HomeChildren's BooksRiding on Duke's Train (LeapKids)
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Riding on Duke's Train (LeapKids)

paperbackDecember 13, 2011
Regular price $61.18 USD
Regular price Sale price $61.18 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9781935248064 ISBN-10: 1935248065
Publisher
Leapfrog Press
Binding
paperback
Published
December 13, 2011
Weight
0.4 lbs
Dimensions
19.10×1.30×13.30 cm

About this book

Riding on Duke's Train (LeapKids) by Carlon, Mick. paperback edition. ISBN: 9781935248064.

Winner of the Leapfrog Global Fiction Prize "Duke used to say that the individual sound of a musician revealed his soul. Mick Carlon is a soul storyteller."—Nat Hentoff, author of Jazz Country "A ripping good yarn. . . . Plunges the reader into the world of Duke Ellington and the America of 1939."—Brian Morton, author of The Penguin Guide to Jazz "Wonderfully convincing and authentic characterizations. . . . A thoroughly enjoyable read."—Dan Morgenstern, author of Living with Jazz "We encounter not only Dukes genius, but his character and humanity. This is one train you wont want to get off!"—Dick Golden, radio host "When this marvelously evocative novel finds a home in the school curriculum, kids across America will be downloading Duke."—Jack Bradley "Excellent command of voice, period, and ethnic dialect . . . clear love and in-depth knowledge of Ellington and his band."—Alexandria LaFaye, author of The Keening Nine-year-old Danny stows away on Duke Ellingtons train one Georgia night. Through Dannys eyes, we meet some of Americas finest musicians as he accompanies them on their 1939 European tour, when the train was briefly held in Germany. Says Nat Hentoff, "I knew Duke Ellington for twenty-five years. The Ellington in this book is the man I knew." Mick Carlon is a twenty-seven-year veteran English/journalism high- and middle-school teacher. A lifelong jazz fan, he regularly plays jazz in his classroom and has turned hundreds of students into jazz fans. He says, "If young people are simply exposed to the music and stories of these American artists, they will make a friend for life."