![]() ![]() ![]() Coerr also shared the story of Sadako in Russia and Latin America when she accompanied her husband, a U.S. For example, the book has been used as a supplemental reader in junior high and senior high schools in English-speaking countries, and has been translated into a dozen languages. Read a brief 1-Page Summary or watch video. publisher and the book helped convey Sadako’s name and wish for peace around the world. Read the worlds 1 book summary of Sadako And The Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr and Ronald Himle here. Coerr’s “Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes” was issued by a U.S. When she returned to Hiroshima in 1963, she learned about the life of Sadako Sasaki, who died at the age of 12 from radiation-induced leukemia ten years after her exposure to the radiation emitted by the atomic bomb, and the Children’s Peace Monument in Peace Memorial Park, which was raised as a result of the effort of her classmates and others after her death. During that time, she visited Hiroshima for the first time. As a foreign correspondent for the Ottawa Journal, a daily newspaper published in Ottawa until 1980, she lived for a year in the house of a Japanese farmer on the outskirts of Yonago, Tottori Prefecture in 1949. Coerr was born in Saskatchewan, a Canadian province, in 1922. A memorial service for her will be held shortly in the United States. ![]() Her family shared this news with Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum on January 12. Eleanor Coerr, the author of “Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes,” died on Novemin the U.S. ![]()
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