Memorial Day is a non-fiction picture book written to explain to children how the holiday came about and why we celebrate it, among other things. Although this is your typical thirty-two page picture book, its aim is for children who might be outgrowing picture books but who need to be eased into chapter books. Each chapter is about two to four pages long (including the full page illustrations).
There is a chapter on the Civil War, a chapter that includes information on The Tomb of the Unknowns, a chapter full of Memorial Day poems, and another full of Memorial Day songs.
This picture book shows how one can never be too old for them. I learned something new while reading it. There is a chapter on Decoration Day and I had never heard of it before. It was the early version of Memorial Day and it was celebrated every May 30. It did not become known as Memorial Day until the 1890s and it became a national holiday in 1971. Anyway, it was known as Decoration Day because it was the day people decorated the headstones with flowers. I am not sure if it is official, but my community still has a sort of Decoration Day. Every year on the Friday before Memorial Day, boy scouts and girl scouts place small American flags next to every headstone in the national cemetery behind my house (yup, backyard, then alley, then a stretch of grass, then the cemetery…I have a post here).

Headstones in the cemetery behind my home.
I enjoyed reading Memorial Day and I think other children and adults will as well. With its semi-realistic illustrations and small chapters to get young readers used to them, Memorial Day is a very informative and good knowledge base for everyone on this holiday. It even suggests various Memorial Day activities and includes a glossary and index.
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Trudi Strain Trueit knew she wanted to be a writer when she was in fourth grade, but before she got there she worked as a television news reporter, weather anchor, a PR specialist, and as a freelance writer before writing children’s fiction and non-fiction full-time.

Ronnie Rooney has a BFA in painting from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and an MFA in illustration from Savannah College of Art and Design. She also found her calling when she was a young girl. She currently lives in Georgia with her husband (who is in the U.S. Army) and their two children.






Nicoletta Ceccoli is a book illustrator with a market in Italy, the UK, and the U.S. She attended the Institute of Art in Urbino, Italy to study animation. The Bologna Children’s Book Fair exhibited her work on seven different occasions and it has also been showcased at Roq la Rue, Dorothy Circus, and the Richard Goodall Gallery. Her awards include the 2001 best Italian illustrator of the year, the award of excellence times four from Communication Arts, and silver medal from the Society of Illustrators in 2006. She was born and raised in San Marino, Italy.









































































