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Renee Londner

Auteur de Stones for Grandpa

5 oeuvres 63 utilisateurs 4 critiques

Œuvres de Renee Londner

Stones for Grandpa (2013) 42 exemplaires
El silbido de Ruby (2004) 1 exemplaire
Stones for Grandpa 1 exemplaire
Stones for Grandpa 1 exemplaire

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In this story, a child losses his grandfather. He talks about special events and bonding moments he had with his grandfather and how much he misses him. His mother reminds him that those memories are there for reassurance that someone you love is always there.

Source: Pierce college library
Age: 4-8
 
Signalé
DonnaChanthabouly | 1 autre critique | May 30, 2018 |
. It’s almost Hanukkah and the dreidel-maker’s shop is busy. But all is not well for the four Hebrew letters that will soon go on the wooden tops. The Heys, the Nuns, and the Shins are jealous of everyone’s favorite letter, the Gimel. They decide to hide the Gimels so that the dreidel-maker can’t use them.
 
Signalé
HandelmanLibraryTINR | Feb 4, 2018 |
This book was a boy grandpa's, he was afraid that he forget about him, mom let him know that memories are not forget, that everything will remind grandpa.
 
Signalé
ccabiya | Mar 21, 2017 |
There are two reasons I liked this book: the subject matter and the illustrations. The book deals with the topic of death. The main character’s grandfather has died and he goes through a “year of firsts” without him. However, the family is Jewish and the book does an excellent job of showing the uniqueness of their culture and their similarities with all people. The author describes spinning a dreidel, building a sukkah, and wearing costumes for Purim.

Yet, the author uses universal concepts as well such as watching stars and catching frogs. I think the way the information is presented shows how Jewish is culture is different in some ways and the same in others. I liked how this allows the reader to connect with the family and possibly learn something new about another way of life.

The illustrations bring the story to life. Although the story is about a family member’s passing, most of the illustrations are bright and happy. The boy is smiling remembering his grandfather with his parents. The illustrations show him dressing up in costumes with his grandfather and frog catching. There is only one picture wear the boy’s mother sheds a single tear. I liked that the illustrations emphasized that remembering the positive times is more important to grieving than being sad.

The big idea or theme of the book is remembering a life. The story is not about how sad the characters are, but how vibrant the grandfather’s life was and how grateful the family was to have had him. I think the idea is to recall good memories with a smile and not to cry over what is lost. I liked the book immensely and thought it presented its ideas in an entertaining way.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
CorinneLovett | 1 autre critique | Oct 20, 2013 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Membres
63
Popularité
#268,028
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
4
ISBN
16

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