Three generations of Ukrainian sunflower farmers thrive until Russia wages war on their country.
Every good family saga features a wedding, and this one boasts two. First, Alina marries Fedir. The newlyweds receive land with a dacha built on it to set them up for the future. Soon they’ll have a “sea of gold”—sunflowers that provide food, oil, and mulch. Alina becomes a baker and makes offerings to “BA BA SPODIVATYSYA,” an ancient oak tree. The couple’s daughter, Yana, is born in 1991, as Ukraine wins its independence from Russia. Years later, the second wedding—Yana’s, to a young man named Andreyev—is accompanied by rumors of Russian aggression toward Ukraine. Yana and Andreyev’s daughter, Oxana, is born with the expectation that she, too, will farm sunflowers. Then the Russians invade. The family house is set on fire; Oxana stops speaking. Alina, Yana, and Oxana, separated from their husbands and fathers, escape to Poland, then to America to live with Alina’s brother. Oxana’s sadness persists until it’s time to plant sunflower seeds there. Hidden within her doll are her family’s sunflower seeds, and sharing them reawakens her joy as she’s reminded of her homeland. With this methodically paced, poignant story, Polacco draws on her own Ukrainian heritage with illustrations of babushkas, their homes festooned with icons that evoke folksy farm scenes and resplendent sunflower fields.
An empathetic, heartbreaking look at how warfare can tear families apart—and how traditions still endure.
(author’s note, glossary) (Picture book. 7-10)