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With millions of votes cast in an election, how much does one single vote matter? Too many people think that their vote won't matter, and they give up their vote and their chance to be heard. That voter apathy is something that children's picture book author and illustrator Sonny Dean hopes to prevent with her book One Equals Many, a celebration of the power of one vote to change the world. With examples from nature and the arts, this simple, yet powerful book shows children just how large of an impact we can have when we work together, and how one vote can combine with others to change the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
With millions of votes cast in an election, how much does one single vote matter? Too many people think that their vote won't matter, and they give up their vote and their chance to be heard. That voter apathy is something that children's picture book author and illustrator Sonny Dean hopes to prevent with her book One Equals Many, a celebration of the power of one vote to change the world. With examples from nature and the arts, this simple, yet powerful book shows children just how large of an impact we can have when we work together, and how one vote can combine with others to change the world. Visually appealing, with spare yet powerful images, the book is an homage to the Works Progress Administration posters and artwork of the 1930s and 40s. It also includes a roadmap for social change- encouraging kids to make their voices heard in their communities and to their elected officials long before they reach the age to vote.
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Autorenporträt
Sonny Dean is the author and illustrator of "The Yellow Square of Stonewall", "Iris and the Virus", "One Equals Many", and "Jean and the Vaccine". She lives in Maine in a cozy cottage by the sea, surrounded by a forest filled with an astonishing assortment of interesting creatures. She fled a successful career in corporate marketing to tell the stories that she would have liked to have read as a child. When she is not writing or drawing (or daydreaming), she can be found enjoying nature with her family, exploring museums, or curled up on her window seat with a towering heap of good books.