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Loading... How Smudge Came (Northern Lights Books for Children) (edition 2002)by Nan Gregory, Ron Lightburn
Work InformationHow Smudge Came by Nan Gregory
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. “How Smudge Came” is a touching story, told through the eyes of a young woman with Down syndrome. She finds a puppy and wants more than anything to keep it. This book shows the bond the woman makes with the puppy, and the understanding she has that she cannot keep it. It is a great story for children to read, especially since they can connect to it if they long for a puppy as well. The book has a wonderful ending that ties the whole story together. ‘If there’s one thing Cindy knows, this is the perfect place for a puppy.” "If there's one thing Cindy knows, this is no place for a puppy," begins this heartbreaking and heartwarming tale of a girl, a dog, and two communities. Cindy, a young woman with Down Syndrome - something that is never mentioned directly in the book, but made evident through various elements of the artwork and story (like the fact that Cindy lives in a supervised group home) - desperately wants to keep the rescued puppy, named Smudge by a mostly blind cancer patient at the hospice where she works, but the people in charge of her home insist that he must go to the SPCA. When her attempts to retrieve him from the shelter prove unsuccessful, she is overcome by sadness and anger: "Cindy sits in the park for a long time, but the hurt won't stop. Every time she breathes. If there's one thing Cindy doesn't know, it's how to find that puppy. Crying won't help." The happy ending to this terribly sad situation feels utterly natural and unforced, and is all the more satisfying for being so! I was tearing up almost as soon as I began reading How Smudge Came, a testament, I think, to the power of Nan Gregory's words, which instantly sucked me in to the story, and placed me squarely in Cindy's shoes. Without fanfare or didactic display, the author makes the reader feel as Cindy does - makes them feel what it must be like to have fewer choices, to always be told what to do, and how to do it. The artwork, done in colored pencil by Ron Lightburn, is perfectly suited to the tale, capturing Cindy's emotional state, in each scene, to perfection, and greatly enhancing their impact, as a result. Highly, highly recommended - to anyone looking for stories featuring characters with Down Syndrome, or for animal tales in general. no reviews | add a review
Cindy, who has to work all day, fights to keep the small stray dog she finds on the street. No library descriptions found. |
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