A young girl discovers the value of mentoring her tag-along little sister in Gardella’s picture book.
Kids and grandmas having fun together are a favorite picture book subject; that’s what’s going on here, as two girls help their jovial grandmother can tomatoes. The author, however, neatly weaves the specifics of tomato canning into a deeper theme: the changing dynamic between a young girl and her little sister. At first, the book’s nameless narrator, who has been her grandma’s only helper at canning time, is dismayed when grandma insists that she bring little sister, Monica, along to help. (“‘She’s too little,’ I complain”). With subtle encouragement from Grandma (a wink of understanding here, a shared giggle there), the narrator (who has fair skin and brown hair) realizes how enjoyable it is to see the experience fresh through Monica’s wide eyes and to offer her guidance and encouragement. The author states that most of her books are inspired by her many years of ranch life—her entertaining description of the canning process, from picking the tomatoes to labeling the jars, is certainly meticulous enough to feel firsthand. The warmth in the text is well matched by Donnelly’s full-color, painterly illustrations that give the well-defined characters life on the page.
A celebration of familial warmth and the rewards of maturing sibling relationships.