Heroines
Beyond Nancy Drew: A Guide to Girls' Literature
- Michael, Charles D. Heroines: True Tales of Brave
Women. London: S. W. Partridge, [19--]. "Bravery and
self-sacrifice are natural qualities in men, or so we love to
think; but men have no monopoly of heroism. In their capacity for
suffering uncomplainingly, and in their power of patient endurance,
women are, as a matter of fact more heroic by nature than
men."
- Parkman, Mary Rosetta. Heroines of Service. New York,
Century, 1917. (Duke Off Site Stacks: 920 P251HE) Features famous
and lesser known women including: Mary Lyon, Clara Barton, Frances
Willard, Julia Ward Howe, Mary Antin, Alice C. Fletcher, Mary
Slessor of Calabar, Madame Marie Curie, and Jane Addams
- Groom, Arthur. The Girls' Book of Heroines London:
Birn Brothers, Ltd., 1952. (E q#2050) Among heroines of the First
and Second World Wars and prominent sports figures of the day, we
find such unlikely heroines as Marie Antoinette, Madame Toussaud
(of wax museum fame), and a "present-day heroine - the Air
Hostess."
- Carlson, Natalie Savage. The Empty Schoolhouse. New
York: Harper and Row, 1965. (not cataloged at time of publication;
check online catalog) Though they are friends at church on Sundays,
Oralee (a white girl) and Lullah (a "colored" girl) must attend
separate schools. When the Archbishop desegregates the parochial
schools, Lullah is thrust into the front lines of the civil rights
movement.
- Weldon, Amelie. Girls Who Rocked the World. Hillsboro,
Oregon: Beyond Words Publishing, 1998. (E Pam #7014) "While our
current history books are giving more credit to women from the
past, it is equally important that you, today's girls, know that
you can make your own impact on the history books of
tomorrow."
Last modified January 30, 2013 1:07:33 PM EST