Product Details
Ma Dear's Aprons

Ma Dear's Aprons
By Patricia C. McKissack

List Price: CDN$ 10.99
Price: CDN$ 9.54 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 weeks
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca

24 new or used available from CDN$ 0.86

Product Description

Little David Earl always knows what day of the week it is. He can tell by the clean, snappy-fresh apron Ma Dear is wearing -- a different color for every day. Monday means washing, with Ma Dear scrubbing at her tub in a blue apron. Tuesday is ironing, in a sunshine yellow apron that brightens Ma's spirits. And so it goes until Sunday, when Ma Dear doesn't have to wear an apron and they can set aside some special no-work time, just for themselves.

In their first collaboration, Newbery Honor author Patricia McKissack and award-winninng illustrator Floyd Cooper lovingly recreate a slice of turn-of-the-century Southern life as it was for a single African-American mother and her son.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1642102 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-02-01
  • Released on: 2000-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .14" h x 8.48" w x 10.91" l, .32 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 32 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
You can read piles of books for kids and think they're just fine--until you hit one that reminds you how truly wonderful a children's book can be. Patricia C. McKissack's Ma Dear's Aprons is such a book. Graceful and deceptively simple, it tells the story of a week in the life of a turn-of-the-century boy and his mother: McKissack's great-grandmother.

Floyd Cooper's illustrations, misty as memory, bring readers so close, and with such warmth and welcome, that youngsters may feel that they, too, sit in the lap of Ma Dear's apron, a little sleepy, and very happy to be there.

From Publishers Weekly
In what PW called a "tender tale of love and sacrifice," an African-American widow and her son trace the rhythms of their week during the early part of the 20th century. Ages 3-8. (Jan.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
Grade 1-4. McKissack recounts the weekly routines of her great-grandmother, Ma Dear, through the eyes of David Earl, Ma Dear's son. Each morning the young boy sees his mother put on a different apron, one for each day's chore. The work is described in carefully chosen detail. Laundry is done by heating water, scrubbing each piece on the rub board, and using peach leaves in the final rinse. Ma Dear and David Earl take the sweet-smelling, neatly ironed and folded clothes in a horse-drawn wagon to the basement door of a large mansion on the other side of town. The rich white woman carefully checks the laundry and gives Ma Dear a quarter for her work. The mother's love for her son is seen in tangible ways as Ma Dear creatively involves David Earl in her weekly chores, teaching him to iron on practice pieces of cloth without making cat whiskers, singing while they clean, and making string designs during their lunch break. Cooper's oil wash paintings in muted colors capture the love of mother and son at work, rest, and play. The narrative ends abruptly with a change of focus to David Earl's father, who had been killed as a soldier. The real story is Ma Dear's. Children who have this book read to them will see an African-American woman whose life in the rural south of the early 1900s was difficult but lived with dignity and joy.?Adele Greenlee, Bethel College, St. Paul, MN
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.