Written by Lana Button
Illustrated by Skye Ali
Tundra Books
978-1-774880784
40 pp.
Ages 3-7
September 2024
Over the holidays, many children will have visited the home of their Grammie or Grandpa, Baba or Opa. Hopefully, with those visits came many great memories. But what if Grammie is no longer there? What happens to those memories? For this child, those memories are still intact and significantly linked to their Grammie's house.
As a couple drive up to a house for sale, they are met by a child who has lots to tell them.
You're going to love my Grammie's house.You'll love every single thing about it.
From My Grammie's House by Lana Button, illustrated by Skye Ali |
So begins the most personal house tour ever. The child takes them through the house and yard, showing them everything that they did with their Grammie and how Grammie lived there. (Skye Ali's illustrations brilliantly depict what had been in place, now gone, with light pink sketches of plants and picture frames, lamps and furniture.) The house hunters learn how the kitchen floor is great for skating, where Grammie used to sit to do her sitting exercises, and where the cranberry juice and cereal were kept, and where Jethro, the cat, likes to hide.
From My Grammie's House by Lana Button, illustrated by Skye Ali |
They find Grammie's old sweater, and they play in Grammie's yard on the old swings and in the climbing tree. There is nothing this child doesn't about this house.
Even with all the attributes of Grammie's house laid out to them–the child calls it, "The best house ever. You are so lucky!"–there is still one thing they'll need and the child is happy to fill it.
For
many children, visiting a grandparent at their home will be as much
about the place as it is the person. Their memories are what they saw
and did there are as crucial as the feelings evoked by the grandparent.
For this child, Grammie's house is a bundle of memories of food and
smells, activities and sounds. Grammie may no longer live there, whether
by a move or a death, but that house is still filled with her and
continues to evoke wonderful memories for this child. Better yet, Lana Button
does not convey any sadness or anger from the child at other people
moving into Grammie's house. She tells it as the grandest of all
welcomes, a sharing of memories and an invitation of appreciation. Lana Button makes this child the best real estate agent on the planet. (No surprise how the story ends.)
Skye Ali, an American illustrator who works in gouache and coloured pencils, keeps the house tour by the child bright and inviting, using bold colours and lines that evoke movement and expectation. As they walk (or run) room to room and outside, Skye Ali brings us with them to experience a shag rug, cold water out of the hose outdoors, and flying to the clouds on a swing singing, "Weebly Womp. Weebly Womp."
Though Grammie no longer lives in this house, she still lives in this child through their memories of the time spent in Grammie's house. The connection of child and grandmother with place is almost tangible, palpable in the cookies that were eaten, the texture of the flooring, the warmth of the sun through a window, and the comfort of a climbing tree. This was and always will be Grammie's house, with or without Grammie.
BTW we need the recipe for those scotch cake cookies. The child promised to share.
Thank you so much for this awesome review, Helen!
ReplyDeleteSo mix 1 pound of butter
2 egg yolks
1 1/2 cups brown sugar
4 cups of flour
Roll into balls and add a piece of cherry
Bake 25 mins at 325- YUM!!!!