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  • Grandpa Green

Grandpa Green

Author
Illustrator
Lane Smith
Publication Date
August 30, 2011
Genre / Grade Band
Fiction /  2nd − 3rd
Language
English
Format
Picture Book
Grandpa Green

Only 2 copies currently available
Description
Grandpa Green wasn't always a gardener. He was a farmboy, a kid with chickenpox, a soldier, and an artist. In this captivating new picture book, readers follow Grandpa Green's great-grandson into a garden he created, a fantastic world where memories are handed down in the fanciful shapes of topiary trees.
Publication date
August 30, 2011
Genre
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781596436077
Lexile Measure
530
Publisher
Roaring Brook Press
BISAC categories
JUV013030 - Juvenile Fiction | Family | Multigenerational
Library of Congress categories
Great-grandfathers
Gardens

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

In this reflective tale, Smith (It's a Book) departs from his customary irony to muse on the memories, talents, and traditions passed down through generations. Smith's young narrator, in overalls and rubber boots, describes his great-grandfather. The boy waters plants and tidies up in a magnificent topiary garden, lined in delicate ink and decorated with ornamental hedges in the shapes of people, animals, and iconic objects. "He was born a really long time ago, before computers or cell phones or television," says the boy, and the first topiary depicts a crying baby. Other creations include rabbit- and chicken-shaped shrubs to suggest a childhood farm; a head-shaped bush dotted with red berries ("In fourth grade he got chicken pox"); and an erupting cannon to signify wartime. Smith works in an impressionistic range of emerald, moss, and seaweed hues, memorializing Grandpa Green's life events in meticulously pruned shrubs. The child eventually catches up with an elderly man who "sometimes forgets things. But the important stuff, the garden remembers for him." It's a rare glimpse into Smith's softer side--as skillful as his more sly offerings, but crafted with honesty and heart. Ages 5-9. (Sept.)

Copyright 2011 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

K-Gr 3—A child relates the story of his great-grandfather's life as it had been told to him in Smith's poignant story (Roaring Brook, 2011) about childhood on a farm, dreams and imagination, and a life filled with loving memories. Growing older sometimes means forgetting, but this tale celebrates the ability to keep memories alive in different ways. Noah Galvin narrates this simple, but poetic account of a man's life and the topiary garden that shares his story. The narration is simple, with little expression. Page-turn signals are optional. Make sure to have the book available since Smith's illustrations are what makes this Caldecott Honor book so successful.—Kelly Roth, Prospect Park School, PA

Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Lane Smith
Lane Smith is the award-winning author of 2012 Caldecott Honor book Grandpa Green, as well as It's a Book, and the middle-grade novel Return to Augie Hobble, among others. In 2012, the Eric Carle Museum named him a Carle Artist for lifelong innovation in the field of children's picture books, and in 2014, he was awarded the lifetime achievement award from the Society of Illustrators. In 2017, he was awared the Kate Greenaway Medal for There is a Tribe of Kids. He lives in an old house in Connecticut with the designer Molly Leach, pondering the goings-on in his own backyard.
Caldecott Medal
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Honor Book 2012 - 2012
Capitol Choices: Noteworthy Books for Children and Teens
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Recommended 2012 - 2012
Red Clover Award
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Nominee 2013 - 2013
Georgia Children's Book Award
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Nominee 2014 - 2014
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