Saturday, August 16, 2008

Living History Children's Book Review: Where Valor Lies by Adele and Cateau De Leeuw


Where Valor Lies by Adele and Cateau De Leeuw, 1959 is living history at it's best! I picked this book up some time ago at a library sale. It was an older book club edition, but I've since learned that Lepanto Press has republished this book.

I've been reading this book aloud to ds at bedtime. I thought it might be a dry historical book beyond his interest level, therefore making it a good fall-asleep book(giggle). It wasn't, and isn't. This book is very well written and peaks your interest in the first few paragraphs as we witness the dialogue of a young man who has a thankless and low paying job as an apprentice carpenter to a cruel taskmaster. Work is hard to come by, and many are starving in 13th century Paris.

Elizabeth Yank reviews the book at the Love2Learn Blog:

"Where Valor Lies includes a colorful cast of characters including Aimar, a father like figure who watches over him, Pierre a dear and close friend, Friar Bernard, whose example of unfailing help to those in need inspires those around him, and the rascal Vincent, an enigma whose generosity ultimately triumphs over his greed.

Where Valor Lies opens with a whirlwind of activity and does not stop until the last page, keeping the reader’s attention riveted throughout. It is a story of personal growth as much as it is an adventure story of an impetuous young man on a quest for great fortune and glory during the Seventh Crusade[Saint Louis the IX]. What is a man’s true valor? In the end, Richard finds out it is not great victories in battles, but the moral victory over oneself."

See the complete review here.

It was a very good book, but I think the ending was a little emotionally flat. Especially considering how exciting it was throughout. Maybe I was depressed by their losses, and wanted to be lifted up with more coverage or discussion regarding their moral victory.

I plan to look for more books by Adele De Leeuw at our public library. What a wonderful way to make history come alive. I'm guessing that the reading level would be appropriate for at least fifth grade, but I enjoyed it as well.

Free Homeschool Printables/ebooks/Curricula


I enjoy researching vintage children's books and making free homeschool printables from public domain resources. We use many of the resources that I've listed, but frankly, I just plain enjoy helping others enrich their homeschool experiences and save money.

If you have any subject area suggestions or requests, please feel free to comment below. I'll do the research and see if I can fill the need. Keep this in mind, I'll only be searching public domain vintage resources. All requests will be posted generally here and on my homeschool library blog. Because of primary obligations to my family, time constraints won't allow me to respond to individual requests.

Free Homeschool Printables: Stories of the Saints


I've reformatted and Americanized some the spellings for these stories which I have excerpted from Stories of the Saints by Candle-Light Vera C. Barclay, 1922, The Faith Press, LTD. London(public domain). They are free to print, but please link back if you repost these. These stories are geared toward elementary school students.

The Story of St. Martin

The Story of St. Antony

The Story of St. Francis, Part I


More to come....and I'm still editing these a bit as I go along. Let me know if you see anything really weird. I've copied and pasted, but I still have had to replace paragraphs, indentations and clean up stuff that came over on the sidebar.