In choosing My Name is Pablo as an Honor Book in its 1966 Spring Festival, the New York Herald Tribune praised the author for her "humanity and depth of understanding" in developing character. The story follows a young boy in Mexico.
Aimée Sommerfelt was a Norwegian author of numerous children's books and young adult novels, as well as a prolific translator.
She was born Nicoline Aimée Dedichen in Oslo in 1892, the daughter of Norwegian physicist Henrik Dedichen.
After studying in Paris, she became an authorized French translator. She later began writing children's books, and made her debut with the novel "Stopp tyven! (Stop, Thief!)" in 1934. For 30 years, she wrote a regular column in the magazine Alle kvinners (All Women), in which she gave advice about parenting and children.
Sommerfelt was most famous for her 1959 work The Road to Agra, which became an international bestseller. In 1961, it became her first book to be published in the United States, being translated into English by Evelyn Ramsden. In the U.S., the book won both the Jane Addams Children's Book Award and the Josette Frank Award.
Her books usually highlighted issues of social justice. They placed young protagonists in extremely difficult circumstances, such as poverty and wartime.
She married linguist Alf Sommerfelt and was also the cousin of Norwegian writer Hans Heiberg.
Sommerfelt was a member of the State Film Control during the first years of World War II as well as after the war ended, and she was the leader of the Youth Literature Writer's Association (ULF) from 1957 - 1966.
Towards the end of her life, she lost her sight and was completely blind when she wrote her last two books.
I enjoyed learning about the Mexican household and its family values. I felt this book was realistic and loved the contrast between Fredrick and Pablo on a financial level. This book described real-world problems from the 1960s to the present.