<p>Does your child have ADHD (Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder)?</p><p>Meet David, one of award-winning author Sherrill S. Cannon's "Classroom of Kids," who manages his ADHD with the help of classmates.</p><p>David discovers ways to cope with his hyperactive brain, while learning how to calm and soothe his ADHD. Solutions include setting daily schedules and following simple rules that regulate behavior. His teachers and therapists encourage using the computer for academic advancement, and to establish a pattern for study as well as for occasional recreation. David not only learns self-control and communication skills, but is able to fit into the classroom and make friends.</p><p>Once again social values are emphasized in the author's latest illustrated children's story, and classroom friends from previous books are featured. In fact, David has been part of the class for a long time!</p><p><strong><em>"David's ADHD</em></strong><em> is a timely topic for parents and children. A story in rhyme that demystifies ADHD. It explains a youngster's behavior in terms of his inattentiveness and impulsivity and how it impacts those around him. A sensitive way of creating understanding for children with ADHD and their families."</em> - <strong>Dr. Valerie Allen, licensed school psychologist</strong></p><p><strong>Author Bio: </strong></p><p>Former teacher Sherrill S. Cannon has won 76 awards for her previous 11 rhyming books. She is also the author of seven published and internationally performed plays for elementary school children. The author has been called "an absolute master of rhyming" and "a modern-day Dr. Seuss."</p>
<p>“Many of us have studied the history of the Rocky Mountain Fur trade and are familiar with the actors and the scenes of their exploits. In most cases I suspect we <em>know</em> the facts more than we <em>feel</em> their impact on the people and on the expanding nation. <em>Glory Days Gone Under</em> by “Poredevil” Edward Louis Henry successfully recreates the trappers’ universe, draws us in, and brings us close as possible to the real experience. This monumental book is the fourth and the last one in the author’s depiction of the American Fur trade through the personal experiences of likable protagonist Temple Buck. (The previous volumes in this series were reviewed earlier in <em>Muzzle Blasts</em>.)</p> <p>The author knows his history and all the seasonings that keep our appetite keen for more. Recorded historical facts that figure in this book include the rabid wolf that fatally attacked rendezvous participants, meteor showers, earthquakes, beached whales, white women at rendezvous, the passage of zealous missionaries, and surgery to remove an imbedded arrow from Jim Bridger’s back. A rather lengthy section presents life, customs, and narrow escapes in Spanish-controlled California. There is also ample information on native cultures - e.g., signs of respect for a deceased husband, courting customs, independence (rather than teamwork) in battle, the price of a bride, and the number of poles used in setting up a lodge. This novel has the ring of authenticity; it clearly is the product of an author who has <em>seen the elephant</em>.</p> <p>This nearly 700-page novel <em>takes you there</em>; the author’s encyclopedic knowledge of horses, guns, curative herbs, classical literature, geography, history, and native values - to name just a few - makes for a fine, long read. This is not a novel that makes you want to race to the end; far better, it invites you linger and savor the atmosphere and the adventure, and believe it all.</p> <p>In this novel we meet the historical figures of Bill and Milton Sublette, William Drummond Stewart, Henry Fraeb, Osborne Russell, Kit Carson, Black Harris, Tom Fitzpatrick, Lucien Fontenelle, Alfred Jacob Miller, Joe Meek, and many others. These characters and their fictional colleagues are drawn convincingly, and they speak in very distinctive voices. We get to know their personalities, emotions, and motivations.</p> <p>You can read this novel by itself, but once you do you will want to read all the others as well. All of them depict phases in Temple Buck’s initiation and growth in the fur trade. The plot is filled with adventure —buffalo hunts, battles, horse raids, and the like - and you won’t find a dull moment. Do you appreciate humor, drama, horsemanship, mountain cuisine, history, and old-time skills? Then get a copy of this novel and settle in for a few weeks of enjoyable winter reading. This is an immense book in size and content, and it will easily merit reading more than once.”</p> <p align="right"><strong>Eric Bye,</strong> <em>Muzzle Blasts Magazine</em></p>