Saturday, January 27, 2024

Singing with Elephants by Margarita Engle

 

Brilliant, joyful, and deeply moving. Kirkus Star review


Publisher blurb: Cuban-born eleven-year-old Oriol lives in Santa Barbara, California, where she struggles to belong. But most of the time that’s okay, because she enjoys helping her parents care for the many injured animals at their veterinary clinic. Then Gabriela Mistral, the first Latin American winner of a Nobel Prize in Literature moves to town, and aspiring writer Oriol finds herself opening up. And when she discovers that someone is threatening the life of a baby elephant at her parents’ clinic, Oriol is determined to take action. As she begins to create a world of words for herself, Oriol learns it will take courage and strength to do what she thinks is right—even if it means keeping secrets from those she loves.

The baby elephant mentioned in this blurb is a twin. An unscrupulous actor who seeks fame at any cost takes one of the two-week-old baby elephants away from its mother. Oriol is determined to find the baby. She feels the grief of the mother and remaining twin very deeply. Once she finds little Song (his sister is Dance) Oriol then needs to spring into action. She organises a petition and with the help of Gabriela Mistral letters are written to other famous actors and to the Humane society. There must be a way to save this tiny elephant and stop the cruel intentions which would force her to perform in unnatural ways. 

Here are a few text quotes to give you a flavour of this verse novel:

My bird name
musical and sweet,
is one I chose 
for myself, long ago, in Cuba
when I knew who I was
and how 
to speak.

ELEPHANT ANATOMY

Standing in front of Chandra
I'm stunned into silence.
Tree-root feet.
Half-moon toenails.
Map-of-India ears.
Paintbrush tail.
A snake-shaped nose
with forty-thousand
muscles.
Her fifty pound heart pulses with love
for her soon-to-be newborn.
She's been pregnant for twenty-two months,
due any day.
She needs to eat three hundred pounds of hay
every twenty-four houses.
When she moves
she's as graceful
as a swaying
ocean wave.

MY FUTURE IS BLURRY (extract)

Gabriela Mistral is right-
I cannot predict the future,
but I can imagine a time
when wild animals
are no longer held captive
My words and actions
have shown me what
is possible.
Maybe the will change
the whole world
someday.


Add this book to your list of verse novels to share with young readers aged 10+ up to age 13. 


I met Margarita Engle at a USBBY conference a few years ago so when I saw this verse novel in The Little Bookroom (Melbourne bookstore) I grabbed it.

Have you heard of Gabriela Mistral (1889-1957) - the first Latin winner of a Nobel Prize for Literature? I had not heard of her but there are details at the back of Singing with elephants along with one of her poems.

"I wanted to imagine how she might have influenced a child ... so I invented a Cuban immigrant girl who loves animals and nature as much as Mistral."

"She believed children deserved kindness, and her reforms of rural education became a model for all Latin America. At the same time she became a world-famous poet, and served as a diplomat, representing the government of Chile while living in various countries. .... (She) was an influential peace activist (and one) of the founders of the League of Nationals and later UNICEF."

Awards:

  • Rhode Island 2024 Children's Book Award Nominee
  • Bank Street 2023 Best Children's Books
  • New York Times Best Children’s Books of 2022
  • Kirkus Best Middle Grade Books 2022
  • School Library Journal-26 MG Books for Latinx Heritage Month 2022
  • Nerdies Award, 2022
  • Cybils Award Finalist
  • School Library Journal Mock Newbery Suggestions
  • Kirkus Starred Review
  • Junior Library Guild Selection
  • New York Times review
  • NPR Morning Edition interview
  • Publishers Weekly starred review
Margarita Engle is the author of these (Summer Birds is a firm favourite of mine).





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