The Truth About Sparrows
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
"The Wynns are an unforgettable family. The details of their struggle to survive the Great Depression will linger long after the last page has been read."-Ann M. Martin, winner of the Newbery Honor for A Corner of the Universe
A stunning debut novel about
the true meaning of home
Sadie Wynn doesn't want a new life; her old one suits her just fine. But times are hard in drought-plagued Missouri, and Daddy thinks they'll be better off in Texas. Sadie hates this strange new place, where even children must work at the cannery to help make ends meet and people are rude to her disabled father.
Yet when trouble comes, it is the kindness of these new neighbors that helps the family make it through. And no one helps more than Dollie, a red-headed chatterbox of a girl who just might become a good friend-if Sadie gives her half a chance.
The Truth About Sparrows is a 2005 Bank Street - Best Children's Book of the Year.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Twelve-year-old Sadie Wynn narrates this first novel, a sentimental, Depression-era tale about the meaning of home. After the Wynns lose their house to the bank in drought-stricken Missouri, they move to a tar-paper shack near the Gulf Coast of Texas. Worse still, Sadie's pal, Wilma, moves in the opposite direction, to California, but not before the two promise to be best friends forever. That vow prompts Sadie to reject the hand offered by new neighbor Dollie, and the heroine's incessant pining for Wilma, whom readers never get to know, feels a bit akin to viewing photos of someone else's vacation. Sadie's three siblings also remain sketchily drawn, but the narrative devotes ample attention to her parents, both of whom are heroically portrayed. Despite "infantile paralysis" that left Sadie's father crippled, the man makes do ("if there were no way around a muddy place in the road, he'd just lean forward on his palms,... and walk on his hands"). He builds a boat from scrap in just a few days, and saintly Mama sews a sail from rags in even less time. The title alludes to a homeless man Sadie encounters fleetingly, but whose impoverishment helps her recognize her own blessings, and the ending is a three-hankie affair that ties things up neatly. Abundant with period details, this story may be best suited to dedicated fans of historical fiction. Ages 9-12.