For one young girl, a ride on the Great Northern Railroad from her small country town to her grandmother’s home in the big city of St. Paul in the early 20th century was an event that would be cherished forever.
Based on a family story told by the author's grandmother, this surprisingly colorful picture book, set in the 1930's, vividly recounts the narrator's first train ride, from her small town home in the prairie (North Dakota?)to St. Paul. The story captures the excitement of her traveling alone on the Great Northern Railroad to visit Grandma, and the realistic paintings add to the text. One thing bothered me: as they train pulls into St. Paul the girl observes a city of lights, zillion more than stars. According to one dictionary, the word zillions did not appear until 1940; another (Merriam-Webster) puts it at 1934. But the book is set, I would guess, in the mid 1930's. Even if Merriam-Webster is correct, would the little girl in her prairie town be likely to be a first adapter of the word? This one word did not ring true--and "millions" would have been just as expressive. No Lexile measure is available, but the book would be fine as a read-aloud for second graders, and the short lines would make it a fairly easy read for new readers. Use in units on the midwest, prairies, farms, and especially for transportation.
This is a beautiful book of days gone by. A little girl goes by herself on a long train journey across the country. My guess is that it goes from one end of the Great Northern line to the other. It is set in a time where train travel was a thing of luxury and we get to experience it through the eyes of a child who when waited on in the dinner car sneaks a few sugar cubes into her coin purse and who makes friends with an older lady passing the time while knitting. A snowstorm brings the train to a halt, causing fear for the girl. The train is late, will Grandma still be waiting on the other end? Of course, Grandma did just that.