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PRAIRIE DAYS by Patricia MacLachlan

PRAIRIE DAYS

by Patricia MacLachlan ; illustrated by Micha Archer

Pub Date: May 26th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-4424-4191-0
Publisher: McElderry

Newbery Medalist MacLachlan tells the story of a pastoral childhood on a prairie farm.

The unnamed narrator is depicted as a pale child with fair hair living in a small prairie town in, perhaps, the 1940s. In a nostalgic, retrospective voice, the protagonist recalls the wildlife and flowers near the farmhouse; the vast landscapes; swimming in the farm pond; and the sights, smells, and sounds of happy summers spent primarily outdoors. The narrator remembers trips to small towns, the local filling station, the granary by the railroad, and the nearby shops. Characters all appear to be white, and it is strictly from this perspective that the story is told; it comes complete with cowboys who say, “Hello, little lady,” and nearby towns with names like Rattlesnake and Spotted Horse. The story is insular, told as it is from this one child’s point of view, yet sprawling in its visual depictions of the “sky so big” (the book’s wide, horizontal orientation does its best to capture this) and the point “where the prairie met the mountains.” Archer’s vivid, textured mixed-media illustrations include tissue papers and homemade stamps. They are richly colored and detailed; these are spreads to linger over. Readers may see something new with each look.

A deeply nostalgic look at once-upon-a-time Midwest farm life.

(Picture book. 4-10)