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Chargement... Bread and Roses, Too (2006)par Katherine Paterson
![]() Aucun Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. This seemed like a well-researched book. Labor strikes are not taught about in US schools, and certainly not extensively. It never even occurred to me that children might have been involved or even affected. In this book, I learned they were sent away like London children were sent away during air raids, although I am likely later to discover this might be an insensitive comparison. Such is not my intent. This book was boring! The use of broken English among the adults and the bigotry among the children was likely historically accurate, but on the page, was aggravating. I originally mistook this for another book entirely and rated it waaaay back when I thought the Goodreads algorithm mattered and wasn't the waste of time it is now. ( ![]() Currently listening to this title on CD. While I am only 1/2 of the way in, I am reminded of what a fine writer Katherine Paterson is, and how vividly she can characterize history in setting, character, and circumstances. Currently listening to this title on CD. While I am only 1/2 of the way in, I am reminded of what a fine writer Katherine Paterson is, and how vividly she can characterize history in setting, character, and circumstances. Story of Rosa Serutti and Jake Beale and the 1912 Mill Worker's strike in Lawrence, MA. This book provides a realistic view of the life of mill workers. Descriptions of tenement life, social economic divide. Introduces Bill Haywood, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, multi-nationality worker unity, labor songs, and the various tactics used by the Mill company to undermine the strikers. Grades: 4-8 Classroom use: Social Studies, research skills, worker rights, factory conditions, primary sources, character and values, culture and diversity, friendship This story is heart wrenching to think how immigrants were treated in the mills and so many other factories. What brave men and women, especially Rosa's mother for standing up for a fair wage and striking to get better wages and working conditions. Curriculum connection: Students could make a timeline of the events that took place in the book. Students use research, the book, the historical info from the note in the back and write newspaper arches to go along with what is happening in the story.
Claire Rosser (KLIATT Review, September 2006 (Vol. 40, No. 5)) Everything Paterson writes is excellent. This historical novel is about the strike by workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts in 1912. In some ways it is a continuation of the theme of her novel Lyddie, about a mill worker in Lowell, Massachusetts in the mid-19th century. She tells of two young people's experience over the several months of the strike. It's interesting because neither of them, Rosa or Jake, is an enthusiast for workers' rights; they just get swept up in the events surrounding them. Rosa's mother and older sister are workers who are completely committed to the strike. Rosa is slightly ashamed of them, their poor English, their risk-taking. Jake is a worker himself, abused by his drunken father, illiterate, a petty thief. The two are sent with other children from Lawrence to Barre, Vermont, to socialist families supporting the strikers by taking in the starving children, taking care of them until the strike is over. An Italian American couple takes in Rosa and Jake, who are pretending to be brother and sister. The man, an accomplished stone worker and nobody's fool, soon suspects Jake is lying, but his response is unexpectedly kind. The way Paterson works in the historical details that are known--the terrible plight of the workers and their families, the evolution of the strike, the support from the growing labor movement around the country--is moving and sound. She speculates on how the slogan of the strike, Bread and Roses, Too, came into being, which fits in nicely with her characters and their feelings. Pat Dole (KLIATT Review, July 2007 (Vol. 41, No. 4)) In 1912 in the mill town of Lawrence, Massachusetts, immigrant workers are being exploited by greedy mill owners. An additional pay cut finally ignites a general strike that is ruthlessly suppressed by local police and militia. Rosa Cerutti, the young daughter of a poor Italian widow, is so bright that her mother and older sister work in a mill to support the family so that she can have the luxury of going to school. When the anti-strike violence escalates dangerously, the strikers decide they must send their children away from Lawrence to cities where union members have agreed to shelter them for the duration. Rosa is destined for Barre, Vermont. Jake, an illiterate, desperate, abused boy she has met accidentally, persuades Rosa to pretend that he is her brother so that he can get on the train with her and escape to a new life. With the new name of Salvatore, Jake is warmly welcomed along with Rosa by an older Italian couple in Barre, who shower them with new clothes and good food. All the while, though, Rosa is in an agony of fear for the safety of her mother and sister, especially when she finds out that they have been jailed and her little brother taken away from them. In the end the plot is neatly wrapped up. Narrator Raver has a grand time portraying the effusive Italian women who figure prominently in the story (based upon a true incident) and she voices an Irish priest and a rough-spoken boy with equal ease. Category: Fiction Audiobooks. KLIATT Codes: J--Recommended for junior high school students. 2006, Listening Library, 6 cds. 7 hrs.; Vinyl; plot, author, reader notes., $39.00. Ages 12 to 15.
Jake and Rosa, two children, form an unlikely friendship as they try to survive and understand the 1912 Bread and Roses strike of mill workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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