Same Kind of Different As Me for Kids

Same Kind of Different As Me for Kids

Same Kind of Different As Me for Kids

Same Kind of Different As Me for Kids

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Overview

This remarkable story shows what can happen when we choose to help. Kids will discover that we can all make a difference—no matter how big or small we are and no matter how big or small the task.

Based on the New York Times bestseller Same Kind of Different As Me, which sold more than a million copies worldwide and inspired the major motion picture, this book tells the true story of Denver Moore and Ron Hall, who also created the delightful illustrations in this book.

Share the power of friendship and faith with your children.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780718091798
Publisher: Nelson, Tommy
Publication date: 01/31/2017
Pages: 32
Product dimensions: 7.80(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.50(d)
Age Range: 4 - 8 Years

About the Author

Ron Hall has dedicated much of the last ten years of his life to speaking on behalf of, and raising money for, the homeless. Formerly an international art dealer, Ron is a #1 New York Times bestselling author and writer/producer of the Paramount/Pure Flix film Same Kind of Different as Me. A Texas Christian University graduate, Ron was honored in 2017 with the Distinguished Alumni Award. In addition to traveling and speaking, Ron and his wife, Beth, run the Same Kind of Different as Me foundation (SKODAM.org), which meets emergency needs for those who are less fortunate.


Denver Moore served as a volunteer at the Fort Worth Union Gospel Mission until his death in March 2012.

Read an Excerpt

Same Kind of Different As Me

Everybody Can Help Somebody


By Ron Hall, Denver Moore

Thomas Nelson

Copyright © 2013 Ron Hall
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7180-9179-8


CHAPTER 1

"I used to spend a lotta time worryin' that I was different from other people. ... But I found out everybody's different — the same kind of different as me."


Not too many years ago, American people were struggling. That time was called the Great Depression. Families didn't have much money. Mothers and fathers couldn't find jobs to buy food, medicine, or warm clothes for their children.

That was the time when Denver was born, on a cold January day on a cotton plantation in Louisiana. He was so small that his granddaddy would carry him in the front pocket of his overalls.

Denver's family worked as sharecroppers picking cotton on The Man's plantation. The Man let them live in a shack on the plantation. They had no electricity. They had no lights. They had no water. They were as poor as they could be.

Denver's family didn't have a car. Sometimes they rode on a big wagon pulled by mules. But they usually walked.

Most of the food they ate came from their garden — corn, potatoes, carrots. The milk came from The Man's cow. At Christmas, The Man would give them a pig so they would have some meat.

Even though he was a little boy, Denver worked with the rest of his family. He fed the chickens. He milked the cows. He picked wild blueberries.

There wasn't money for toys, so Denver would make toy trucks from old boards, with bottle caps for the wheels.

One day, Denver saw The Man's son Bobby riding down the dirt road on a brand-new bicycle. It was shiny and red! Denver had never seen a bicycle. He wanted one so much! He asked The Man, "Can I do extra chores for you so I can earn enough money to buy a bike like Bobby's?"

"Denver," The Man said, "if you pick one hundred pounds of cotton, I will buy you a new bike."

Denver got up before the sun even came up the next morning and picked cotton all day, sweat trickling down his forehead and into his eyes. Just as the sun was setting, he took his pillowcase full of cotton to The Man's barn and put it on the scales. It only weighed five pounds!

Day after day, he worked in the hot sun and picked cotton until his hands and knees were so sore and swollen that he could not pick any more. The Man's son Bobby felt sorry for Denver and thought, I'll pick some cotton too and sneak it into Denvers sack in the barn. With a friend helping him, Denver finally had one hundred pounds of cotton.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Same Kind of Different As Me by Ron Hall, Denver Moore. Copyright © 2013 Ron Hall. Excerpted by permission of Thomas Nelson.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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