Ox-cart man

Donald Hall, 1928-

Book - 1979

Describes the day-to-day life throughout the changing seasons of an early 19th-century New England family.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Viking Press 1979.
Language
English
Main Author
Donald Hall, 1928- (-)
Other Authors
Barbara Cooney, 1917-2000 (illustrator)
Physical Description
[40] p. : col. ill
ISBN
9780881036077
9780670533282
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ages 5-9. The cycle of the seasons comes vividly alive as pictures and text follow a New England farm family in the mid-1800s as they till the soil, harvest their crops, and sell their goods at market.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Plain but pleasingly cadenced, concrete as the list of commodities that makes up much of the text, yet radiating a sense of life's cyclic rhythms, this tells of an early New England farmer going off to Portsmouth market. He sells products the family has raised and grown, sells products they have made from what they raised and grew, then sells the containers (apple barrel, potato bag) the goods were in, and finally sells his ox cart, harness, and ox, before buying some humble household tools and walking home (with ""coins still in his pocket"") to start again. . . ""stitching a new harness for the young ox in the barn."" Without Cooney's illustrations--comely and decorous scenes in the manner of early American folk painting--this might seem almost too plain. But she makes a satisfying, full (and eye-filling) experience of the everyday round, as she follows the farmer and his family through the peaceful countryside and the changing seasons--reflecting their unselfconscious accord with nature in her own seamless accord with the text. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.