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Sugarcane Academy: How a New Orleans Teacher and His Storm-Struck Students Creat

2011-11-23 
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 Sugarcane Academy: How a New Orleans Teacher and His Storm-Struck Students Created a School to Remember


基本信息·出版社:Harvest Books
·页码:192 页
·出版日期:2007年07月
·ISBN:0156031892
·条形码:9780156031899
·装帧:平装
·正文语种:英语
·丛书名:Harvest Original

内容简介 在线阅读本书

Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, taking lives and livelihoods and displacing thousands. Because the hurricane struck at the beginning of the school year, the city's children were among those most affected. Michael Tisserand, former editor of the alternative cultural newspaper Gambit Weekly, evacuated with his family to New Iberia, Louisiana. Then, rather than waiting to find out when--or if--schools in New Orleans would reopen, Tisserand and other parents persuaded one of his children's teachers, Paul Reynaud, to start a school among the sugarcane fields.

So was born the Sugarcane Academy--as the children themselves named it--and so also began an experience none of Reynaud's pupils will ever forget. This inspiring book shows how a dedicated teacher made the best out of the worst situation, and how the children of New Orleans, of all backgrounds and races, adjusted to Katrina's consequences.
作者简介 MICHAEL TISSERAND is the author of The Kingdom of Zydeco, which won the ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for music writing. He served as editor of Gambit Weekly, the alternative newsweekly of New Orleans. He lives in Evanston, Illinois.


编辑推荐 Review
"A slender but appealing book...[about] a remarkable teacher named Paul Reynaud, the sort of person who has a gift for understanding children's wants and needs..." -- The New York Times (Education Supplement), July 29, 2007

"Every so often a remarkable tale of human resiliency comes our way. It is especially moving when that saga enables vulnerable children to overcome adversity. Sugarcane Academy is a story that needed to be told. The contents of its pages open our eyes to how a disaster in New Orleans can bring forth creativity and empathy that we all need to emulate." -- Dr. M.D. Levine, author of "A Mind at a Time"

"The contrast between the hopefulness and ingenuity of the parents, students and teachers who created the school and the despair of downtrodden bureaucrats and volunteers who, in Tisserand's gentle telling, established policies and protocols that become roadblocks to spiritual and physical regeneration is huge." -- LA Times, Susan Salter Reynolds, July 15, 2007

"The story of Sugarcane Academy is as inspiring as it is moving and sometimes sad, and as much a reflection on the resilience of children and dedicated teachers as it is on the hardships faced by everyone displaced by the storm...heartwarming." -- Times Picayne (New Orleans), July 8, 2007

"Through his personal account, the experiences of his two children and the stories of people he encounters, Tisserand is able to accomplish what the extensive news coverage could not: He puts a human face on the tragedy, allowing readers to better understand the experiences of the victims of Katrina." -- Bookpage, August 2007

Review
"Every so often a remarkable tale of human resiliency comes our way. It is especially moving when that saga enables vulnerable children to overcome adversity. Sugarcane Academy is a story that needed to be told. The contents of its pages open our eyes to how a disaster in New Orleans can bring forth creativity and empathy that we all need to emulate." (Mel Levine, M.D. author of A Mind at a Time 08/01/2007)

"Writing with the same warmth and humanity that distinguished his ASCAP Deems Taylor Award-winning The Kingdom of Zydeco (1998), Tisserand offers tender, revealing profiles of Reynaud, his fellow volunteer teachers and others affected by the evacuation...Inspirational and heartwarming." (Starred Review) (Kirkus Reviews 07/15/2007)

"A testament to the teachers who supported Katrina''s children, Sugarcane Academy reminds us all that heroes hold small hands on field trips, clean paint brushes, and sing morning songs." (Phillip Done, author of 32 Third Graders and One Class Bunny 07/29/2007)

"This wonderful memoir manages to do what a flood of news-reporting could not: see the tragedy of Katrina through the eyes of children. I was touched by the depth of feeling that wells from these pages, and I was heartened by the resilience and courage of these Children of the Storm. Katrina impressed itself indelibly on a generation of New Orleans children, and Tisserand makes the complexity real through the story of his own children and that of their friends in exile. The story of The Sugarcane Academy, an improvised one-room school in a sugar-cane parish in south Louisiana, will be one of the lasting books of our tragedy." (Andrei Codrescu, author of New Orleans, Mon Amour 09/01/2007)

"Michael Tisserand knows more about life in New Orleans than anybody else I know. Sugarcane Academy is a poignant, well-written and awe-inspiring non-fiction saga of Louisiana citizens coping with Katrina''s wrath. Highly recommended." (Douglas Brinkley 08/01/2007)

"With his sharp eye for detail and his abundant heart, Tisserand paints a devastating portrait of the toll exacted by Hurricane Katrina, particularly on the children. Simple, compelling, and quietly dramatic, Sugarcane Academy is both eulogy and commencement -- a tribute to the endurance of the human spirit." (Mike Sager, Writer-at-Large Esquire 08/19/2007)

"Heartwarming...The story of Sugarcane Academy is as inspiring as it is moving and sometimes sad, and as much a reflection on the resilience of children and dedicated teachers as it is on the hardships faced by everyone displaced by the storm." (Times Picayne (New Orleans) )

"Through his personal account, the experiences of his two children and the stories of people he encounters, Tisserand is able to accomplish what the extensive news coverage could not: He puts a human face on the tragedy, allowing readers to better understand the experiences of the victims of Katrina." (Bookpage )

"The contrast between the hopefulness and ingenuity of the parents,students and teachers who created the school and the despair of downtrodden bureaucrats and volunteers who, in Tisserand''s gentle telling, established policies and protocols that become roadblocks to spiritual and physical regeneration is huge." (Susan Salter Reynolds LA Times )

"A slender but appealing book...[about] a remarkable teacher named Paul Reynaud, the sort of person who has a gift for understanding children''s wants and needs..." (Charles McGrath The New York Times Education Supplement )

"When journalist Michael Tisserand and his family found themselves escaping the maelstrom of Hurricane Katrina, he turned his investigative eye on the aftermath as his family and others helped create a one-room schoolhouse for evacuee children. This true story of how determination, faith, and a sheer force of will allowed learning and hope to blossom in the office space that became the only public school open in New Orleans." (FamilyCircle.com )

"This book delivers insightful anecdotes on the incredible misfortune Katrina wrought. But it also embodies the spirit of the people who rose from the floodwaters and dared to plant seeds of hope in the sugarcane fields." (Southern Living Magazine )

"[Tisserand''s] ''Sugarcane Academy: How a New Orleans Teacher and His Storm-Struck Students Created a School to Remember'' is that seemingly impossible thing -- a gentle, hopeful tale about the displaced and the small Cajun town where they landed...It''s an Oprah-worthy story sure to resonate with young urban parents...Quiet and powerful." (The Oregonian )

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