This is the rope : a story from the Great Migration
(Book)
JP WOODS
1 available
JP WOODS
1 available
JP WOODS
2 available
Copies
Location | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Aurora Hills - Kids Picture Books | JP WOODS | Available |
Columbia Pike - Kids Picture Books | JP WOODS | Available |
Westover - Kids Picture Books | JP WOODS | Available |
Westover - Kids Picture Books | JP WOODS | Available |
Description
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
A little African American girl skips rope back home in South Carolina in the mid-twentieth century. When she is grown, with a husband and a baby girl, she uses that rope to tie up their belongings as they move to New York City. A few years later, it becomes a skipping rope for her little girl. And when she grows up, her father uses it to tie up her belongings for the drive to college. Later, she marries and has a little girl of her own, who skips rope in Brooklyn. That child narrates this intergenerational family story, which (in an author's note) Woodson relates to the Great Migration. Expressive oil paintings illustrate the clean, well-cadenced text in scenes that include well-researched period details. Although it is difficult to convey the passage of so much time in a 32-page picture book, and children may have trouble keeping track of the generations, there's no doubt of the warmth and strength of the family ties that bind these individuals together. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY-- Woodson and Ransome both have huge followings who will be interested in what this collaboration has produced.--Phelan, Carolyn Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Woodson's (Each Kindness) gentle, unpretentious writing and Ransome's eloquent artwork breathe life into this story of a close-knit African-American family and their pursuit of a better life. The rope of the title is used over and over, tying luggage to the family station wagon when they leave South Carolina, airing diapers outside their new Brooklyn apartment, serving as a jump rope for the narrator's mother as a girl, then securing boxes as she later goes off to college. Ransome (Light in the Darkness) pays close attention to the details of life in 1970s and '80s Brooklyn, from the posters on a bedroom wall and silverware drying by the sink to the dubious expressions of the neighborhood preteens as they survey the new girl. The rope that unites the family then passes to a new generation, as the narrator learns how to jump rope, "right here in Brooklyn, just last Friday night." The chronicle of a homely object in an age of disposables and the sense of place Woodson and Ransome evoke make this an especially strong and vibrant fictive memoir. Ages 5-8. Author's agent: Charlotte Sheedy Literary Agency. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
School Library Journal Review
Gr K-2-Something as simple as a discarded rope has tied a family story together through several generations. In the middle of the 20th century, an African American family moves from South Carolina to Brooklyn, NY, making the great migration north as many other families bravely did at the time. This tale follows a family through several generations, always coming back to the rope and its impact on the family as it's used to jump rope and tie suitcases to their car for the drive north. Channie Waites narrates with soothing and rhythmic tones. The story ends on a heartwarming, positive note with a family reunion which lends itself to further classroom discussion about the importance of family. VERDICT Woodson's story of family is a wonderful addition to any collection and will prove helpful for discussing civil rights with students.-Jessica -Gilcreast, Bedford High School, NH (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
"This is the rope my grandmother found / beneath an old tree / a long time ago / back home in South Carolina." The narrator's grandmother first uses it as her skipping rope. Later, she migrates north to Brooklyn as a young woman with her own family, and the rope is used in many other ways: to help tie their belongings to the top of their car, as a clothesline for laundry, as a cord for a pull toy, etc. But in each succeeding generation, one little girl uses it as skipping rope, sometimes as a solo pastime and sometimes in group play. As with the quilt passed down from generation to generation in Show Way (rev. 11/05), the rope becomes a symbol of family tradition and continuity against a backdrop of historical and social change. Woodson's understated but eloquent text gives specific details of one family's experience (the scent of South Carolina pine, the feeling of uncertainty of driving down a busy urban street for the first time, the pride in finally owning their own home), while Ransome's rich oil paintings provide historical context (Afros and dashikis in the 1960s, posters of Michael Jackson and Prince on a bedroom wall in the 1980s, mom's business suit in the 2000s). It all comes full circle in the end as Grandma sits on the front stoop watching her grandchild skip rope, just as she had done at the girl's age, and the sight stirs a "long-ago memory of sweet-smelling pine." kathleen t. horning (c) Copyright 2013. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Book Review
