Yes, you read the cover right. Illustrated by Maurice Sendak! However, most of the pictures in the book are similar in style and quality to what you see here (that is, mostly lacking the charm and detail I recall from his picture books).
This book covers the journey of a dog who was adopted by two siblings as a puppy, but was then lost in a storm on a road trip. He then spends the next few years skirting the fringes of where his home had been, scrounging for food, almost finding home but not quite.
I didn't find this exceptional as a stray-dog sort of book, but those who love dogs will enjoy it.
Showing posts with label 1954. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1954. Show all posts
Friday, October 6, 2017
Saturday, September 30, 2017
Magic Maize, by Mary and Conrad Buff
It took me a few books to figure it out, but our friends Mary and Conrad Buff definitely have a format that they enjoy. Books too long for a conventional picture book, and long enough to be a short juvenile novel, but printed in a way that allows generous space for rich illustrations, many full-page.
This particular book takes place in Guatemala. Fabian, our protagonist, lives with his family (parents, two sisters, livestock, and one parrot) at the foot of a hill that holds the CITY UP YONDER, the place that his Mayan ancestors once called home. His family are largely subsistence farmers, but try to raise enough corn and animals each year to sell some at the market. This money and the corn they harvest will last them the winter; without it, the entire family will have to hire themselves out to pick coffee berries to survive.
The book begins as the family prepares for the new growing season by burning last year's growth away from their fields and offering gifts to the various gods of their ancestors (and offering Christian prayers as well). While his parents are away offering one such gift, Fabian's oldest sibling, his brother, Quin, returns. Quin has vastly disappointed his father by not remaining home to continue the family's traditions. Instead, he travels the country peddling food and objects from a pack on his back. Before heading back to work, Quin gives Fabian a gift: 12 uniform kernels of yellow corn that the "gringos" developed from their own Indian corn. He says that it is growing beautifully and enriching farmers in Mexico and elsewhere. Fabian is excited about the potential of this "Magic Maize", but knows that his father distrusts the gringos and would sooner throw the corn to the chickens than plant it.
With the help of his friend Augustin, Fabian plants his corn in a secret place on the hillside. He figures that if his father sees the results, he may be more willing to put his faith in this new corn. While the friends are digging and sowing their seeds, Fabian finds an old jade earplug that may have once belonged to Mayan royalty. Impressed by its novelty, Fabian saves it with his other treasures (the usual findings of a small child).
The days pass, and the family's corn grows. And during the rains, gringos appear. Since his father is away traveling, Fabian's mother makes a judgment call and at the polite request of their Indian guide, allows them to come in until the rain stops. Fabian realizes that these men are friends of Quin, and the ones who gave him the yellow corn. They are on a mission from the President, who has commissioned them to dig artifacts from the CITY UP YONDER to preserve them for the people. Fabian receives his mother's reluctant permission to assist them.
Fabian enjoys his time with the three men. He quickly learns enough Spanish to converse easily with them, and adapts to their different foods (meat in a can!). Then the gringos discover a jade ear plug. Fabian shows them the one that he had found as well; it appears to be a match! The gringos know that it belongs to him, and agree to buy it from him on behalf of the President. This offer comes at a fortuitous time, because when they descent the hill together, they see that Fabian's father's corn has been destroyed in a cloudburst. He can hardly believe that a piece of green rock from the dirt is worth so much money, but he is so relieved that he even agrees that Fabian can go to school (a privilege previously denied as unnecessary). Fabian also has some of his corn's first healthy ears to show. It looks like things are turning around for his family.
This particular book takes place in Guatemala. Fabian, our protagonist, lives with his family (parents, two sisters, livestock, and one parrot) at the foot of a hill that holds the CITY UP YONDER, the place that his Mayan ancestors once called home. His family are largely subsistence farmers, but try to raise enough corn and animals each year to sell some at the market. This money and the corn they harvest will last them the winter; without it, the entire family will have to hire themselves out to pick coffee berries to survive.
