Book Description
for The Secret Pocket by Peggy Janicki and Carrielynn Victor
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
“I was always hungry and cold at Lejac. … Soup at lunch was a different color depending on the season. Gray soup in wintertime and colorful soup in the fall.” This moving account of a young Dakelh girl in western Canada forced to leave her home to live at a church-run residential school for much of the year is imbued with marvelous details and remarkable balance as it describes both hardship and resilience. Told in the voice of an older woman looking back on her childhood, her memories are of sadness and loss but also moments of humor (discovering nuns go the bathroom!), ingenuity (she and her friends sewed secret pockets inside their petticoats to hide food), and joy. Nothing was more joyful than the arrival of her grandfather’s sleigh to take them home at winter break, and the renewing months of summer among family. “Now … I look back at this time and see what sweet little geniuses we were. … We sewed our survival into every stitch. We were geniuses. We are geniuses. We will always be geniuses.” Heartrending and heartening, this stirring picture book features illustrations with a somber palette that brightens, and sober expressions that lighten, when setting and thoughts shift to home. (Ages 6-9)
CCBC Choices 2024. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024. Used with permission.