Book Descriptions
for A Scarf for Keiko by Ann Malaspina and Tuesday Mourning
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
With World War II under way, Jewish Sam is struggling to learn how to knit socks for his soldier brother alongside his classmates at school. He’s also learning that attitudes toward people of Japanese heritage are becoming increasingly hostile. Reluctantly following his friends’ lead, Sam ignores his neighbor and friend, Keiko, when she offers to him help with his knitting. Sam’s parents, who understand prejudice and persecution, are appalled at the treatment of their Japanese friends and neighbors. When Keiko and her family are sent to an internment camp, Keiko leaves her bicycle in Sam’s care and gives him a pair of knitted socks for his brother. In response, Sam learns to knit a scarf, which he sends to her at the internment camp. Additional information about the internment of Japanese Americans is included in an author’s note at the end of a story that invites readers to consider how people seen as “other” are treated. (Ages 5–9)
CCBC Choices 2020. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2020. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
It's 1942. Sam's class is knitting socks for soldiers and Sam is a terrible knitter. Keiko is a good knitter, but some kids at school don't want anything to do with her because the Japanese have bombed Pearl Harbor and her family is Japanese American. When Keiko's family is forced to move to a camp for Japanese Americans, can Sam find a way to demonstrate his friendship?
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.