Sweet pea summer

Hazel Mitchell

Book - 2021

A young girl stays with her grandparents while her mother is in the hospital. At first, the adjustment is hard. It's difficult to focus on anything other than missing and worrying about her mom. But then Grandpa suggests that she help in his garden. And what a garden it is! There are rows and rows of vegetables and all kinds of flowers, but the most beautiful of all are Grandpa's sweet peas. Maybe, Grandpa suggests, she can take care of them over the summer and enter them into the flower show. Nothing seems to go right with the sweet peas. No matter what she does, the flowers keep dying. Until finally, the mystery is solved - but will the sweet peas bloom in time for the show? If only her mother were there...

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Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Picture books
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press 2021
Language
English
Main Author
Hazel Mitchell (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 30 cm
ISBN
9781536210347
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This picture book by Mitchell follows a white child narrator who spends the summer at their grandparents' home after their mother's unspecified illness leads to a hospital stay. Offering the child an outlet that can fill their attention, Grandpa invites them to help in the garden and look after his prized sweet peas. With a goal in mind ("Grandpa said I could enter the sweet peas in the flower show"), the child takes care of the flowers, solving problems through information-gathering and trial-and-error when the buds inexplicably fall. Straightforward prose lends itself well to readalouds ("Grandpa wheeled his vegetables, and I held my sweet peas"); soft graphite illustrations feature a dot-eyed, majority white cast, while bright watercolors emphasize the sweet tone. A gently encouraging narrative that invites readers to seek solace through caretaking. Ages 4--8. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

When Mom's illness necessitates a hospital stay, Dad drives his young child for a summerlong visit with grandparents. When the child, who narrates, struggles to concentrate on activities, Grandpa proposes helping with his garden--robust with veggies and flowers. He assigns his grandchild his "prized sweet peas," and Grandma suggests entering them in the flower show at summer's end. The child waters, deadheads, weeds, and fertilizes, as Grandpa's taught. One morning there's "something terrible"--the sweet peas have dropped their flower buds. The young gardener studies Grandpa's books and tests solutions, protecting the vines from cool evening temps and hot summer days. The kid waters carefully, noting that sweet peas need "just the right amount of water around their roots." Therein lies the mystery's solution: Grandpa's been inadvertently drenching the vines with "icy cold water" while irrigating his adjacent vegetables. Spared such shocks, the colorful flowers thrive, and blue blooms--the loveliest and most difficult--arrive, too. The gentle time-heals theme culminates with an award at the flower show and the sudden, unheralded arrival of the child's parents, ready to reunite at home. Mitchell's winsome pictures chronicle English townscapes, comfy, kitten-filled interiors, gentle hills, and a garden replete with small creatures to spy. Family members are White (and the grandparents, gray-haired); townspeople are diverse. While the resolution's a bit abrupt, engaging pictures enhance this successful, absorbing intergenerational tale. (author's botanical note) (Picture book. 4-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.