In 1948, nine-year-old Katy Sue's mother dies suddenly, and she and her family spend the next year trying to recover from their loss, assisted by her Aunt Katherine, who quits her teaching job to help out on their Iowa farm.
Ellie Mathews is an author of fiction and nonfiction works including The Linden Tree (winner of the 2007 Milkweed Editions Prize for Children’s Literature). Her recipe for Salsa Couscous Chicken was the Grand Prize Winner of the 1998 Pillsbury Bake-Off. Mathews holds a degree in geography from the University of Washington, 1976 with emphasis on cartography and graphic arts.
A quiet story set in the 1940’s of a family adjusting to the sudden loss of the mother to meningitis. Told in first person through eleven year old Katy Sue, the plot focuses on the emotions of this close knit Iowa farming family. Genuine and warming. Middle readers who enjoy historical fiction or family drama should consider this as a title to try.
This is a beautiful story of a young girl and her family coming to terms with the sudden loss of their mother from illness. From the first lines, you are pulled into the world of rural farm life in 1940s America and the sobering reality that life can indeed be very fleeting. It's a serious novel but there are moments of levity. Some would call this a "quiet novel" in that there aren't huge plot points and sweeping changes. But there don't need to be. I recommend giving this book a read.
I absolutely loved this book, a balm in a pandemic. I loved the veracity of the girl’s voice, her attention to her surroundings, the little gestures like touching the elastic cuff on a nightgown, the importance of these things in reading her world. I loved the moment that Aunt Katherine touches her own neck and conveys a self-sense of being superior in her former life. The birth of the calf was so fresh. Just great.
It really is a piece of gratitude. I loved the lack of conflict; loss is enough of a life challenge. Everybody did their best and were allowed to be human.
I also really appreciated the thoroughness of so many facets of grief. Katy Sue’s grief informed me. I actually thought about the loss of my mother in new ways. My mother had been lost to me after a massive stroke, she couldn’t speak or walk, and yet she lived for thirteen more years. Katy Sue’s more compressed grief period was something I never had, I could never completely process the million little losses as we adjusted to her diminished presence in the family. When she did die, I had a new kid and I had forgotten so much, and the main feeling was that she was released. I so appreciate what this book brought back of my youthful relationship with my own mother.
I also loved looking up Stanchions, Cambric Tea, and the Fox and Geese game.
It is worthy of its awards, what a beautiful classic.
This is a very well written story about a family who has just buried their Mama under the linden tree. Not really YA, no major complications, somewhat mundane.
The story takes place in the 40's or 50's on a farm. Though I did not grow up on a farm, my mother did & we would visit the farm every summer when we were small. The author's words made me FEEL the physical place of the farm - she was descriptive without being overdone. I could see in my mind what she wrote. The book took me back to my youth. When she described making jelly & skimmming the foam off the top & putting it on a pie plate - my Mom did that. The main part of the story deals with the death of the mother & the changes her death made in the family & how they coped. It brought tears to my eyes a couple of times. That being said, I am not sure that it would be a book that children would enjoy. An older child might or a child who (unfortunately) might've lost someone they loved. There is a lot of feeling in the book & a lot of children would understand the words, but not register the depth of feeling behind the words.
This book, prominently displayed at my local library, seemed to call me. So different from my last read The Prince of Frogtown, that at first it was hard to adjust to the different writing styles.
This is a story told in lyrical writing, filled with soft images. Unlike Bragg who packs a wallop in his writing, this author quietly, introspectively, portrays the effects of grief on three young children and their widowed father when the mother/wife unexpectedly, suddenly dies from meningitis.
This is a snapshot of four seasons after the loss and how the family is working through the process of grief. It is accurate in the depiction of of pain and of moving forward, placing one foot in front of the other after a severe loss. I admired the characters and the writing.
If you like historical fiction you've probably read this one before: mother dies, family, especially one of the girls, has a hard time adjusting especially as father prepares to remarry, etc. Don't get me wrong, I am not belittling this kind of sadness and tragedy, but this book doesn't add anything new to this time-worn path. Still, I liked it and enjoyed Katy Sue's voice as well as her gentle and (for the most part) loving family.
This is Sarah Plain and Tall for the slightly older reader, say 5th to 7th grade instead of 3rd or 4th. The plot is common, but the characters and the setting are so real that even though I'm too young to have been there, I feel I truly know those people. This is a book for readers who like mood pieces.
I've read several of these books---how a family tries to survive after the mother dies, etc. It's pretty good, but nothing special. It was a good quick read, though and the characters were likable. It wasn't a waste of time, but I have read better. How's that? Not quite a professional review, but that's why they don't pay me the big bucks.
It's about a farm family in the 1940s, who is struggling after the mother dies. Not a book that will sell like Harry Potter but I think it will definitely appeal to those into the American Girl books and the Dear America series.
A "book for intermediate readers" by a friend and ex-student of mine. It...is...WONDERFUL. Such a warm, wise exploration of grief. Great period details.
A gentle read of a farm family in 1940's Iowa rooted in love who learn to cope with the sudden death of their mother. Winner of the Milkweed Prize and reminiscent of Sara Plain and Tall.