From School Library Journal:
Grade 1-4?Polacco excels at personal narrative woven in words and pictures. Here, she tells the story of the summer her father, a lovable, flimflamming traveling salesman, discovers an ancient rock with mysterious lines that he believes to be magic. Da shows it to young Patricia and her somber brother, Ritchie, who seem convinced of the rock's powers as well. When their father is fired from his job, Ritchie is sure that the rock will help them; in its own way it does. Da writes a story about it and submits it to the local radio station, which then hires him to write stories of magic, hope, and dreams to be broadcast on the air. Returning to the rock to say "thank you," they discover it is gone. It is then that Patricia realizes that the magic had been inside them all along. The sentimental portraits Polacco paints are both intimate and universal?from the interior of Da's car, its dashboard littered with the detritus of a traveling salesman, to the interiors of the house with a wheelchair-bound Grandma, her artistic fingers twisted with arthritis and her hose drooping. So successful is Polacco at communicating through her vigorous words and watercolors that readers know these people and their modest, comforting environment instantly. A tender story that will not only remind readers of the necessity of believing in magic, but also renew memories and spark discussions of their own talismans.?Kate McClelland, Perrot Memorial Library, Greenwich, CT
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Publishers Weekly:
Polacco (Pink and Say; Chicken Sunday) again spins a family anecdote into a picture book, this time focusing on the adventures of her traveling-salesman father. Every day brings a surprise during the summers young Patricia spends with her dad, who collects stories "like kids collect baseball cards, or fine ladies collect special teacups." But one afternoon Da comes home with a tale of a magical rock that Patricia and her brother must see to believe. Eventually, it is belief in the rock's magic that sees the family through some hard times. While an excess of sentimentality occasionally saturates the tale, Polacco's easy-listening storytelling style so effectively evokes time, place and personality that her characters come to seem like old friends. Her signature art combines pencil, bold gouache and watercolor into vibrant, almost kinetic portraits. Period photos of Polacco and her relatives on the endpapers enhance this book's homey charm. Ages 5-up.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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