|
|
Books that Promote Peace & Nonviolence |
Synopsis
"When the Depression hits her family, Lydia Grace, 10, leaves her snug
rural home and journeys alone by train to a nearby city to live with dour
Uncle Jim 'until things get better.' Her suitcase is filled with seeds given to
her by Grandma, who has taught her how to garden. Lydia Grace is a resilient
child and is not daunted by dreary buildings, her dreary uncle, and his dreary
bakery. Instead, she sees the empty window boxes and makes plans to fill
them with flowers in the spring. She also plans to put a smile on her uncle's
face. And she does. Come spring, the bakery is filled with flowers and many
customers. Her greatest joy is the beautiful garden she has created on a
once-barren, trash-strewn roof. Uncle Jim rewards her with his equivalent of a
smile, a cake covered with flowery frosting." (SLJ) "Ages five to
eight." (Booklist)
Annotation
A series of letters relating what happens when, after her father loses his
job, Lydia Grace goes to live with her Uncle Jim in the city but takes her love
for gardening with her.
From the Critics
From Publisher's Weekly - Publishers Weekly
Late in the summer of 1935, Lydia Grace's parents are out of work, and to help
make ends meet they send Lydia Grace to live with Uncle Jim, a baker in the
city, "until things get better." Told entirely through Lydia Grace's
letters, the story radiates her utterly (and convincingly) sunny personality.
Before she leaves, for example, she writes Uncle Jim with a list of
"important things that I'm too shy to say to your face: 1. I know a lot
about gardening, but nothing about baking. 2. I'm anxious to learn to bake, but
is there any place to plant seeds?" With a subtlety finely attuned to
Stewart's quietly emotional narrative, Small shows the hardy nature of the
girl's optimism: she works long hours in her uncle's bakery and stays cheerful
in his bleak apartment. Bloom by bloom, Lydia Grace adds splashes of color to
her drab surroundings, eventually transforming a littered rooftop into a
splendid garden as a surprise for her somber-faced but kind uncle. This
inspiring offering from creative collaborators (The Library) gets much of its
vitality from what it leaves unsaid: at first Lydia Grace misses her home and
her garden; and, even though Uncle Jim never once succumbs to her plans to make
him smile, she succeeds in bringing him happiness. The final picture, of Uncle
Jim hugging Lydia Grace good-bye at the train station 10 months after her
arrival, the bakery cat tucked in a carrier to accompany her home, speaks
volumes about the vast impact one small individual can make. All ages. (Aug.)
From Publisher's Weekly - Publishers Weekly
To ease the Depression's burdens on her family, an irrepressible girl spends the
summer with her dour baker uncle in the city. In a starred review, PW said that
this Caldecott Honor book "speaks volumes about the vast impact one small
individual can make." All ages. (Mar.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business
Information.|
From School Library Journal
PreS-Gr 2When the Depression hits her family, Lydia Grace, 10, leaves her snug
rural home and journeys alone by train to a nearby city to live with dour Uncle
Jim "until things get better." Her suitcase is filled with seeds given
to her by Grandma, who has taught her how to garden. Lydia Grace is a resilient
child and is not daunted by dreary buildings, her dreary uncle, and his dreary
bakery. Instead, she sees the empty window boxes and makes plans to fill them
with flowers in the spring. She also plans to put a smile on her uncle's face.
And she does. Come spring, the bakery is filled with flowers and many customers.
Her greatest joy is the beautiful garden she has created on a once-barren,
trash-strewn roof. Uncle Jim rewards her with his equivalent of a smile, a cake
covered with flowery frosting. The story is mostly told in the double-paged,
cartoonlike, and richly detailed illustrations. The brief text is in the form of
letters, first to Uncle Jim and then to her family. Words are not needed to
describe Lydia Grace's feelings when she arrives alone in the huge barren train
station; when she shows off her horticultural talents; and when, finally, she
returns to a sunnier train station on her way home. The detailed pictures bring
the 1930s to life, especially the posters advertising bread for five cents a
loaf. This is a story to share one-on-one, talking about the pictures together
and then poring over the details alone. Virginia Golodetz, St. Michael's College,
Winooski, VT
From School Library Journal
Music and sound effects enhance the narration of Sarah Stewart's story of a
young girl whose green thumb brings beauty into the lives of those around her.
The recording frees listeners to savor David Small's Caldecott Honor
illustrations.
From Kirkus Reviews
This latest collaboration from Stewart and Small (The Library, 1995, not
reviewed) is the Depression-era story of young Lydia Grace Finch, whose family's
financial woes are the occasion for Lydia's extended stay in the city with dour
Uncle Jim. Lydia's letters to her parents and Grandma, her beloved gardening
partner, tell of her adjustment to the city, her work in her uncle's bakery, and
of her determination to make her uncle smile. Meanwhile, the pictures show
Lydia's gradual transformation of the drab shop and their apartment "over
the store," as she plants the seeds from Grandma in pots and tubs and
flowerboxes in every possible space. Her pièce de résistance is the lush roof
garden she cultivates in secret and springs on her uncle on the Fourth of July,
earning Uncle Jim's equivalent of "one thousand smiles," a huge cake
elaborately decorated with flowers. It's a lovely story exemplifying the old
adage, "Brighten the corner where you are," and a good introduction to
the epistolary form of storytelling. Small's marvelous pictures show the city in
all its gritty variety—pushcarts, pigeons, packing crates, fire escapes,
awnings, nuns, bums, and dogs—and the scrawny, smiling bakery cat, Otis.
| ©
2002 Dennis
W. Mills, Ph.D. 3300 21st Ave SW #F7 Olympia WA 98512 360-754-9417 www.distanceeddesign.com dwmills@distanceeddesign.com |