By Jorge Argueta
*ISBN-13: 978-1-55885-889-3
*Format: Trade Paperback
*Ages: 10-15
*Pages: 96
*Imprint: Piñata Books
Ten-year-old Jimena Pérez loves life with her parents
in El Salvador. They sell fruit at the market, just like her grandmother and
great grandmother did. “Fruits / are a blessing / like you, Jimena,” her mother
tells her.
But one day a group of boys threaten her friend
Rosenda at school. “You know / what will happen / to your family / if you don’t
join us.” Jimena’s parents, afraid gangs will try to recruit her too, decide
she must go to the United States with her mother. She is excited and fearful,
and doesn’t want to leave her father, friends and dog Sultán. “I felt sad / the
way fruit looks / when it’s past ripeness.” By bus, train and on foot, mother
and daughter make their way north, until one night, bright lights fill the sky
and men in green uniforms rip Jimena from her mother.
Imprisoned with children from El Salvador, Honduras,
Guatemala and Mexico, Jimena and the others cry for their parents. One boy
repeats over and over, “My father’s name is Marcos / He is in Los Angeles.” A
box full of books brings her some solace, reminding her of the ones donated to
kids at the market in El Salvador. “The letters kiss me / like my mama’s words
/ like my papa’s words / I am a little bird / Nothing can stop me / I can fly.”
In this poignant narrative poem for kids ages 10-15,
award-winning Salvadoran poet Jorge Argueta movingly captures the fear that
drives so many Central Americans to flee their countries and the anguish
created by separating children from their parents at the US border. Putting a
human face on the millions of people who flee their homelands each year, this
book will help young people understand the difficulties of migration and
leaving behind all that is dear.
“Argueta tells the story of 10-year-old Jimena Pérez,
who unexpectedly journeys from her home in El Salvador to the U.S. Told in a
sequence of short poems first in Spanish and consequently in English, this
poignant story introduces Jimena’s home through her senses. A poignant,
sincere, empathetic glimpse at family border separation.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
JORGE ARGUETA is a prize-winning poet and author of
more than twenty children’s picture books, including Una película en mi almohada / A Movie in My Pillow (Children’s Book Press, 2001); Guacamole: Un
poema para cocinar / A Cooking Poem (Groundwood
Books, 2016); Agua, Agüita / Water, Little Water (Piñata Books, 2017); and Somos como las
nubes / We Are Like the Clouds (Groundwood
Books, 2016), which won the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award and was named to
USBBY’s Outstanding International Book List, the ALA Notable Children’s Books
and the Cooperative Children’s Book Center Choices. His poetry collection, En carne propia: Memoria poética / Flesh Wounds: A Poetic Memoir (Arte Público Press, 2017), focuses on his experiences with civil war
and living in exile. The California Association for Bilingual Education honored
him with its Courage to Act Award and his trilingual picture book, Agua, Agüita / Water, Little Water, won the
inaugural Campoy-Ada Award in Children’s Poetry given by the Academia
Norteamericana de la Lengua Española. A Pipil Nahua Indian, Jorge is also the
founder of The Library of Dreams in his native El Salvador, a non-profit
organization that promotes literacy in both rural and metropolitan areas. Jorge
divides his time between San Francisco, California, and El Salvador.
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