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Anna All Year Round

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Eight-year-old Anna enjoys one exciting experience after another in this charming story set in Baltimore just before World War I. She gets a new winter coat that's even better than Rosa's, rollerskates down the steepest hill in the neighborhood, and rides the trolley all by herself. And she delights in the changes occurring in the world around her, as motorcars and electric lights appear for the first time on her street. Based on the childhood experiences of the author's mother, these heartwarming episodes touch on timeless themes of family, friends, and the wonders of growing up.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 29, 1999
      Hahn (Stepping on the Cracks) mines her mother's reminiscences of growing up in Baltimore before WWI to create this nostalgic chapter book. Though set in a bygone era of gas street lamps and horse-drawn delivery carts, these episodes in the year Anna turns nine have timeless themes. Anna's efforts to eavesdrop are thwarted, for example, when her mother and aunt speak in their native German to tell secrets, so she attempts to learn the language on her own. (Hahn includes a glossary of German words and phrases.) On a dare from her best friend, Charlie, Anna speeds down a cobblestone street on her roller skates and ends up with stitches. One of the most humorous chapters also delivers the greatest lesson: Anna throws herself a "surprise" birthday party after her mother strictly forbids having friends to the house; her aunt saves the party, but as punishment Anna has to go to her room without dinner. Children will recognize the personalities and rivalries of the neighborhood (e.g., snobby Rosa with the perfect coat and her sidekick Beatrice as foils for tomboyish Anna) and will seeing the similarities between Anna's time and their own. Final artwork not seen by PW. Ages 7-10.

    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 1999
      Gr 2-4-Life in Baltimore in the years just before World War I might seem slow and dull to today's youngsters, but eight-year-old Anna experiences the same yearnings, disappointments, joys, and adventures that all children do. During the seasons described here, she struggles with long division; she outgrows her winter coat and longs for a red one just like the one belonging to her snobby friend Rosa; she asks Santa for an Erector set, though it is not considered a suitable present for a young lady; and she eavesdrops on her mother and aunts' conversations, only to be thwarted when the adults speak in German (a glossary of German terms is included). Hahn masterfully captures Anna's humiliation at wearing a coat that is too small, her thrill and fear during her fling as a daredevil roller skater, and the comforting sense of family that surrounds these everyday activities. De Groat depicts the period details-dress, transportation, etc.-and the characters' personalities all come to life through her soft, though vibrant pencil illustrations. Reading this book is like taking a quiet, peaceful carriage ride over the cobbled streets of an earlier time.-Linda Bindner, formerly at Athens Clarke County Library, GA

      Copyright 1999 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 1999
      Gr. 3^-5. Hahn's latest has the warm feel of Sidney Taylor's "All-of-a-Kind Family" stories," without the religious underpinnings. Almost-nine-year-old Anna Elizabeth Sherwood is growing up in a world that is changing. Soon motorcars will replace the horse and carriage, and streetlights will be electrified. Along with such exciting changes, Anna is also concerned about more mundane matters--the secrets her mother and aunt exchange in German; the birthday party she wants but her mother refuses to give her; a kiss on the cheek from the nice boy down the street. Writing in a selection of connected episodes, arranged around the seasons, Hahn introduces Anna, mischievous and sweet, bold and fearful, and her supportive circle of family and friends. Anna's prickly relationship with her loving but old-fashioned mother is especially well done. Illustrations by Diane de Groat, authentic right down to a Rolls Royce limousine with the steering wheel on the right, affectionately catch the flavor of the early 1900s setting. A glossary of German words is appended. ((Reviewed March 15, 1999))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1999, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 1999
      Based on the childhood of the author's mother, this engaging episodic novel follows the everyday adventures of third-grader Anna Sherwood growing up in pre-WWI Baltimore. Hahn's use of the present tense helps keep nostalgia at bay, as does the energetic, just-dashed-off quality of deGroat's rough pencil sketches.

      (Copyright 1999 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.8
  • Lexile® Measure:670
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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