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[EVE]≡ [PDF] Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books

Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books



Download As PDF : Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books

Download PDF Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books


Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books

I read this to an 8 year-old for home school history lessons. We really enjoyed the book. The story of Antony and Cleopatra especially interested her.

There are pictures of major people for each section. I photo-copied some of them for my daughter to colour while I read. It gave her a quiet activity related to the story while she listened to the reading.

Mrs. Foster wanted to give an overview of other events around the world in this era. It includes a survey of major world religions and events in chapters between the main action of the story. This made the story a little choppy and took away from the main narrative, but overall, the book was still very good.

Read Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books

Tags : Amazon.com: Augustus Caesar's World (9780964380325): Genevieve Foster: Books,Genevieve Foster,Augustus Caesar's World,Beautiful Feet Bks,0964380323,History - Ancient,History World,Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9),Juvenile Nonfiction

Augustus Caesar World Genevieve Foster Books Reviews


I needed this book for my daughters school.
My friend recommended this book in my first year of homeschooling my son. I read it like a novel, in bed, in the bath, riding in the car, I could not put it down! It's everything I never learned in high school (public school) because those old textbooks were so boring! Not so with this book! There are just enough drawings in the book to illustrate who and what these people were like! I would have wanted to read this book just for fun and I hope my 8th grader will too! I will let him give his own review!
Don't let the title make you think this is just about Augustus Caesar. It's about everything and everyone relatively close to his lifetime. A comprehensive history, this tells more of many individual people and their stories, as well as collective groups/cultures, and in a way that's easy to read and interesting. Even though I knew some of what was in here already, I didn't mind reading about it again in this volume because of the presentation and additional insight and information. Plus, there was much more that I didn't already know.

I bought this book to use to wrap up a unit on ancient history in our homeschool. It served that purpose well. However, I will read this book again just for my own pleasure in coming years.
I checked this out from the library to research it as a possible source for our homeschooling library and have had trouble putting it down. It reads like a story and I love the way Foster inserts chapters that let you know what else is going on in the world at the time. My 5 year old son asked me to start reading it aloud to him after learning it was about Ancient Rome, and I was hesitant, concerned that it would be too far above him. But with some summarizing on my part at the end of every few paragraphs and asking him questions to see how well he was tracking, I discovered he really was understanding more than I thought and he was soon hooked. He didn't even want me to stop reading when he got up to use the restroom -- he hollered from down the hall, "Just keep reading loud, Mom, and I can still hear you. I want you to read all the way to the end!" Of course, we didn't finish the whole book in that sitting, but he's asked for it every day since. I look forward to checking out Foster's other histories.
One of the great bonuses of parenting is that you get to introduce books to your own kids that wowed you when you were a kid yourself. Sometimes your children love the books as much as you did; sometimes they don't. But in either case, you get to revisit with old friends and see how much you and they have changed and retained over the years.
Some of my best book friends when I was a kid were the wonderful illustrated histories of Genevieve Foster, and the one I loved most was *Augustus Caesar's World.* I recently introduced it (and a few others *Washington's World*, *Lincoln's World*, *John Smith's World*, *Columbus's World*) to my 8 year old, and he's discovering the magic in them I did so many years ago.
There are three qualities to *Augustus Caesar's World* that make it so entertaining and educating. The first is that it's incredibly well written. Foster has the gift of breathing life into historical accounts. In reading about Cicero's execution or the life of Siddhartha, for example, one experiences all the dreadful waste of the one and the liberating wonder of the other. Second, the book is wonderfully illustrated by Foster herself. The illustrations are themselves instructive along with individual scenarios, she provides time-lines, illustrated most fetchingly, that conveniently encapsulate events and persons. Finally, Foster's histories are really world histories. In *Augustus Caesar's World,* she focuses on the events leading up to the end of the Roman Republic and the establishment of the Empire (roughly, 44BCE to 14 CE). But she doesn't limit herself to Roman history; she also examines events taking place across the world during the time frame in which she's working the druids in Gaul, Hindus in India, Confucius in China, Mayans in the Americas, and so on. She even includes intellectual history the origins of Christianity and Buddhism, the Upanishadic culture of the Hindus, etc. Her aim is to give the reader a wide angle of vision, and she succeeds wonderfully.
I'm grateful that Foster's histories are being republished. They don't patronize kids by resorting to silly gimmicks that supposedly make learning more palatable (or at least more marketable). Instead, they make history fascinating the old fashioned way by showing that it's a great story in its own right. They're a great discovery for my son, and a great rediscovery for me.
I really enjoyed this book. It was well illustrated and it gave me good visual connections. Very informative. Everything was easy to understand; however,I feel as though the topics often interrupted each other. For example, the book would be explaining the Roman affairs of Augustus, then it would suddenly jump-cut to another civilization, and sometimes, a different time period. Now, all the topics explained in the book are relevant to the Roman world in a sense that they all influenced Rome; but I feel as though the little "back-stories" that are given unexpectedly about other civilizations or characters are a little to long. Yet, the book was definitely enjoyable to read and I would most certainly recommend it. "Augustus Caesar's World" is a great read for those seeking more knowledge on the Roman Empire and the other civilizations that were present during that time period.
I read this to an 8 year-old for home school history lessons. We really enjoyed the book. The story of Antony and Cleopatra especially interested her.

There are pictures of major people for each section. I photo-copied some of them for my daughter to colour while I read. It gave her a quiet activity related to the story while she listened to the reading.

Mrs. Foster wanted to give an overview of other events around the world in this era. It includes a survey of major world religions and events in chapters between the main action of the story. This made the story a little choppy and took away from the main narrative, but overall, the book was still very good.
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