 977.311 HANNI | Long Overdue (Lost) | November 12, 2023 |
Description
Turn back the clock with History Comics! In The Great Chicago Fire you'll learn how a city rose up from one of the worst catastrophes in American history.A deadly blaze engulfs Chicago for two terrifying days! A brother, a sister, and a helpless puppy must race through the city to stay one step ahead of the devilish inferno. But can they reunite with their lost family before it’s too late?
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
In this inaugural installment of First Second's History Comics series (released simultaneously with an installment about the Roanoke colony), readers are plunged into 1871 Chicago. Through the fictionalized viewpoints of two siblings, the story follows the pair as they search the burning city for their parents. Hannigan includes lots of interesting facts throughout the narrative and tells the story of the fire in an understandable way. Readers will be engaged in the story of the children, all the while learning about how the fire started, why it was so powerful, and the racist ideology and xenophobia that led people to blame the fire on an Irish immigrant who was later exonerated. Graudins' bright, evocative illustrations neatly fit together with the text and bring the ferociousness of the fire amid vignettes sprinkled throughout that add context to local and national decisions. Supplemental material included at the beginning and end gives greater explanations and opportunities for further learning. Vibrant artwork and an engaging story make this a great vehicle for a poignant glimpse at American history.
Kirkus Book Review
Two young eyewitnesses link watershed events in Chicago's history: its massive fire in 1871 and the Columbian Exposition in 1893. Separated from their parents, Franny and John Patrick Fitzgerald flee amid panic-stricken crowds--and also witness flaring prejudice against the city's Irish immigrants--as the fire destroys one neighborhood after another. Both then reappear 22 years later as young parents to marvel over the Ferris wheel and other wonders of an exposition that was organized to highlight their city's brilliant recovery and promise. Hannigan sticks closely to historical records in tracing the causes and course of the fire (no, it was not the fault of either Mrs. O'Leary or her cow) as well as the architectural and infrastructure improvements wrought in its wake and the fair's artistic and technological highlights. If the dialogue sometimes assumes a declamatory cast ("There are so many new immigrants moving into the city--Greek, Italian, Jewish, Polish"), Graudins overlays the infodumps with small, intimate panels depicting period-clad people with appealingly open expressions (and, often, puppies in tow) in accurately drawn settings. Crowd scenes frequently feature both white characters like Franny and John Patrick and people of color…except at the Exposition, from which, as one character pointedly if anachronistically puts it, "African Americans" were excluded. Simultaneously publishing in the History Comics series, Chris Schweizer's The Roanoke Colony: America's First Mystery (with coloring by Liz Trice Schweizer) works period sources and modern archaeology into a snarky account of the early settlement's decidedly checkered career delivered by two local observers from the Secotan Nation. Both volumes close with source notes; students of the Windy City also get a modern tour and a timeline. A fictive plotline adds a strong "you are there" feel to this informative account. (bibliography, maps, additional facts) (Graphic historical fiction. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
In this inaugural installment of First Second's History Comics series (released simultaneously with an installment about the Roanoke colony), readers are plunged into 1871 Chicago. Through the fictionalized viewpoints of two siblings, the story follows the pair as they search the burning city for their parents. Hannigan includes lots of interesting facts throughout the narrative and tells the story of the fire in an understandable way. Readers will be engaged in the story of the children, all the while learning about how the fire started, why it was so powerful, and the racist ideology and xenophobia that led people to blame the fire on an Irish immigrant who was later exonerated. Graudins' bright, evocative illustrations neatly fit together with the text and bring the ferociousness of the fire amid vignettes sprinkled throughout that add context to local and national decisions. Supplemental material included at the beginning and end gives greater explanations and opportunities for further learning. Vibrant artwork and an engaging story make this a great vehicle for a poignant glimpse at American history. Grades 4-8. Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.
Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Hannigan, K. (2020). The great Chicago fire: rising from the ashes (First edition.). First Second.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Hannigan, Kate. 2020. The Great Chicago Fire: Rising From the Ashes. New York: First Second.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Hannigan, Kate. The Great Chicago Fire: Rising From the Ashes New York: First Second, 2020.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Hannigan, K. (2020). The great chicago fire: rising from the ashes. First edn. New York: First Second.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Hannigan, Kate. The Great Chicago Fire: Rising From the Ashes First edition., First Second, 2020.