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  • The Iron Dragon Never Sleeps

The Iron Dragon Never Sleeps

Publication Date
November 01, 1995
Genre / Grade Band
Fiction /  4th − 5th
Language
English
The Iron Dragon Never Sleeps
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Description
Ten-year-old Winnie and her mother spend the summer of 1867 with Winnie's father, a mining engineer for the Central Pacific Railroad. While the Central Pacific weathers a strike by the Chinese immigrant laborers, Winnie's view of the world is forever changed by Lee Cheng, a young tea carrier. Illustrations.
Publication date
November 01, 1995
Genre
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780440411369
Lexile Measure
390
Publisher
Yearling Books
BISAC categories
JUV016110 - Juvenile Fiction | Historical | United States - General
Library of Congress categories
Railroads
Frontier and pioneer life
California
Chinese Americans
Strikes and lockouts
Pacific railroads

Publishers Weekly

In his more than 30 books, Krensky ( Who Really Discovered America? ) has often reexamined American history and found stories previously hidden under years of accepted ``fact.'' This time out he turns to the role of Chinese laborers in the building of the transcontinental railroad. In the summer of 1867, 10-year-old Winnie Tucker and her mother leave Sacramento for Cisco, Calif., to join her father, a railroad worker. There Winnie befriends Lee Cheng, a Chinese boy who also works on the railroad. But unlike Winnie's father and the other white workers, Lee endures harsh treatment from his supervisors and receives pitiful wages for the long hours he puts in. Winnie's exposure to the Celestials, as the Chinese are called, causes her to question the prejudices of the adults around her. When an explosion traps Lee's brother and Winnie's father in a mine, Krensky avoids a pat happy ending, instead devising a bittersweet conclusion that renders his historically accurate story even more powerful. 

Copyright 1994 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission

Kirkus

An interesting adjunct to the study of Westward expansion, California history, or the Chinese-American experience.

Stephen Krensky
Stephen Krensky is the author of more than a hundred books for children, including How Santa Got His Job (an ALA Notable Book) and Big Bad Wolves at School. He and his wife, Joan, live in Lexington, Massachusetts. You can visit him at StephenKrensky.com.

Henry Cole has written and illustrated more than 150 books for children, including Spot, the Cat; And Tango Makes Three; Oink?; and Little Bo in France. He is also the illustrator of With a Little Help from My Friends by John Lennon and Paul McCartney. A former elementary school teacher, he now writes and paints full time.
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