26
Fairmount Avenue
Tomie's family starts building their new house at 26
Fairmount Avenue in 1938, just as a hurricane hits town, starting off a busy,
crazy year. Tomie has many adventures all his own,
including eating chocolate with his Nana Upstairs, only to find out--the hard
way--that they have eaten chocolate laxative. He tries to skip kindergarten
when he finds out he won't learn to read until first grade. "I'll be back
next year," he says. When Tomie goes to see Snow
White, he creates another sensation. Tomie dePaola's childhood memories are hilarious, and his
charming illustrations are sure to please.
Here
We All Are
In this second installment in beloved author Tomie dePaola's autobiographical 26 Fairmount Avenue series,
young Tomie and his family are setting into their new
house. Charming and lively, with dePaola's trademark
illustrations, this is a wonderful addition to the series.
On
My Way
Tomie is overjoyed because his baby sister, Maureen,
is finally strong enough to come home from the hospital. Over the next months,
he is in a dance recital and he gets to go to the World's Fair. Soon, the
school year is at an end. Summer is full of fun things to do, like going to the
beach and celebrating the Fourth of July-but Tomie
can't wait for school to start again. He hopes he'll get Miss Kiniry, the first-grade teacher he likes the best. In first
grade he will finally-finally-learn to read. And maybe even get a library card of his own!
What
a Year!
The year 1940 is a very big year for Tomie-it's the
start of first grade, and it's his first birthday in the new house at 26
Fairmount Avenue. It's also the first year that Tomie
gets to go trick-or-treating with his older brother, Buddy. Then the holidays
arrive, and Tomie has a part in the Christmas play.
This Christmas is going to be great! But disaster strikes when Tomie gets the chicken pox. Will he be cured in time for
the Christmas pageant? Join Tomie dePaola
once again as he takes us back to his childhood and allows us to share the
holiday season with his family and friends.
Things
Will Never Be the Same
Tomie has his own diary with a lock and a
key&150now he can write down all his secrets and no one will be able to
read them. All through the year, exciting things happen and Tomie
writes about them in his diary. Sledding down the steep hill on his new Junior
Flexible Flyer, being a pirate in the dance recital, and starting second grade
with real art lessons at last! Then one Sunday morning Tomie's
family hears news on the radio that changes everything. Master storyteller Tomie dePaola takes us back to
1941 and lets us experience what life was like growing up in the dePaola household.
I'm
Still Scared
First-grader Tomie dePaola
experiences uncertainty in the weeks following the attack on pearl
Harbor, December 7, 1941. What are the grown-ups talking quietly about at home
and even at school? why does his class have to go to
the spooky furnace room for an air raid drill? why
does the family hang thick black curtains over the windows? Tomie's
mother is there to comfort and explain the confusion, and Tomie
feels better. but he's still scared.
Why?
World War II is raging in Europe, and young Tomie
finds that everyday life has changed in many ways. Sure, there’s still New
Year’s Eve to celebrate, and he still has to face penmanship and arithmetic in
second grade— definitely not his strongest subjects. But now he has to wear an
extra sweater to school because they’re trying to conserve coal for heating.
And a shopping trip to Hartford for Easter outfits seems more urgent in the
face of looming shortages.
For
the Duration: The War Years
Tomie keeps hearing the phrase,
?For the duration.? Gas is being rationed ?for
the duration.? The Fourth of July fireworks will be the last show
?for the duration.? So many things will be different as long as the war
goes on, but much of Tomie?s
life goes on as usual. He?s
excited about starring in a dance recital, taking the bus around town all by
himself, and having his first Communion. But Tomie is
also still getting over his cousin?s
death in the war, and he has to say good-bye to his uncle as he ships off to
basic training. And then he has a run-in with some bullies and his brother doesn?t even help him out.
Luckily, Tomie knows there are a lot of people he can
count on for the duration.