Twelve-year-old Rebecca, in Laurel Snyder's BIGGER THAN A BREADBOX, will be a friend, I am sure, for many of my students. Her mom and dad are having a hard time, and finally, one day after school, her mom puts Rebecca and her three-year-old brother, Lew, in the car and leaves Baltimore, headed for her mother's house in Atlanta.
Rebecca, who has always been called Rebecca, misses her dad horribly. And she is a new kid, missing her niche and friends in her old school, trying to be the "Becky" that the popular kids at her new school want her to be. And her mom, drowning in adult issues, is not really there to help.
Rebecca/Becky's life is further complicated by a magical bread box that she finds in the attic at her grandmother's house. She can wish for anything she wants- an iPod, her favorite Baltimore treats, cash, cute clothes-- and as long as it is small enough to fit into a bread box, her wish will be granted. Rebecca uses the bread box a lot, until she discovers the source of all of its riches…
BIGGER THAN A BREAD BOX is one of those books that screams to be shared with kids. It's about family, and fitting in, and growing up, and right and wrong. But mostly, it's just about saying to kids, "You are not alone."
And I know a lot of kids that need to hear that message…
I loved Bigger Than a Breadbox, and I agree with you; it is a book that has come along at just the right time for many kids. I loved the aspect of magical realism the book contains, and as a person whose parents divorced when I was 8, I could really connect with Rebecca's conflicted feelings.
ReplyDeleteI look forward to reading more of your posts!
There's lots of talk about this book & you've cemented my wish to get it & read it. That breadbox wishing sounds so intriguing!
ReplyDeleteI SOOooo need to read this...
ReplyDeleteI am doing this as a read aloud right now. The class loves it. They have great insight into where the stuff is coming from.
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