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Esperanza Rising


by Pam Munoz Ryan

List Price: $6.99
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 1294
Studio: Blue Sky Press
Binding: Paperback
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Number Of Pages: 288
Publication Date: June 01, 2002
Publisher: Blue Sky Press


FEATURES

  • Made with the Best Quality Material with your child in mind.
  • Top Quality Children's Item.


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
Notable Children1s Books in Paperback


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 310 reviews)

Very good book ! Good message to youth.  
This was simply a good read for youth or perhaps for anyone. The story sent out a message concerning discrimination, learning and coping with change, and growing and evolving into a stronger human being. Thumbs up !
August 13, 2008

Beautifully written and moving  
Based on her grandmother's experiences as an immigrant and a migrant worker in the 1930's. Ryan has written a beautiful and sensitive book about a young girl who is forced to flee her home and her sheltered life in Mexico to becme a migrant worker in the US.

Highly recommended!
July 01, 2008

I Liked It  
"Esperanza Rising," a great book to read over the summer.This book is about a young girl whos life goes way down hill but at the end her life changes a bit but she's always with the people she loves most. If you don't like it at first give it a chance, that's what I did and I liked it alot. The book requires you imagining to be Esperanza. At the end think about what you read. It's a great book to think about at the end and see if you love it because your brain will do a little review and you will like it.

Singley, 5th grader
June 18, 2008

Enlightening  
We just recently listened to the the book Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan on. cd It has been awhile to have a book touch me and make me think like this book did. This book is based upon the stories a grandmother told her granddaughter, the author. The grandmother is Esperanza. Esperanza and her recently widowed mother make the difficult decision to leave Mexico, where they lived the lives of royalty to come to America, the land of the free. They leave with their servants who are now their equals and Esperanza learns the true meaning of "The rich take care of the rich, the poor take care of the poor". She sees firsthand the poorest of the poor giving away their food and help to those in even more need than they themselves face, and later is both giver and taker of doing just that.
*
This is the first book I have read/listened to that tells the story of the Mexican Emigrants and the hardships they faced after coming to America, where "everybody" has a chance at becoming rich. It tells how they were looked down upon because they were brown skinned and therefore must be dumb, even if in Mexico, they had had a better education and/or training than the white Americans. Reduced to rags and poor poverty like conditions, they struggled to feed their families. American born Mexicans were deported to Mexico because of setting up strikes and trying to make things better for everybody. Mexicans, who were reduced to digging and laying tracks for the railroad, even if they knew the mechanics of how the engines work and how to fix them. This is one of those subjects I have never before heard as it was not taught in the schools I attended, whether for geographical reasons (Wisconsin), or because if it isn't in the books, it didn't happen or for whatever reason.
*
My husband's great grandparents brought their family to America from Mexico, when his grandpa was a young boy. My husband's great grandfather came here to work as a railroad worker. As his grandfather has passed away, I don't know that we will ever hear what really happened when they came to America, but I can only pray that they did not face the prejudices that the people did in Esperanza Rising. I pray that whatever happened to my husband's family when they came here, that they too, like Esperanza rose above it and became stronger people because of it, not hardened and calloused, but better people because of their circumstances.
May 28, 2008

Burckhalter Elementary School 5th grade, Oakland, CA student reviews  
CHANTAL'S REVIEW- ESPERANZA RISING is a fictional book that tells the story of a girl who grew up rich and then had to learn how to live like a peasant. Esperanza taught me lessons. Don't be selfish and don't always think about yourself, think about others, too. ESPERANZA RISING shows you should never give up. Always believe in yourself. Other people should read it because it is a phenomenal book!

MARK'S REVIEW- ESPERANZA RISING is ficiton. Esperanza is my favorite person in the book because I think she's smart and intelligent."

BRYCE'S REVIEW- Esperanza means hope. That is what this story is about. Esperanza, the main character, had hope. I would recommend ESPERANZA RISING to anyone who wants to read a great book. I think this is a good book about changes and loving each other.
May 06, 2008


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