How Benjamin Franklin Became a Revolutionary in Seven (Not-So-Easy) Steps

How Benjamin Franklin Became a Revolutionary in Seven (Not-So-Easy) Steps

How Benjamin Franklin Became a Revolutionary in Seven (Not-So-Easy) Steps

How Benjamin Franklin Became a Revolutionary in Seven (Not-So-Easy) Steps

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Overview

How did Ben Franklin become an outspoken leader of the American Revolution? Learn all about it in seven (not-so-easy) steps in this humorous, accessible middle-grade chapter book that focuses on Ben’s political awakening.

Famous founding father Benjamin Franklin was a proud subject of the British Empire—until he wasn’t. It took nearly seventy years and seven not-so-easy steps to turn Benjamin Franklin from a loyal British subject to a British traitor—and a fired-up American revolutionary.

In this light, whimsical narrative, young readers learn how Franklin came to be a rebel, beginning with his childhood lesson in street smarts when he buys a whistle at an inflated price. Franklin is a defiant boy who runs away from his apprenticeship, and while he becomes a deep thinker, a brilliant scientist, and a persuasive writer when he grows up, he never loses that spark. As a community leader who tries his best to promote peace and unity both between the colonies and with Great Britain, he becomes more and more convinced that independence for the American colonies is the way forward.

Illustrated throughout with art by noted New Yorker cartoonist and illustrator John O’Brien and sprinkled with quotations from Franklin, this unfamiliar story of a familiar figure in American history will surprise and delight young readers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781635923315
Publisher: Astra Publishing House
Publication date: 10/17/2023
Pages: 96
Sales rank: 643,507
Product dimensions: 6.31(w) x 9.31(h) x 0.46(d)
Age Range: 9 - 12 Years

About the Author

Gretchen Woelfle is the author of multiple award-winning fiction and nonfiction books for young readers. Her books include Answering the Cry for Freedom, Mumbet’s Declaration of Independence, and Write On, Mercy!, both of which received the California Reading Association’s Eureka! Silver Award, among many other honors.

John O’Brien has illustrated over 100 books for children. His titles include Revolutionary Rogues: John André and Benedict Arnold by Selene Castrovilla and Thomas Jefferson Builds a Library by Barb Rosenstock. John is also a cartoonist for many magazines and newspapers, most notably The New Yorker, New York Times, and Esquire.

Read an Excerpt

Benjamin Franklin was a proud citizen of America all his life.
And a proud subject of the British Empire.
Until he wasn’t.
It took nearly seventy years and seven not-so-easy steps to turn Benjamin Franklin from a loyal British subject to a British traitor—and a fired-up American revolutionary.
Here’s how it happened.
 
“Being ignorant is not so much a Shame,
as being unwilling to learn.”
 
’Twas a special day!
Seven-year-old Benjamin Franklin had a pocket full of pennies, so he strolled down the streets of Boston to the toy store. On his way, he met a boy playing a shiny tin whistle.
He stopped to listen. The boy played on.
Benjamin loved that shiny whistle!
He wanted that whistle!
He wanted that whistle so much he emptied his pocket and gave the boy all his pennies—every single one.
Benjamin wasn’t shy about getting what he wanted.
Home he went, tooting his whistle all the way. He tooted in the kitchen . . . in the bedrooms . . . in the workshop where his father stirred smelly vats of soap . . . in the shop where his mother sold the soap, made from a secret family recipe . . .
“STOP!” cried his mother and father and brothers and sisters and cousins.
Benjamin stopped long enough to tell them how he spent all his pennies for his wonderful whistle. Everyone laughed.
“You paid four times more than it was worth,” they told him.
They kept on laughing, but Benjamin cried with vexation.
His shiny whistle wasn’t fun anymore.
 
Step #1
 
Benjamin Franklin learned early, “Do not give too much for the Whistle.”

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