The Good Garden: How One Family Went from Hunger to Having Enough

by Katie Smith Milway

On This Page

Description

Eleven-year-old Maria Luz and her family have a small farm in Honduras, but may not have enough food to sustain them for the year, so Maria's father must leave home to find work, leaving her in charge of the garden.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

6 reviews
This story should act as a vehicle for social change. It does a great job of explaining the plight of numerous farming families in Central America. It also contains extensive endnotes on organizations that are working to correct these continuing social wrongs. I loved this book. I'd highly recommend it be added to any collection that doesn't have it already.
Response - I think this picture book does a wonderful job teaching the reader how we can take local action within our communities to make a positive difference. Also, this book is a great introduction to world hunger and the food scarcity that millions of people face around the world.

Curricular connection - read aloud; unit on rights and responsibilities
This Monday I'm looking at two gardening/farm books - with a little more than just how-to-grow or cute-outdoor-crafts going on! Deborah Hodges' Up We Grow is a composite of several different small farms, specifically co-ops, which are practicing sustainable farming. The story is arranged by seasons, from spring to winter. Descriptions of farm life, planting, weeding, caring for livestock, and selling produce are interspersed with information on how sustainable farms care for the land and animals. The text also includes questions for younger children to answer and to spur ideas of small scale farming in your own yard or home. An end note explains how a sustainable farm is defined and gives a little more information about the farms show more pictured in this book. The photographs mostly feature children interacting in farm life and there are plenty of animals and equipment pictured to interest younger children. This enthusiastic, optimistic nonfiction will be enjoyed by beginning readers and listeners alike and perhaps inspire adults to try a little sustainable farming themselves - or search out their closest farmers' market.

Up We Grow! A Year in the Life of a Small, Local Farm by Deborah Hodges, photographs by Brian Harris

ISBN: 978-1554535613; Published August 2010 by Kids Can Press; Review copy provided by publisher through Raab Associates

The Good Garden looks at sustainable farming from a slightly different angle. This story of a fictional family explains the work of Don Elias Sanchez, who taught Honduran farmers how to move beyond subsistence farming and, using sustainable farming, create a better life for their families. The story follows one young girl, Maria Luz Duarte for one year. Their land is worn out and cannot produce enough food to feed the family. When Maria Luz' father has to leave to find a job to support his family, they worry he won't earn enough money - and they'll lose their farm, like many other families. But when school begins, a new teacher arrives. The new teacher helps the children create a school garden using compost, terraces, and natural techniques to fertilize the soil and keep weeds and insects away. Maria Luz tries the new techniques at home and also tries growing a cash crop; radishes. With the teacher's support, Maria Luz' family and others bypass the middleman, Senor Coyote, and take their crops to market themselves. Their families have enough food now - and money for medical supplies and school. The new teacher moves on to teach another school the new ideas, leaving Mariz Luz and her family with more than enough food for the winter; now they have hope for a better future.

An end note explains the life and work of Don Elias Sanchez and what it means to be "food secure" or have a "food crisis". Ideas on how kids can help are included, as well as further information on the topic. Four organizations that work on rural development are spotlighted and there is a brief glossary of Spanish words from the story. The art is lovely and inspiring and the story broken into simple chapters so even smaller children can listen.

This would be an excellent book to use in a classroom or library program to encourage children to contribute as well as think about gardening for their own families. It's long for a read-aloud, but could be broken into sections for a multi-part program or classroom series. This would make a great resource for libraries that have a charity component for their summer reading program, something I hope to incorporate some day in the future!

The Good Garden is part of Kids Can Press' CitizenKid series, which simplifies global issues for elementary age children and gives them concrete things they can do to help, without making the issues scary or overwhelming. More resource materials specifically for teachers are available at http://www.kidscanpress.com/. More information on getting involved in rural development is available at http://www.thegoodgarden.org/ or http://www.onehen.org/.

The Good Garden: How One Family Went from Hunger to Having Enough by Katie Smith Milway, illustrated by Sylvie Daigneault

ISBN: 978-1554534883; Published September 2010 by Kids Can Press; Review copy provided by publisher through Raab Associates
show less
This is a great choice for the higher grades. This book teaches that one can grow a garden that can provide food for a family. In the book we are introduced into a family from Honduras who has little o eat and the garden becomes their solution.
From the author of One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference, this book tells the story how a poor farming family who live in the hills of Honduras and learns how to grow enough food that will sustain them and provide an income. An excellent introduction to the issue of food insecurity.
This is the true story of how one family in Honduras changed from hungry and not having enough food, to having enough to go around. This book explains the importance of gardens and growing food around the world.

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Author Information

Author
6 Works 1,338 Members

All Editions

Daigneault, Sylvie (Illustrator)

Awards and Honors

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Good Garden: How One Family Went from Hunger to Having Enough

Classifications

Genre
Children's Books
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PZ7 .M6467 .GLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
187
Popularity
174,479
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (4.36)
Languages
English, Portuguese
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7