A little house in a big place

Alison Acheson, 1964-

Book - 2019

"A beautiful free verse story, set in the prairies, about a little girl who waits at a window to wave to the train engineer who drives past her house every day. It's also a story about growing up and finding one's way in the world. Everything changes one day, when something flies out of the window of the train, and the girl rushes out to find out what it is. She wanders further an further from her house, until she spots something in grass-the engineer's cap. It's a farewell gift. It was the engineer's last day driving that train. After that, the train still comes by the house every day with a different engineer, and sometimes the girl waits by the window and waves, but not every day. Sometimes paints, dances, ...plays guitar. And then one day, she gets on that train and rides away."--

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Children's Room Show me where

jE/Acheson
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Acheson Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Stories in rhyme
Bildungsromans
Picture books
Published
Toronto, ON : Kids Can Press [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Alison Acheson, 1964- (author)
Other Authors
Valériane Leblond, 1985- (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 24 x 27 cm
ISBN
9781771389129
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In lyrical verse, Acheson writes, "A girl lived in a little house... in the middle of a big place"; the girl's sibling plays on a patchwork quilt amid patchwork fields. Every day, the girl exchanges waves with the train engineer and wonders whether "she might go away, too" one day. Chalky multimedia art by LeBlond portrays perspective-a little house against a liquid, star-flecked sky; wild strawberries against a vast field; the dot that becomes a train that becomes "an almost invisible dot." After the engineer tosses the girl his cap on his last day on the job, the girl too moves away from her daily post, on to the business of growing up. Years later, she dons the cap as she herself boards a train to a new place with similarities to her family home, showing that temporal and spatial changes are fluid, necessary, parts of life. Ages 4-7. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 2-A girl living in a little house surrounded by an expansive patchwork of fields loves to watch the train rumble by her backyard each day. She waves to the engineer, and he waves back. The child wonders "where he came from and where he went. And if she might go away, too, someday." One day, the engineer floats a gift through the air to the young girl, which she cherishes always. Although the daily habit of greeting the speeding train dissipates, the lasting impression of that experience never leaves the young girl, even as she matures into a young woman. Done in gouache, oil pastels, and colored pencils, Leblond's illustrations perfectly convey the feeling that people only take up a small space in the vast world around them. Invoking a sense of curiosity and imagination, the combination of text and artwork takes readers on a journey of thoughtful wonder about all that the future may hold. The presence of the engineer's gift in the illustration depicting the girl's entry into adult life demonstrates the significance of the engineer and his impact on the young girl's development. VERDICT A quiet, dreamy coming-of-age story that gently highlights the influence that strangers can have on one's imagination.-Amy Shepherd, St. Anne's Episcopal School, Middleton, DE © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A wistful little girl imagines a world beyond the gardens and grain fields of home.A country girl waits patiently at her window each day to wave to the engineer of the train that passes nearby, traveling east in the morning and journeying west at night, wondering about this person she will never meet. Like her, does he dream of a life different from the one he has? The gift of the engineer's hat gives the precocious child the courage to explore her safe domain and imagine a different life. Surrounded by loving parents, a baby brother, some quiet cows, and a snoozing cat, she looks beyond the borders of a bucolic world to ponder where else she could go, what else she could be. Acheson chooses rhythmic language that carries the story forward with a nearly audible clickety-clack. Soft folk-style art done in gouache, oil pastels, and colored pencils lends a homey country atmosphere to the changing seasons of a very quiet rural life. Both the little girl's perspective and the pages' focus change from up close to far away, from what's real to what's imagined, always with her family nearby. A final two-page spread provides a happy ending that, like the arrival of a train, we know is coming. All the characters present white.Although the book's plot is, perhaps, as predictable as the evening train, it's entirely pleasurable. (Picture book. 6-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.