The true story of the Jewish immigrants who in 1902 created the beloved “Teddy’s Bear.”
After Emily’s parents, Morris and Rose, read a news story about how President Theodore Roosevelt spared the life of a wild bear on a hunting trip, the little girl helps her mother make a stuffed bear in his honor. Using velvet fabric, Emily stitches the seams while her mother tells the story of how Morris fled persecution in Russia for the United States. On the ship, he gave his treasured stuffed animal to a sad-eyed youngster, an act of compassion similar to the kindness that President Roosevelt showed to the bear. When Emily and her mother finish the toy, they call it Teddy’s Bear and display it in the family’s candy shop window. Soon kids all over Brooklyn—and indeed all over the country, including the president’s own children—are cuddling teddy bears sewn by Emily and her mother. The illustrations are flat but cheerful, depicting expository moments that reflect the text. Images of the original Teddy’s Bear himself are especially sweet. The characters are light-skinned; Emily’s mother uses several Yiddish phrases, italicized and integrated into the dialogue. An author’s note offers more context and clarifies that there’s no evidence that Emily helped create the bear (though she may well have assisted).
A sweet, straightforward story that stitches hope and kindness into the history of a very special toy.
(Informational picture book. 4-7)