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Public
Employee Press Media Beat Book
Review Summer reading for union kids
Summer reading for the small set includes picture
books that are fun to read out loud and delightful to look at, as well as labor
history conveyed through compelling stories.
All of these selections, plus
additional books, CDs and videos, are available in the DC 37 Ed Fund Library,
Room 211.
Click, Clack, Moo Cows That Type, by Doreen Cronin
with pictures by Betsy Lewin (Simon & Schuster), is about Farmer Brown and
his pesky cows
and other barnyard animals. What happens when they all get
together is at the center of this enchanting story. Also on DVD.
Joe
Van der Katt and the Great Picket Fence, by Peter J. Welling (Pelican Publishing),
tells the legend of a Dutch man who lived in the Catskill Mountains of New York.
In his town of Litterbox, there are only two types of catsthe Fat Cats and
the others, who work at jobs like picking grapes.
My Mother the
Mail Carrier/Mi Mama la Cartera, by Inez Maury with illustrations by Lady
McCrady (Feminist Press), is sure to enchant small fry with its storyin
English and Spanishof an urban mail carrier.
The Bobbin Girl,
by Emily Arnold McCully (Dial) tells the story of 10-year-old Rebecca, one of
thousands of girls and women who add to their familys meager income by toiling
under harsh conditions as a bobbin girl in 1830s New England. When
a cut in wages is announced, the mill girls rally to stage a turnout
(strike) and protest their predicament.
Kid Blink Beats the World,
by Don Brown, Illustrator (Roaring Books). In 1899, Kid Blink, Tiny Tim, Crutch
Morris, Crazy Arborn, and thousands of Newsies struck the World and
Journal newspapers over a penny. That was the extra penny that the newspaper owners
wanted to charge these child newspaper vendors to buy their papers. This story
is also beautifully told in the Disney musical DVD, Newsies.
Fire
at the Triangle Factory, by Holly Littlefield and illustrated by Mary OKeefe
Young (Carolrhoda Books), is the story of two fictional girls, Minnie, a Jewish
girl, and Tessa, an Italian Catholic, who are friends and co-workers, and become
involved in a real-life tragedy. On March 25, 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist Company
went up in flames, killing 146 workers, some as young as 14.
Woody
Guthrie: Poet of the People, by Bonnie Christensen (Alfred A. Knopf). Born
in Oklahoma, Guthrie wrote overa thousand songs, many of them for children. He
traveled all over the country singing those songs, and his story is beautifully
captured in both the words and illustrations. Harvesting Hope: The Story
of Cesar Chavez, by Kathleen Krull and illustrated by Yuyi Morales (Harcourt).
Cesar Chavezs family were migrant workers, poorly paid and badly treated.
As an adult, Chavez organized a nonviolent revolt, culminating in a 300-mile protest
march that produced the first contract for farmworkers.
Si, Se Puede!
/ Yes, We Can! Janitor Strike in L.A., by Diana Cohn and illustrated by
Francisco Delgado (Cinco Puntos), chronicles the April 2000 strike that united
8,000 janitors in Los Angeles through the eyes of one female workers son.
After his mama tells Carlitos that she is helping to organize a janitors
strike for a union, Carlitos gets support at school.
Ken Nash and Jane LaTour | |