In support of Los Angeles Teachers
Written by Diana Cohn
Illustrated by Francisco Delgado
- Age Range: 5 - 7 years
- Grade Level: Kindergarten - 2
- Paperback: 32 pages
- Publisher: Cinco Puntos Press; Bilingual edition
- Language: English, Spanish
- ISBN-10: 093831789X
- ISBN-13: 978-0938317890
Carlitos’ mother is a janitor. Every
night, he sleeps while his mother cleans in one of the skyscrapers in downtown
L.A. When she comes home, she waves Carlitos off to school before she goes to
sleep. One night, his mamá explains that she can’t make enough money to support
him and his abuelita the way they need unless she makes more money as a
janitor. She and the other janitors have decided to go on strike.
Will he support her and help her all he
can? Of course, Carlitos wants to help but he cannot think of a way until his
teacher, Miss Lopez, explains in class how her own grandfather had fought for
better wages for farmworkers when he first came to the United States. Finally,
Carlitos knows how he can show his mamá how proud he is of her. He and the
other children in his class make posters and Carlitos joins the marchers with a
very special sign for his mom!
¡Sí, Se Puede! is a Jane Addams Peace Award Honor Book, a Skipping Stones Honor Book,
as well as a selection for The Best of Beyond Difference, a recommended list of
the top 10 diversity books published in 2002.
Diana Cohn, the author, is a social activist. As an elementary teacher, she
discovered there were few books for children that discussed social issues, so
she began to write as an avocation. She now works as Program Director for the
Solidago Foundation, a foundation that supports communities working for
economic and environmental justice. She lives on a houseboat in Sausalito,
California.
Francisco
Delgado, the illustrator, grew up in Juárez,
Chihuahua, but completed high school in El Paso, Texas. He will -receive his
MFA at Yale in Painting, Drawing, and Printmaking in May 2002. Francisco is
becoming known nationally for his political paintings that satirize U.S. icons
blind to the mestizo and immigrant communities of Mexico. He lives in New
Haven, Connecticut. Luis J. Rodriguez (Always
Running) adds the afterword and a poem.
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