We Are a Garden: A Story of How Diversity Took Root in America

by Lisa Westberg Peters (Author) Victoria Tentler-Krylov (Illustrator)

Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade
This lyrical and extremely timely picture book illuminates the many different migrants who have made their homes in North America through the centuries. Long ago a strong wind blew. It blew people, like seeds, to a new land. The wind blew in a girl and her clan, where herds of mammoths still wandered the frozen tundra. It later blew a boy and his family across frigid waters, and they spread across the new land. Over time, the wind continued to disperse newcomers from all directions. It blew in men who hoped to find gold, and slave ships, and immigrant families. And so it continued, for generations and generations. Here is a moving and tender picture book that beautifully examines centuries of North American history and its people.
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Publishers Weekly

Overly glossy metaphor undermines this narrative nonfiction explanation of how the U.S. became culturally and racially diverse. Peters employs a metaphor of wind, chronologically tracing human migration to the North American continent, from First Nations peoples ("Long ago a strong wind blew. It blew people, like seeds, to a new land") to contemporary immigrants ("The wind blows in a thirteen-year-old refugee who adjusts her head scarf... and declares she will be a doctor someday"). Tentler-Krylov contributes sweeping, vintage-inspired watercolors, though scenes aboard slave ships and portrayals of Chinese railroad workers feel racially insensitive, portraying stereotyped features. In this uneven effort, the metaphor elides historical context, lending an equivalent lens to voluntary emigration and forced migration: "it blew in a sailing ship carrying boys and men who hoped to find their fortune" is followed by "the wind blew in slave ship after slave ship" and "it blew in ships carrying families who were weary of hunger." Back matter includes a glossary, an author's note clarifying the groups portrayed, and a select bibliography. Ages 4-8. (Apr.)

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.
Lisa Westberg Peters
Lisa Westberg Peters is the author of nineteen children's books including Our Family Tree: An Evolution Story, the winner of the Minnesota Book Award. Her first book, The Sun, The Wind and the Rain, was named an Outstanding Science Trade Book, and many of her titles have received starred reviews. She lives in Minneapolis with her husband, but they spend much of their time at their cabin in northwestern Wisconsin. Visit her at lisawestbergpeters.com.

Victoria Tentler-Krylov grew up in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and studied architecture and urban design at Cooper Union and Columbia University. Victoria's artwork has been published by Pink Giraffe Books in Russia and by Spider magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe, and Flutter Magazine in the US. She is the illustrator of Just Read! by Lori Degman. Her first book, a picture-book read-aloud of Peter Pan, was published by Quarto. She lives with her family just outside Boston, MA. Visit Victoria online at cargocollective.com/victoriakrylov.
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9780593123133
Lexile Measure
1000
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Schwartz & Wade Books
Publication date
April 06, 2021
Series
-
BISAC categories
JNF053240 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Social Topics | Emigration & Immigration
JNF038100 - Juvenile Nonfiction | People & Places | United States
JNF052000 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Social Science | General
Library of Congress categories
Immigrants
United States
Cultural pluralism

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