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America's Champion Swimmer Gertrude Ederle

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ISBN-10: 0152019693

ISBN-13: 9780152019693

Edition: 2000

Authors: David A. Adler, Terry Widener

List price: $16.00
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Description:

Trudy Ederle loved to swim. And she was determined to be the best. At seventeen Trudy won three medals at the 1924 Olympics, in Paris. By the time she turned nineteen, Trudy had set twenty-nine U.S. and world records. But what she planned to do next had never been done--by a woman. She would tackle the most difficult swim of all time: the twenty-one miles of cold, choppy water that separate England from France. Trudy's historic fourteen-hour swim across the English Channel set a world record. She defied those who said it couldn't be done. And with her courage and endurance, Trudy Ederle became a symbol for women everywhere. •By the award-winning team that created Lou Gehrig: The Luckiest…    
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Book details

List price: $16.00
Copyright year: 2000
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Publication date: 3/1/2000
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 32
Size: 9.50" wide x 11.50" long x 0.50" tall
Weight: 0.880
Language: English

David A. Adler was born in New York City. He attended Queen's College in New York City and later, earned an MBA in Marketing from New York University. He writes both fiction and non-fiction. He is the author of Cam Jansen mysteries and the Andy Russell titles. His titles has earned him numerous awards including a Sydney Taylor Book Award for his title "The Number on My Grandfather's Arm," "A Picture Book of Jewish Holidays" was named a Notable Book of 1981 by the American Library Association and "Our Golda" was named a Carter G. Woodson Award Honor Book.

“I was inspired to write ‘There’s No Mouse In My New House’ after moving to my townhouse in Maryland. While sitting on the floor arranging photos in an album, I observed a small shadow exiting the from the room. It was too small to be anything other than a mouse. Soon, those dreadful creatures that I feared became the subject of this book. Perhaps writing stories about them is therapeutic because I have a sequel in the works.” –Jean Smith Andrews