by Gerald Hausman & Uton Hinds ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 2001
A fictionalized version of Hinds’s childhood, he and Hausman have written a prose poem of a book that tells the story of a poor Jamaican boy who has to grow up real fast when his father suddenly abandons the family. Though he’s only 12, protagonist Tall T is the dependable one in a family of six children, the one Iya, his mother, counts on, the one “who’s expected to do more than anyone else.” The story is simple—after his father’s desertion, Tall T labors to continue learning, studying at the library because the school won’t let a boy with such shabby clothing attend, and working at whatever odd jobs he can find to help put food on the table. In the course of the novel he struggles to come to terms with his ambivalent feelings about his father, a “rough, rough man” who has become a stranger to the family, “a stranger whom we have known all of our lives.” Still, Tall T is proud when his father singles him out, offering him the honor of participating as the “devil’s treasurer,” the person responsible for gathering the coins the townsfolk throw at the dancers during the annual Jonkonnu ceremony. The language from the distinctive Jamaican dialect—“me no thief you,” to the vivid descriptions, “He’s fringed and fabulous . . . ablaze with tiny round mirrors, winking in the sun,” is textured and luxuriant. Pulsating with exotic color, the story Hausman and Hinds have created is vibrant and heart-warming. (Fiction. 10-13)
Pub Date: April 1, 2001
ISBN: 0-531-30331-4
Page Count: 128
Publisher: Orchard
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2001
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More by Gerald Hausman
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by Gerald Hausman & Loretta Hausman & illustrated by Robert Florczak
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by Soyung Pak ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 1999
Picture-book debuts for both author and illustrator result in an affectionate glimpse of intergenerational bonds. Juno loves to get letters in the red-and-blue bordered airmail envelopes that come from his grandmother, who lives in Korea, near Seoul. He cannot read Korean, but he opens the letter anyway, and learns what he can from what his grandmother has sent: a photograph of herself and her new cat, and a dried flower from her garden. When his parents read him the letter, he realizes how much he learned from the other things his grandmother mailed to him. He creates some drawings of himself, his parents, house, and dog, and sends them along with a big leaf from his swinging tree. He gets back a package that includes drawing pencils and a small airplane—the grandmother is coming to visit. The messages that can be conveyed without words, language differences between generations, and family ties across great distances are gently and affectingly handled in this first picture book. The illustrations, done in oil-paint glazes, are beautifully lit; the characters, particularly Grandmother, with her bowl of persimmons, her leafy garden, and her grey bun that looks “like a powdered doughnut,” are charming. (Picture book. 3-7)
Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1999
ISBN: 0-670-88252-6
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Viking
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 1999
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by Soyung Pak & illustrated by Joung Un Kim
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by Soyung Pak & illustrated by Marcelino Truong
by Gennifer Choldenko ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 11, 2024
Moving and perceptive: Hankies are a must.
A sixth grader struggles with feelings and survival strategies after his single mom disappears.
Hank is more or less used to being left to cope with caring for himself and his 3-year-old sister, Boo, for short stretches—but when their mother vanishes for a week, the power goes off, and the landlord serves an eviction notice, it’s crisis time. What’s the right thing to do? Along with sensitively exploring Hank’s rough emotional landscape as his mother’s whereabouts remain unknown, Choldenko offers a moving portrayal of the powerful bonds that connect him, an unwillingly parentified child, and the younger sibling who means everything to him. Throwing themselves on the mercies of strangers with emotional vulnerabilities of their own earns at least temporary respite but also leads to brushes with the foster care system, the threat of being separated, and, most wrenchingly, the necessity of making yet another consequential choice; finally, his sorely missed mom abruptly reappears. Meanwhile, not only does a neighbor’s extended Latine clan give the two white children their first glimpses of life in a bustling household, but Hank gets a warmer welcome than he was expecting from the diverse classmates at his new middle school. These experiences, plus the fact that Hank and Boo are both strongly appealing characters in their own different ways, will give readers cause for intense relief when the author throws the pair a lifeline at the end.
Moving and perceptive: Hankies are a must. (Fiction. 10-13)Pub Date: June 11, 2024
ISBN: 9781524718923
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: April 5, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2024
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More by Katherine Applegate
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by Katherine Applegate & Gennifer Choldenko ; illustrated by Wallace West
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by Katherine Applegate & Gennifer Choldenko ; illustrated by Wallace West
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