A Cloak for the Dreamer

by Aileen Friedman

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When a tailor asks each of his three sons to make a cloak for the archduke, the third son's design reveals his desire to travel the world rather than follow in his father's footsteps.

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10 reviews
This is a story of a tailor and his three sons. All three help him and he hopes one day they will become tailors. The Archduke needs 3 cloaks and 3 dresses made so the tailor has each son make a cloak while he makes the dresses. Two of his sons make great cloaks, one of them even makes 2 cloaks. But Misha makes a cloak out of circles, representing the blue oceans, green meadows, yellow sand of deserts, and red routes between far away places. Misha wanted to travel the world and his cloak represented it. The tailor realized when he saw Misha's cloak that his son should travel and not be a tailor. The next day the tailor and his two other sons fix the cloak that Misha has make so that he can wear it when he travels. This would be a good show more book to use in math. It incorporates shapes, patterns, and geometry. show less
The town tailor had three sons, Ivan the oldest wanted to be a tailor just like his father and work side by side with him. Alex the middle son wanted to work as a tailor with his father also. The youngest, Misha was different, he spent his day looking over maps and dreaming of far away places and lands that he would like to go see. One day, the tailor had an order so big he did not think he could fill it alone so he told each of his three sons to make a cloak for the Archduke and to show their work to him. They each fulfilled this task, Ivan used rectangles, Alex used squares and triangles, while Misha used circles, making it unusable because of all the wholes. Proud of all three of the boys, the tailor praised each for their work and show more pointed out that Misha’s would not make a very good cloak but that it was obviously time for his youngest son to travel the world. While Misha slept, the tailor and his two older sons took Mishas cloak of circles and transformed it to a cloak of hexagons for Misha to wear on his travels.

Cute story, Misha shows determination, he does not enjoy the work like his brothers do and yet he does his best for his father. The tailor is a kind man and understands the sacrifices that Misha is making and wants his young son to be happy, so he lets him go with a special cloak that has been fashioned with love and is now useable. The kids enjoyed me reading this story to them, they liked seeing the pictures of the colorful cloaks the boys made and seeing the father understand that it was harder for Misha than it was for his brothers to do the work at the tailors shop. They found it sad that the younger brother left, but was happy he was leaving to do what he wanted. Great pictures, good story, the back of the book has learning ideas about shapes, math, and other activities to help reinforce some of the subtle learning concepts of this book.
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½
This book is a good example of a realistic fiction book. This is a narrative that presents a true depiction of life in present day. Readers will be able to imagine themselves or people they know encountering similar situations. It allows them to experience a different lifestyle without living it. The plot of the book smoothly develops. It is obvious when the son Misha creates a cloak that isn't appropraite for the archduke they must figure out what to do with the cloak and Misha. The conflict is resolved has the tailor and his other sons fix the cloak and give it to Misha as they send him out to explore the world. I would use this book in an intermediate classroom. The type of media used is watercolors.
½
A well told tale of three brothers who work for their tailor father. While two aspire to follow in the dad's business, the other has dreams of something more. While his tailoring skills are not great, his vivid imagination is revealed to his father who decides to set him free to travel the world. The older brothers would help encourage this by creating a special cloak for him to take on his journey.
Subject Area: Math
Genre: Folktale
This book is a modern folktale based on the Russian culture. The author's story has a simple plot, setting, and characters. The author uses repetition such as the number of sons, the completion of the cloaks, the approaches to sewing, etc. The plot, setting, and characters are all established at the beginning of the book. The characters are stereotypical, such as the kind father.
(Stars for plot)
Age: Intermediate
This book is a good example of a legend/myth because it starts with once upon a time, and it sounds like a story that has been told for many years. The third son is named Ivan and he is a dynamic character that dreams big! You can tell that he has other passions than tailoring, and eventually his father helps him do what he is passionate about. This book would be great to read to the primary grades or intermediate grades.
Father has his three sons to create cloaks for the archduke. Sons uses various shapes to create the perfect cloak to see whose will be chosen.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
A Cloak for the Dreamer
Original publication date
1994
Dedication
For Aunty Ann, who sent us all off into the world but still looks after us.--A.F.
First words
Once there was a tailor who had three fine sons.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Then they stood together and watched as the dreamer set off into the world, his beautiful cloak growing smaller and smaller in the distance.

Classifications

Genre
Children's Books
DDC/MDS
516Natural sciences & mathematicsMathematicsGeometry
LCC
PZ7 .F8964 .CLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
611
Popularity
47,573
Reviews
10
Rating
(4.09)
Languages
Arabic, English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
6
ASINs
3