The book begins as the family prepares for the new growing season by burning last year's growth away from their fields and offering gifts to the various gods of their ancestors (and offering Christian prayers as well). While his parents are away offering one such gift, Fabian's oldest sibling, his brother, Quin, returns. Quin has vastly disappointed his father by not remaining home to continue the family's traditions. Instead, he travels the country peddling food and objects from a pack on his back. Before heading back to work, Quin gives Fabian a gift: 12 uniform kernels of yellow corn that the "gringos" developed from their own Indian corn. He says that it is growing beautifully and enriching farmers in Mexico and elsewhere. Fabian is excited about the potential of this "Magic Maize", but knows that his father distrusts the gringos and would sooner throw the corn to the chickens than plant it.
With the help of his friend Augustin, Fabian plants his corn in a secret place on the hillside. He figures that if his father sees the results, he may be more willing to put his faith in this new corn. While the friends are digging and sowing their seeds, Fabian finds an old jade earplug that may have once belonged to Mayan royalty. Impressed by its novelty, Fabian saves it with his other treasures (the usual findings of a small child).
The days pass, and the family's corn grows. And during the rains, gringos appear. Since his father is away traveling, Fabian's mother makes a judgment call and at the polite request of their Indian guide, allows them to come in until the rain stops. Fabian realizes that these men are friends of Quin, and the ones who gave him the yellow corn. They are on a mission from the President, who has commissioned them to dig artifacts from the CITY UP YONDER to preserve them for the people. Fabian receives his mother's reluctant permission to assist them.
Fabian enjoys his time with the three men. He quickly learns enough Spanish to converse easily with them, and adapts to their different foods (meat in a can!). Then the gringos discover a jade ear plug. Fabian shows them the one that he had found as well; it appears to be a match! The gringos know that it belongs to him, and agree to buy it from him on behalf of the President. This offer comes at a fortuitous time, because when they descent the hill together, they see that Fabian's father's corn has been destroyed in a cloudburst. He can hardly believe that a piece of green rock from the dirt is worth so much money, but he is so relieved that he even agrees that Fabian can go to school (a privilege previously denied as unnecessary). Fabian also has some of his corn's first healthy ears to show. It looks like things are turning around for his family.
Friday, June 25, 2010
...And Now Miguel, by Joseph Krumgold
... And Now Miguel is set on a New Mexico family's sheep farm in the mid-twentieth century. The protagonist is Miguel, a 12-year-old boy who finds that "it is not so easy, being Miguel." The way he sees it, his seven-year-old younger brother has it pretty easy because he doesn't want much - he's happy being a kid, and happy with the amount of work he is and isn't expected to do. His older brother has it pretty easy too, because he's 19 and whatever he wants, he can get. But Miguel, he wants a lot, but can't get it. Mostly, he wants to go to the mountains with the men when they drive the sheep there for the summer - every year, he packs a bag just in case at the last minute his father should decide that this is the year Miguel should join them. But he never does.
This year, Miguel decides it's finally going to happen if he can do anything about it. He works hard on the farm, through lambing and shearing, and works up the courage to ask his father and his grandfather if he can join the men in the mountains this year. When they say no, there is only one person left to ask - the village's patron saint, St Ysidro. And it works, in a way. Only Miguel hadn't counted on how St Ysidro would make it happen, and he learns an important lesson about life. Everything comes at a cost. And it's not always like at the store, where you can put something back if you decide it costs too much.
I loved this book - it's a gorgeous look at life on a sheep farm in a traditional New Mexican community, told in a matter-of-fact way. According to the book jacket, the author worked on a documentary film chronicling this basic story before writing the book; a quick glance at Wikipedia tells me that it shares a name with the book, and came out in 1953. I'll see if I can find it, and see how it is.
This year, Miguel decides it's finally going to happen if he can do anything about it. He works hard on the farm, through lambing and shearing, and works up the courage to ask his father and his grandfather if he can join the men in the mountains this year. When they say no, there is only one person left to ask - the village's patron saint, St Ysidro. And it works, in a way. Only Miguel hadn't counted on how St Ysidro would make it happen, and he learns an important lesson about life. Everything comes at a cost. And it's not always like at the store, where you can put something back if you decide it costs too much.
I loved this book - it's a gorgeous look at life on a sheep farm in a traditional New Mexican community, told in a matter-of-fact way. According to the book jacket, the author worked on a documentary film chronicling this basic story before writing the book; a quick glance at Wikipedia tells me that it shares a name with the book, and came out in 1953. I'll see if I can find it, and see how it is.
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