Copyright Date:
2024
Edition Date:
2024
Release Date:
09/10/24
Illustrator:
Vidal, Oriol,
Pages:
1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN:
1-7282-8351-5
ISBN 13:
978-1-7282-8351-7
Dewey:
629.225
Dimensions:
26 cm
Language:
English
Reviews:
School Library Journal Starred Review
(Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Gr 2–4— Nelson Molina grew up in East Harlem, New York City. He learned early on from his mother that nothing was worthless and that even things that seemed like trash had value if upcycled or repurposed. From his father he learned the pleasure of collecting and displaying treasures. As a sanitation worker, Molina discovered many unique items thrown away in the day. Treasure by treasure, he developed what has now become The Trash Museum, an unofficial collection of finds from the garbage housed in a Sanitation Department garage. The illustrations effectively capture the joy of discovery and the dignity of Molina's work and life's mission. Back matter encourages readers to employ the four R's (reduce, reuse, recycle, and rethink) when it comes to the resources they use and discard. VERDICT Informative and inspirational without veering into sentimentality, this title is useful across curricula and will have readers rethinking the value of items that appear seemingly worthless. Highly recommended.— John Scott
Kirkus Reviews
A tribute to a New York City sanitation worker who salvaged a museum's worth of treasures from the trashThough actual glimpses of the thousands of antique toys, old family portraits, and other evocative artifacts that Nelson Molina gathered over the course of his long career are limited to a paltry few photos at the end, his message that our castoff junk is rich in things that can be usefully recycled or upcycled comes through strongly in this brief biographical account. Following an appeal from Molina himself to search for the beauty and value in everything, even garbage, Larsen looks back to his subject's youth in East Harlem. The author links the pleasure that Molina took in building birdhouses from discarded bits of lumber and repairing a broken toy truck for his little brother to later years on the job-arranging reclaimed items first in a locker room and then expanding into larger quarters as the first few finds grew into thousands. Vidal's tidy, pleasant scenes of Molina hauling trash and sifting through garbage are implausibly clean and uncrowded. Still, suggestions for personal ways to "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, and Rethink" at the end invite readers to carry on the good work. Molina writes that his parents were from Puerto Rico; figures in group scenes are racially diverse.Bags up a worthy takeaway about finding beauty in the most unlikely of places.(Picture-book biography. 6-8)
"Informative and inspirational... will have readers rethinking the value of items that appear seemingly worthless. Highly recommended." -- School Library Journal, STARRED Review A picture book about what we throw away, and why it might be worth keeping! What if everywhere you looked, you saw something to make? Instead of seeing something broken, you saw something to fix? Instead of seeing something to throw out, you saw something to give away? This is how Nelson Molina sees the world. A former employee for the New York City sanitation department, Nelson saved over 45,000 objects from the garbage to fix and show his community through his museum, Treasures in the Trash. Explore the hidden potential in what we often discard and think differently about consumption, waste, and the impact of small actions. With themes of upcycling, anti-consumerism, love for community, and finding joy, Gifts from the Garbage Truck inspires kids to think creatively and curiously about what they do (and don't) throw away! Often, Nelson came across oddly shaped garbage bags. They clinked and clanked and jingled and jangled. Is there something more than garbage in here? Nelson would wonder. Is there something someone might love? "I knew it!" he'd exclaim, tearing the bag open and discovering a new gift from the trash. Nelson didn't throw the objects into the back of the truck with everything else. He had a better idea.