The Camping Trip That Changed America: Theodore Roosevelt, John Muir, and Our National Parks by Barb Rosenstock, illustrated by Mordicai Gerstein
Teddy Roosevelt and John Muir had little in common growing up except for one thing: they both loved the outdoors and the wilderness. So in 1903, when President Roosevelt read a book by John Muir that pleaded for people to save the trees, he couldn’t stop thinking about losing all of the trees in the mountain forests. Roosevelt set out to meet with Muir in Yosemite. After a few pictures, the two men rode off together with no entourage or photographers along. Roosevelt got to see the giant sequoias, listen to Muir’s stories, see valleys carved by glaciers, and awaken under inches of snow. Together the two men dreamed a new dream for the United States and its wild areas, one where they were protected for generations to come.
Rosenstock tells this story with a wonderful joy that permeates the entire work. She captures the differences between the two men clearly but binds them together through their love of the outdoors. The natural parts of the story are also captured in imagery and distinct moments where the men connect with each other and with the wilderness itself.
Gerstein’s illustrations have a depth to them that nicely captures both the men and the natural beauty. The quiet of Roosevelt’s life is shown in deep colors and stillness. It contrasts powerfully with the blues, golds and greens of the natural world that is light filled and also full of action.
This is a celebration of two men and the difference they made in our lives by creating the National Parks. It is also an invitation to head out and explore the parks for yourself, looking for your own moments of connection to the wilderness. Appropriate for ages 7-10.
Reviewed from copy received from Dial Books.
