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Its casual and unassuming tone is perfectly delightful. Her slender story is packed with amusing facts and details and has just the right amount of witty repetition. In “And Then What Happened, Paul Revere?” Jean Fritz tells, in her deceivingly simple and seemingly effortless way, of Paul Revere's early years and, of course, of his famous ride and then continues to relate what happened to him in later life. So here I find myself reluctantly on the other side of the fence, not liking it one bit.īeyond the fact that all three have the American Revolution as their background, and that two are about Paul Revere, the books have nothing in common literarily or visually. Of course, I know fully well that a responsible reviewer doesall these things and that I and others like me are fair game when it comes to reviews.
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