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GRETA'S STORY by Valentina Camerini

GRETA'S STORY

The Schoolgirl Who Went on Strike To Save the Planet

by Valentina Camerini ; illustrated by Veronica Carratello ; translated by Moreno Giovannoni

Pub Date: Nov. 26th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-5344-6877-1
Publisher: Aladdin

A quick tribute to a young eco-activist unafraid to speak her mind to power.

In this wide-margined, generously leaded profile translated from the Italian, Thunberg’s throw-down-the-gauntlet style comes through clearly—both in the challenging stare she directs at readers from Carratello’s cover and interior illustrations and in the distinctively tart quotes within: “Adults keep saying that they must give young people hope. I don’t want hope, I want you to panic, to take action.” Though her visibility on the world stage only dates from her sit-down strike in front of Stockholm’s parliament building in August 2018 and her story is only carried to March 2019 here (and so cuts off before her August arrival in the U.S.), Camerini works from published interviews and articles to fill in the origins of her concern over the lack of effective action to counter climate change, her Asperger’s diagnosis, and the significant supporting roles her parents have played. The author’s habit of referring to her subject as a teenager “with braids” strikes a faintly condescending note, but Thunberg is plainly a force of nature, and considering that her grassroots “Fridays for Future” campaign has already sparked thousands of student strikes and other demonstrations, her message is plainly hitting a nerve. Thunberg is white, but she stands with or addresses ethnically diverse groups in the grayscale illustrations. A comparison to Rosa Parks strikes a discordant note.

A rushed but understandably urgent call to action.

(glossary, pollution timeline, suggestion list, recommended sources) (Biography. 8-10)