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Richardpeck

If You Do Nothing Else This Summer, Please Introduce Your Young Reader To The Redoubtable Grandma Dowdel…Via the Inspiring Reads of Richard Peck.

Richard Peck, children’s author extraordinaire, whose books possess a pure and keen insight into the human heart, and whose characters are filled with a purposeful and practical wisdom born of living life on their own terms, passed away several years ago.

His books are favorites of mine.

It is sad, but the sadness is compounded if your young readers have never had the chance to read his books. They are gems. They are peopled with persons you wish you could meet, and even maybe have, in some odd way, as friends, in the thrum and hum of life today.

He wrote fiction and mystery genre for young adults that are unique and classic.

Here are a list of but some of his notable awards:

1977 – Edgar Allan Poe Award: Best Juvenile for Are you in the House Alone?

1990 – Margaret A. Edwards Award for “significant and lasting contributions to Young Adult Literature.”

1999 – National Book Award finalist and Newbery runner up for A Long Wayfrom Chicago 

2001 – Newbery Medal for A Year Down Yonder

2004 – Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction for The River Between Us

 

Richard Peck, Decatur Illinois native, graduate of Depauw University and also a masters degree from Southern Illinois University, called on those mid West values in his validation of what was truly important and lasting in life. He filled many of his books with characters that modeled them.

My absolute favorite is the redoubtable Grandma Dowdel from his trilogy of A Long Way from Chicago, A Year Down Yonder and A Season of Gifts.

She is, at alternate times, daunting, indomitable, redoubtable, formidable, commanding, no-nonsense and awe-inspiring… but most of all, loving. Grandma Dowdel prepares young ones for what they will face in life by facing it herself in a calm and measured way. She’s a hoot and capable of doing things unexpectedly off the grid.

Grandma Dowdel is Mary Poppins down on the farm.

A summer spent with this senior is a page taken from the syllabus of life and it’s worth every day with her, for her lessons will last long past the fall of autumn leaves. They will sustain young ones for a lifetime of tumbles and turns.

In A Year Down Yonder, sixteen year-old Mary Alice is sent off from Chicago, along with the beloved Bootsie, the cat. From post-Depression 1937 era Chicago, and her home there, her parents decide to send her to southern Illinois, until times get better. Mary Alice has to settle in for a spell with a relative that lives there; and that would be her Grandma Dowdel.

Settle in, Mary Alice. It’s gonna be a bumpy, but beautiful ride!

Things come full bore immediately on arrival as Mary Alice meets a contemporary named Mildred Burdick, who attempts to extort $1 from Mary Alice. Mary Alice is immediately marked by the cagey Mildred as a rich type from Chicago.

How Grandma Dowdel out maneuvers Mildred, thereby instructing Mary Alice, sets the stage for many of the lessons to follow. How’s this for a piece of encouragement from Grandma Dowdel:

 

I can’t fight all your battles for you, but I can give you a level start.

 

Richard Peck initially taught high school English and then was switched to middle school, and as you can hear from his quote he echoes the thought of Anna from the musical The King and I who says in her song,  “Getting to Know You” that:

 

It’s a very ancient saying,

But a true and honest thought

That if you become a teacher

By your pupils you’ll be taught.

 

And Richard Peck was. He taught and he LISTENED:

 

Ironically, it was my students who taught me to be a writer, though I was hired to teach them. They taught me that a novel must entertain before it can be anything else. I learned there is no such thing as “grade level reading;'” a young person’s ‘reading level’ and attention span will rise and fall according to his degree of interest.

The last sentence of Richard Peck’s quote speaks volumes to me, and it should to the parents of young readers and teachers.

When children’s interest level rises, their seemingly dictated reading grade level also somehow rises to the challenge, and it is in that continuing challenge to the quality of WHAT they are reading, that will spur them on to be better readers.

And so, I urge you to introduce your young readers this year, and soon, to  Grandma Dowdel via Richard Peck, and the rich legacy of the love of literature that he has left to help the coming generations of children to grow and thrive on the feasts of fiction he created.

As the generations today live apart, generally, the wealth of wisdom that older generations possess and model, is lost in the everyday living of life, by young ones.

This was not so a mere generation or more ago, as both my husband and myself benefited from this interaction. In my case, a grandparent lived with us for a time, and in my husband’s case, his two aunts shared a brownstone in Brooklyn with his mom, dad and brother.

They taught us so much about how to negotiate life when life throws the curve balls as it ultimately will, for they were survivors and non-whiners. They dealt with life and moved on to what was next on the agenda.

I love Richard Peck for introducing me to Grandma Dowdel. In some respects I can see a bit of her in my own mom.

Both Richard Peck’s and the Greatest Generation’s legacies are lengthy and loving!

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