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Floella Benjamin

Author of My Two Grannies

14+ Works 350 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Floella Benjamin

My Two Grannies (2007) 107 copies, 8 reviews
Coming to England (1997) 88 copies
Skip Across The Ocean (1995) 85 copies, 2 reviews
My Two Grandads (2011) 38 copies, 1 review
Sea of Tears (2011) 8 copies, 1 review
Caribbean Cookery (1986) 3 copies
The Arms of Britannia (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Kingfisher Treasury of Witch and Wizard Stories (1996) — Contributor — 73 copies
IC3: The Penguin Book of New Black Writing in Britain (2000) — Contributor — 17 copies
The Sunday Review 31 August 1997 (1997) — Contributor — 1 copy, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Baroness Benjamin, of Beckenham in the County of Kent
Birthdate
1949-09-23
Gender
female
Organizations
Liberal Democrats
Awards and honors
Action for Children's Arts (J. M. Barrie Award|2012)
Nationality
Trinidad and Tobago
UK
Birthplace
Pointe-a-Pierre, Trinidad
Associated Place (for map)
Pointe-a-Pierre, Trinidad

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
Alvina loves her two grandmothers more than anything. Granny Vero is from Trinidad and tells Alvina about her childhood in the sun. Together, she and Alvina dance along to Calypso music. Granny Rose is from Yorkshire and has stories about riding donkeys on the English coast. When she plays brass-band music for Alvina, they dance, too. When Alvina’s parents decide to go on vacation, Granny Vero and Granny Rose both want to take care of Alvina, who settles the situation by suggesting they show more all stay at her house. The visit looks to become something of a battle royal as each granny tries to take over, but some clever negotiating on Alvina’s part and cooperation from the grannies saves the day. After all, despite their differences, they have a lot in common—each loves her granddaughter very much. Alvina is a spunky, biracial heroine whom readers will enjoy and appreciate. Chamberlain’s bright, childlike illustrations capture all three worlds and add a gently humorous touch. (Picture book. 3-6)

-Kirkus Review
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I feel that My Two Grannies is a very well written and illustrated children’s book. The character, Alvina has two grandmothers from different backgrounds and cultures. Thus, readers can get a glimpse of multiculturalism within families. I think that is extremely important for children to be aware of differences either within their selves or amongst their peers. Additionally, at the beginning of the story, the grandmothers wanted to do everything with their granddaughter their own way show more through their culture. However, the little girl insisted that they take turns because she loved both of her grandmother’s cultures. This provides a very important message for young readers. It is saying that no one should have to pick which aspect of his or her diversity they like best; they should embrace every part of who he or she is. In addition to the text being meaningful throughout this book, the illustrations did as well. The art really brought the message together because readers are able to see the difference of skin color, clothing, food, etc. between the grandmothers. The main idea is to embrace diversity and believe this book, through the text and pictures, demonstrates that well. show less
This story is great because it focuses on multicultural families. The two grannies have to share their granddaughter, and they fight over her very much when her parents go out of town. But, they end up liking eachother and sharing recipes and their granddaughter. The story line really showed how different people, cultures, and families can get along and collaborate.
My Two Grannies is a children’s fiction book written by Floella Benjamin and illustrated by Margaret Chamberlain. It was first published in Great Britain in 2007 by Frances Lincoln Children’s Books. This book tells the story of Alvina and her two grannies -one is from Trinidad and the other is from Yorkshire, England. When her parents go on vacation, both her grannies fight over which of them will take care of Alvina until she suggests they both watch her. It would be most suitable for show more 1st-3rd grade. The message in this book is about the importance of learning about different cultures. During this time, the grandmothers learn to share their differences with each other and Alvina is able to learn about both cultures. I liked this book because of the realistic characters that offer representation for biracial kids. People do not always get along and may have so much pride in their culture that it is hard to be accepting of other cultures as we see in how the two grandmother’s fight. I also liked how Alvina taught her grandmothers to compromise after they were fighting over which activities to do because they were then able to all learn about the two cultures! She told them to take turns and was trying to keep the peace. I loved how she made the time to learn about both cultures and appreciated both sides of her cultural background. Students would be able to learn from this book and it would be a wonderful book to use for a discussion about different cultures or even about family dynamics. show less

Awards

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Kevin George Contributor
E. L. Norry Contributor
Katy Massey Contributor
Judy Hepburn Contributor
Jermain Jackman Contributor
Kirsty Latoya Contributor
Joelle Avelino Illustrator, Cover artist
Diane Ewen Illustrator
Jennifer Northway Illustrator

Statistics

Works
14
Also by
3
Members
350
Popularity
#68,328
Rating
3.9
Reviews
12
ISBNs
45
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs