A beautifully rendered and colorfully illustrated account of the childhood of the great black writer and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston shows a young child triumphing over adversity and learning to pursue her dreams. IP.
An inspirational story of the life of Zora Hurston, an African-American author. Great for instilling confidence and proving the message, "you can be anything you want to be if you set your mind to it".
As a child in Florida, Zora Hurston loved to climb a chinaberry tree to look out over the lands that lay beyond her small town and dreamed of going there. Her mother encouraged her dreaming and told her that she could be anything that she wanted to be. Her father, on the other hand, said that tree climbing was for boys, and Zora would do better by wearing a dress and do more traditionally female activities. The future author and folklorist decided to follow her mother’s advice.
A beautifully illustrated depiction of an incident in the famous African American writer Zora Hurston’s childhood, which incorporates themes of self-esteem, independence, critical thinking about the world around you, heritage and African American history while treading lightly across slavery, and the role of an observer and storyteller in preserving history.
Beautiful watercolor illustrations and a sad, but inspiring story. The narrative is a bit choppy and my daughter was left confused by a few sections where the story jumped around. This picture book focuses solely on Hurston's childhood and her mother's death. Hurston's later success as a novelist is only briefly mentioned in the author's note.
I am always drawn to watercolor art. The art in this book is gorgeous!
I am also drawn to parents that encourage their daughters' love of climbing trees and not listening to the men in their lives who tell them to "be a lady". Zora's mom was wonderful!
Classic Picture book –Zora is inquisitive and adventurous, which her mother encourages. When Zora’s mother dies from sickness, Zora runs to the chinaberry tree, looks up into the sky, and promises to see the world like her mother wanted. This book is powerful, but in a subtle way. The illustrations are watercolor, creating a somewhat blurry, far-off feel, like we are reading a memory. The color pallet is clean and warm, which deepens the effect of reading a sweet memory. The words aren’t excessive, telling just enough to let the reader gather clues from the silences and beautiful pictures. I would use this book to teach children about living their dreams and how this helps fulfill their parents’ dreams as well.
A short account of Zora's Hurston's relationship with a mother who encouraged her to remember the stories she has been told and believe that her dreams are within her reach.