Small Things Mended
Small Things Mended
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2024--
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Penguin
Annotation: The healing power of community is tenderly expressed in this picture book for fans of A Sick Day for Amos McGhee and Las... more
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #826801
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright Date: 2024
Edition Date: 2024 Release Date: 03/19/24
Illustrator: Whitesides, Nancy,
Pages: 1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN: 0-593-52981-2
ISBN 13: 978-0-593-52981-2
Dewey: E
LCCN: 2023058175
Dimensions: 27 cm
Language: English
Reviews:
School Library Journal Starred Review (Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

K-Gr 3 —This is a soft and gentle book sharing the importance of community and friendship in healing a broken heart. The story begins with Cecil, an elderly man with a "good eye," who hears the laughter of his young neighbor, Lily. When a cartwheel causes Lily's watch to break, Cecil promises he will try to fix it to make her smile again. When he is successful, news quickly spreads just as Cecil also remembers how much he enjoyed fixing things. In the end, a pink elephant with a broken heart helps Cecil unlock his own path to happiness. There is much a young reader might miss in this nuanced tale. The story doesn't explicitly say that Cecil is sad and lonely, but Whitesides's translucent watercolors show framed photos of a spouse no longer there. VERDICT While on the surface this appears to be a quiet and muted narrative, it can spark lengthy discussions about the importance of community, the beauty of fixing things rather than discarding them, and the path to healing after immeasurable loss.—Heidi Dechief

Publishers Weekly

Though his backstory is left unspecified, apparently middle-aged Cecil lives alone with a dog and framed images of an absent loved one. When he adjusts a broken pocket watch for young neighbor Lily, he begins to recall how satisfying he finds fixing things, and soon makes a sign: “Cecil’s Repair Shop/ Small Things Mended.” After a child named Eleanor brings him Daisy, a stuffed elephant that’s missing a button eye, Cecil says, “He needs his eye fixed.... I know something about that” while pointing to himself. But Eleanor says that Daisy has a broken heart, and Cecil soon forms an emotional bond with the animal, which sits at his table and reminds him of the “warm feeling” that guests bring. Before long, Cecil renews his garden in order to invite neighbors to share its bounty. “A broken heart needs friends,” Cecil tells Eleanor in this heartwarming story, in which Robinson’s straightforward narration and Whitesides’s softly tinted, painting-like spreads underscore the role of community in healing. Characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Ages 4–8. (Mar.)

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School Library Journal Starred Review (Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly
Reading Level: 1.0
Interest Level: K-3
Lexile: AD560L
Guided Reading Level: N
Fountas & Pinnell: N

The healing power of community is tenderly expressed in this picture book for fans of A Sick Day for Amos McGhee and Last Stop on Market Street.

Kindly Cecil has a broken heart, but when the kids in his neighborhood start asking him to fix their valuables—a music box, a watch, a stuffed elephant—he gradually finds that he knows just how to do this mending. And in return, his circle of new friends offers the mending that his own heart needs.

This gentle, kindhearted story brings the generations of a community together to sustain and enrich one another, and it beautifully showcases the value of fixing things―and loving their history―rather than quickly discarding them.


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