“Girls who love sports or baseball will appreciate this biography of Dorothy Kamenshek, a Cincinnati native famous for playing first base in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. … [It] This book allows fans to discover her true story and visualize it through interesting sidebars and historical photographs.”
The Toledo Blade
“[Kammie was] the fanciest-fielding first baseman I've ever seen, man or woman.”
Wally Pipp, former New York Yankee first baseman
“This is a truly engaging account of the life and times of an exceptional woman athlete and the league which provided her the opportunity to play professional baseball—a dream held by many young girl softball and baseball enthusiasts, past and present.”
Merrie A. Fidler, author of The Origins and History of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
“When readers think back on sports news from 2014 and remember 13-year-old female pitcher Mo’ne Davis at the Little League Baseball World Series games, they will be pleased to come across this biography of a key female athlete…. This solid title could be used for reports and will fill a gap in biography collections.”
School Library Journal
Dorothy Mary Kamenshek was born to immigrant parents in Norwood, Ohio. As a young girl, she played pickup games of sandlot baseball with neighborhood children; no one, however, would have suspected that at the age of seventeen she would become a star athlete at the national level.
The outbreak of World War II and the ensuing draft of able-bodied young men severely depleted the ranks of professional baseball players. In 1943, Philip K. Wrigley, owner of the Chicago Cubs, led the initiative to establish a new league—a women’s league—to fill the ballparks while the war ground on in Europe and the Pacific. Kamenshek was selected and assigned to the Rockford Peaches in their inaugural season and played first base for a total of ten years, becoming a seven-time All-Star and holder of two league batting titles. When injuries finally put an end to her playing days, she went on to a successful and much quieter career in physical therapy. Fame came again in 1992, when Geena Davis portrayed a player loosely based on Kamenshek in the hit movie A League of Their Own.
Kammie on First is a real-life tale that will entertain and inspire young readers, both girls and boys. It is the first book in a new series, Biographies for Young Readers, from Ohio University Press.
Michelle Houts holds degrees in special education and speech-language pathology. She is the author of several fiction and nonfiction books for young readers, including the award-winning The Beef Princess of Practical County, The Practical County Drama Queen, and Winterfrost. More info →
Q&A with Michelle Houts
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Paperback
978-0-8214-2130-7
Retail price: $15.95,
T.
Release date: October 2014
61 illus.
·
148 pages
·
7 × 10 in.
Rights: World
Hardcover
978-0-8214-2133-8
Retail price: $32.95,
S.
Release date: October 2014
61 illus.
·
148 pages
·
7 × 10 in.
Rights: World
Electronic
978-0-8214-4511-2
Release date: October 2014
61 illus.
·
148 pages
Rights: World
“The very readable main text is supplemented with many sidebars on topics such as Kammie’s stats and the league’s contributions to the war effort. A solid choice for sports-minded girls and fans of the movie A League of Their Own.”
Booklist
“A solid look at Kamenshek’s youth and career, and life after baseball…. [Also] includes sidebars about the Depression, the role of women in World War II and the popularity of the name “Dorothy” (Kammie got her nickname because there was another Dottie playing for the Peaches—and at one point, there were five!).”
Akron Beacon Journal
Missing Millie Benson
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Growing up in Ladora, Iowa, Mildred “Millie” Benson had ample time to develop her imagination, sense of adventure, and independence. Millie left her small hometown to attend the University of Iowa, where she became the first person to earn a master’s degree from the school of journalism. While still a graduate student, Millie began writing for the Stratemeyer Syndicate, which published the phenomenally popular Hardy Boys series, among many others.
Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography | Women · Young Readers · Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography | Literary · Ohio
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Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography | Women · Juvenile Nonfiction | Transportation | Aviation · Young Readers · Ohio
Virginia Hamilton
America’s Storyteller
By Julie K. Rubini
Long before she wrote The House of Dies Drear, M. C. Higgins, the Great, and many other children’s classics, Virginia Hamilton grew up among her extended family near Yellow Springs, Ohio, where her grandfather had been brought as a baby through the Underground Railroad. The family stories she heard as a child fueled her imagination, and the freedom to roam the farms and woods nearby trained her to be a great observer.
Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography | Women · Young Readers · Ohio · Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography | Literary
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