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The Dress and the Girl

di Camille Andros

Altri autori: Julie Morstad (Illustratore)

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A little girl and her favorite dress have extraordinary adventures together, but when the girl emigrates from Greece to the United States they are separated, and the dress travels the world searching for her.
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A book for later primary to younger intermediate. A great story about remembering that things you love always find a way back to you. The little girl loved her dress and wore it often. But when she had to move countries, she lost her dress. But unexpectedly, her dress came back to her and her own daughter gets to wear it now.
  Brianna.phelps | Feb 22, 2024 |
This book would be good for both primary and intermediate students. This book is about a girl who immigrated to the U.S. from the Greek islands. This book takes us through the journey of the dress and the girl through the ups and the downs. In the classroom this book would be good to talk about immigration with your students. ( )
  HannahSmith22 | Mar 3, 2023 |
Great for grades k-3. About a young girl who immigrated to the United States with her dress, but go separated from the dress. The story guides us through both the journies of the girl and the dress until they find each other. Talks about the power of memories and items, as well as unexpected journies. Good for talking about repetition in writing or messages from books. Also good if students relate. ( )
  HaliaMclucas | Feb 22, 2023 |
Around the turn of the last century, a Greek village girl wears her beloved red dress as she goes about her daily life only to be separated from it when the family emigrates.

The child and her dress lead a seemingly idyllic, nature-filled life under blue skies, among whitewashed buildings, but they long for adventure. For unexplained reasons, the family boards a ship, where girl and dress play and go to school as before, details that subtly convey the length of the passage. Upon arrival at Ellis Island, the family is separated from the trunk in which the dress is now packed. The trunk, unclaimed, circles the globe in search of its rightful owners, eventually landing in a secondhand shop. Now grown, the girl spots her dress in the window and buys it for her own daughter. Morstad’s (House of Dreams, 2018, etc.) clean illustrations expertly evoke the era through a nostalgic color palette and the (unnamed) locations through carefully chosen details. The opening and closing spreads echo each other, reinforcing the theme of connection. Immigrant stories are perennially relevant, and the rarely seen 20th-century Greek setting is refreshing. However, the dress—while attributed human feelings—never generates enough emotion to create dramatic tension, and readers are not shown the impact on the family of starting a new life without most of their worldly possessions.

A gentle tale well-suited for family-history and creative-writing units. (Picture book. 4-8)
  CDJLibrary | Dec 1, 2021 |
A young girl does everything in her favorite dress, from attending school to watching the stars, eventually emigrating in it from her Greek island home to the United States. Here she and the dress are parted, until the day, many years later, that the girl - now a grown woman with her own little girl - sees this beloved garment from her past hanging in a vintage clothing store window...

Although author Camille Andros' story idea in The Dress and the Girl is engaging enough, what really stood out here, for me, was illustrator Julie Morstad's gorgeous artwork. This latter was, in fact, what had me hunting down this book in the first place, and I was not disappointed! The visuals here are stunning, from the girl gazing up at the night sky to her wonderstruck face, looking in the clothing store window. I'm not sure what medium Morstad used - it looks like collage - but her illustrations are well-suited to the theme, and beautifully capture and build upon the emotional undercurrents of the story. Recommended to Morstad fans (of course), and to picture-book readers seeking stories about treasured items from childhood. ( )
  AbigailAdams26 | Nov 8, 2020 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Camille Androsautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Morstad, JulieIllustratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
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A little girl and her favorite dress have extraordinary adventures together, but when the girl emigrates from Greece to the United States they are separated, and the dress travels the world searching for her.

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