Bajo las palmas reales
by
Pura Belpre Award 2000 - American Library Association
In this companion volume to Alma Flor Ada's "Where the Flame Trees Bloom", the author offers young readers another inspiring collection of stories and reminiscences drawn from her childhood on the island of Cuba. Through those stories we see how the many events and relationships she enjoyed helped shape who she is today.
We learn of a deep friendship with a beloved dance teacher that helped sustain young Alma Flor through a miserable year in school. We meet relatives, like her mysterious Uncle Manolo, whose secret, she later learns, is that he dedicated his life to healing lepers. We share the tragedy of another uncle whose spirited personality leads to his love of flying...and the crash that takes his life.
Heartwarming, poignant, and often humorous, this collection encourages children to discover the stories in their our own lives -- stories that can help inform their own values and celebrate the joys and struggles we all share no matter where or when we grew up.
School Library Journal : Grade 4-7-This simple and graceful reminiscence of a
childhood in Cuba in the 1940s is a companion to Where the Flame Trees Bloom (Atheneum,
1994). Although not wealthy, the author's family lived comfortably with aunts,
uncles, and cousins in a large, shared family home in the small town of Camagüey.
Here any event beyond the ordinary became the focus of everyone's attention and
the fuel for many days of conversation. Each chapter includes an early memory or
experience of Ada's: nursing the baby bats that fell onto her porch, the
production of simple and inexpensive plaster figures for nativity scenes, etc.
The author writes about the contrast of wealth and poverty in her country at
that time and of the people who made an impression on her, including a ballet
teacher who befriended her during a lonely year in a new school, and an uncle
and aunt who worked with lepers. Her observations of people lead to a series of
revelations that shaped her life. Black-and-white photographs of the author and
her family appear throughout. Sylvia V. Meisner, Allen Middle School,
Greensboro, NC.
The New York Times Book Review, Mirta Ojito : [Ada] understands that to get to a
child's bedroom shelves, often a book must first enchant choosy adults to buy
it. And enchant this one does.
Kirkus Reviews : Of books comprising nuggets of memory there seems to be no end,
and in a companion volume to her Where the Flame Trees Bloom (1994, not
reviewed), Ada recounts small stories of growing up in the town of in Camagüey,
Cuba. She captures with some feeling the powerful effect of scent on memory:
night jasmine, coffee, ylang-ylang, and her grandmother's perfume of lavender
and sage. She immortalizes sibling hurts and uncles' gifts, and writes of the
childhood mystery of adult conversations partially overheard and partially
understood. She is rich in family, attempting with her grandmother the
impossible task of counting bats as they fly, and smashing her favorite doll
when her dashing uncle dies in a plane crash. She is rich in memories of other
adults, too: Madame Marie, a French-Jewish refugee; Gilda, a dance teacher,
whose affection carried Ada through an impossible year at school. Some
repetition does not detract, and children might be moved by Ada's exhortation to
consider their own family stories. (b&w photographs) (Memoir. 9-14).
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