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On Linden Square

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

While there are many books about building friendships, this one celebrates the creation of a community. —Booklist

It's the first day of winter vacation and Stella Mae Culpepper is bored to tears. As she looks out from the window of her second-floor apartment, she can see all of the usual happenings on Linden Square, her city neighborhood. There are her neighbors. She knows them all by name—or by the names she's given them, depending on their activities and what Stella Mae can see from her window. Stella Mae thinks she knows her neighbors but she doesn't really. Everyone in the neighborhood is too busy minding their own business to pay much attention to anyone else.

But now it's the first day of winter vacation and a storm is coming. Not just any storm but a big, wonderful winter storm. It's a blizzard! And when the snow finally stops and Stella Mae ventures outside to play, something quite marvelous happens on Linden Square.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2013
      Stella Mae loves to sit at her apartment-house window and watch her neighbors. They are all colorful characters that are easily identifiable. One sings karaoke badly, and one, named Miss Arpeggio, plays the piano. One has two cats named Pianissimo and Fortissimo and is named Mr. Rubenstein (for the piano virtuoso Arthur?). There's a couple who dress fancily and a couple who wear Mexican hats. Not one of these folk has any community spirit until a great snowfall blankets the town square. With Stella Mae in the lead, they join together to build a snowman, all providing their individual touches. Have they sculpted a dancer or a jazz musician or an Indian elephant-headed god or Babar? It is Stella Mae who devises the most inclusive name, "Ferdinand Ganesh, the Jazzy Dancing Baba Feng Shui Elephant-Mouse!" Community togetherness! They eat latkes and tacos, drink cider and dance to tango music from a trombone. Sullivan is a musician and undoubtedly intended her use of musical terminology along with multicultural touches to be a learning experience. Unfortunately, there is no lesson to be learned without textual support or visual clues. The watercolor art is so loose it becomes lost on the mostly white backgrounds. (glossary) Pleasant but inconsequential. (Picture book. 4-7)

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      September 1, 2013

      PreS-Gr 3-Home on her winter vacation, Stella Mae Culpepper surveys the scene from her second-floor window overlooking the square below. She spies her many neighbors, none of whom seem to interact with one another. Then, following a heavy snowstorm, she ventures to a park across the street and begins rolling a snowball. Surprisingly, she is soon joined by her fellow residents, all of whom participate in the snow sculpting. Each one has a different interpretation of what they are jointly creating. Readers familiar with children's literature will recognize the characters' references to Ferdinand the Bull, Babar, and Baba Yaga. Stella Mae distills the suggestions and "triumphantly" calls the sculpture, "Ferdinand Ganesh, the Jazzy Dancing Baba Feng Shui Elephant-Mouse." Outdoors for the rest of the day, the celebrating neighbors interact eating latkes and tacos with cider, enjoying music, and dancing by candlelight. Sullivan's friendly storytelling is accompanied by pen-and-ink and watercolor illustrations that are reminiscent of Quentin Blake's style. Sullivan outlines elements using narrow black lines and tucks in small details. Along with giving the characters even more personality, the artwork nicely defines the setting. This pleasant story would be a worthy choice for libraries needing picture books with a message about cooperation and being neighborly.-Lynn Vanca, Freelance Librarian, Akron, OH

      Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2013
      Preschool-G While there are many books about building friendships, this one celebrates the creation of a community. Initially, the neighbors of Stella Mae Culpepper keep to themselves, listening to their own music, riding their bikes, and playing with their dogs. And Stella remains aloof, too, as an observer. But a snowstorm brings them all out at once, first to wonder at Stella's snow sculpture creation and then to join in, adding unique features including horns and dancing feet. Ultimately, they create Ferdinand Ganesh, the Jazzy Dancing Baba Feng Shui Elephant-Mouse, a reflection of their varied cultures and interests and whimsical enough to delight all readers. Sullivan's watercolor illustrations, which leave plenty of white space on the page, are lively and fluid, with few straight lines outlining soft colors. The cartoonlike humans are more realized by their actions than their features, but the text and illustrations individualize them all, showing their unique interests. A glossary at the conclusion explains many of the musical terms interspersed in the text, along with cultural references. Move over, Frosty, more imaginative snow sculptures are on the way.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2014
      Stella Mae's Linden Square neighbors rarely acknowledge one another. When a big snowstorm transforms their small park, everyone ventures out to build a snow sculpture together and make merry. The loosely sketched watercolor and ink illustrations capture the community diversity, which seems on too much display in the text. The glossary includes musical concepts and literary and cultural references.

      (Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • PDF ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.3
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:3

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