With great affection, a Brooklyn girl tells the story of her grandmother, mother and a rope that forms a bond across three generations. When just a little girl in South Carolina, the grandmother finds a rope under a tree and uses it to play jump-rope. The rope becomes entwined in the family story as the grandparents, with a baby in their arms, move to Brooklyn, and that baby grows up to become mother to the narrator. Whether used for games, for tying down luggage on a car or for holding high a banner at a grand family reunion, the rope is treasured. Woodson, a Newbery Honor and Coretta Scott King Honor and Award winner, has crafted a warm family saga of a household united by love, pride and an uncommon heirloom. The repetition of the title in a nursery-rhyme style will resonate with young listeners. Ransome's vivid, full-bleed, double-pagespread oil paintings create an upbeat, welcoming vista of rural South Carolina and urban Brooklyn. The sun-infused yellows on the cover beckon readers to open the book and savor the "long-ago memory of sweet-smelling pine." A quiet affirmation of a strong and close-knit family that, along with so many other African-Americans, found a better life as part of the Great Migration. (author's note) (Picture book. 4-8)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
A little African American girl skips rope "back home in South Carolina" in the mid-twentieth century. When she is grown, with a husband and a baby girl, she uses that rope to tie up their belongings as they move to New York City. A few years later, it becomes a skipping rope for her little girl. And when she grows up, her father uses it to tie up her belongings for the drive to college. Later, she marries and has a little girl of her own, who skips rope in Brooklyn. That child narrates this intergenerational family story, which (in an author's note) Woodson relates to the Great Migration. Expressive oil paintings illustrate the clean, well-cadenced text in scenes that include well-researched period details. Although it is difficult to convey the passage of so much time in a 32-page picture book, and children may have trouble keeping track of the generations, there's no doubt of the warmth and strength of the family ties that bind these individuals together. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY-- Woodson and Ransome both have huge followings who will be interested in what this collaboration has produced. Copyright 2013 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Woodson's (Each Kindness) gentle, unpretentious writing and Ransome's eloquent artwork breathe life into this story of a close-knit African-American family and their pursuit of a better life. The rope of the title is used over and over, tying luggage to the family station wagon when they leave South Carolina, airing diapers outside their new Brooklyn apartment, serving as a jump rope for the narrator's mother as a girl, then securing boxes as she later goes off to college. Ransome (Light in the Darkness) pays close attention to the details of life in 1970s and '80s Brooklyn, from the posters on a bedroom wall and silverware drying by the sink to the dubious expressions of the neighborhood preteens as they survey the new girl. The rope that unites the family then passes to a new generation, as the narrator learns how to jump rope, "right here in Brooklyn, just last Friday night." The chronicle of a homely object in an age of disposables and the sense of place Woodson and Ransome evoke make this an especially strong and vibrant fictive memoir. Ages 5–8. Author's agent: Charlotte Sheedy Literary Agency. (Aug.)
[Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLCSchool Library Journal Reviews
K-Gr 3—A utilitarian rope-now a toy, now a clothesline, now a fastening cord-ties together this lyrical multigenerational story of one family's experience leaving the South for greater opportunities up North. Woodson's text and Ransome's warm, lived-in oils begin in the sweet expanse of South Carolina, the rich rural landscape contrasted with the busy, populous images of the family's new stone-and-concrete neighborhood in Brooklyn. Every page turn reveals the titular phrase again, but the repetition does not weary as the family thrives and evolves in great leaps and short steps. Significant episodes like the arrival of a baby or the beginning of college unfold in meaningful text and blend with fine splashes of humor; one surprisingly dynamic and evocative spread shows a teenager's room-Prince poster on the wall, Michael Jackson albums scattered on the bed-and the shadow of a mischievous younger brother dashing down the hallway with the rope, needed for "some crazy game that little boys play." An author's note offers a brief familial history as well as a few lines about the Great Migration and supports the text as a resounding affirmation of the journey made by more than six million African Americans in search of change. With characteristic grace and a knack for the right detail, Woodson and Ransome have provided a pleasing portrait of one loving family in the midst of a movement.—Robbin E. Friedman, Chappaqua Library, NY
[Page 75]. (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Woodson, J., & Ransome, J. (2013). This is the rope: a story from the Great Migration . Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc..
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Woodson, Jacqueline and James, Ransome. 2013. This Is the Rope: A Story From the Great Migration. New York, NY: Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Woodson, Jacqueline and James, Ransome. This Is the Rope: A Story From the Great Migration New York, NY: Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc, 2013.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Woodson, J. and Ransome, J. (2013). This is the rope: a story from the great migration. New York, NY: Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Woodson, Jacqueline., and James Ransome. This Is the Rope: A Story From the Great Migration Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 2013.