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Overview
Tomie has his own diary with a lock and a key&150now he can write down all his secrets and no one will be able to read them. All through the year, exciting things happen and Tomie writes about them in his diary. Sledding down the steep hill on his new Junior Flexible Flyer, being a pirate in the dance recital, and starting second grade with real art lessons at last! Then one Sunday morning Tomie's family hears news on the radio that changes everything. Master storyteller Tomie dePaola takes us back to 1941 and lets us experience what life was like growing up in the dePaola household.
Author-illustrator Tomie De Paola describes his experiences at home and in school in 1941 when he was a boy.
Synopsis
Tomie has his own diary with a lock and a key&150now he can write down all his secrets and no one will be able to read them. All through the year, exciting things happen and Tomie writes about them in his diary. Sledding down the steep hill on his new Junior Flexible Flyer, being a pirate in the dance recital, and starting second grade with real art lessons at last! Then one Sunday morning Tomie's family hears news on the radio that changes everything. Master storyteller Tomie dePaola takes us back to 1941 and lets us experience what life was like growing up in the dePaola household.
Publishers Weekly
This installment in the series set at 26 Fairmount Avenue finds Tomie enjoying a new sled, going to see Fantasia, celebrating a traditional Italian Easter and struggling to understand what is happening in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. Ages 7-up. (May) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
This installment in the series set at 26 Fairmount Avenue finds Tomie enjoying a new sled, going to see Fantasia, celebrating a traditional Italian Easter and struggling to understand what is happening in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. Ages 7-up. (May) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.Children's Literature
Part of the "26 Fairmount Avenue" series, this memoir allows children to jump back in time to 1941 and experience life through the eyes of Tomie. Tomie, a first grader, who received this journal as a Christmas present, describes for us the everyday events of his life during the year. We read early on about his Saturday afternoon sledding adventures. The best part of the day is the thrill of tying several sleds together to make a "ripper," then speeding down the hill, and tipping out into the cold, powdery snow. Tomie tells us about his trip to the movie theater to see Fantasia, his excitement of rehearsing, dressing up in a pirate's costume for his dance recital, and the fun he and his family have while at an amusement park. In addition to these happenings, Tomie's journal entries introduce us to important events and people of the times. One entry talks about FDR, polio and the March of Dimes. Another entry refers to celebrities such as Mae West, Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. The book ends with the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Black-and-white illustrations bring Tomie's journal writings to life. The childlike, pencil-drawn images allow one to believe that it is Tomie, the first grader, who is drawing these as he writes. Excellent as a teaching tool, this book can be used to teach about memoirs, diaries, and letter writing. In a social studies classroom it can be used to look at life during a certain period in our history. Because it is set in Connecticut, this book would be of particular to interest to Connecticut residents. 2003, G. P. Putnam's Sons,β Cara Mulcahy