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Chicken Charlie's Year: Large Print Edition
Contributor(s): Manzke, Susan (Author)
ISBN: 1537516248     ISBN-13: 9781537516240
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $9.50  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: September 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Juvenile Fiction | Historical - United States - 20th Century
Physical Information: 0.4" H x 7.99" W x 10" (0.85 lbs) 188 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 20th Century
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Ten-year-old Charlie Petkus isn't surprised to get scratchy wool underwear from Aunt Mutzi for Christmas 1932, but he is surprised that her gift package includes a diary. To his dismay, his Lithuanian-immigrant mother thinks a diary is the perfect present. "You man of family, Casimir," she says. "You learn to write the English like good American." Charlie wants more than anything to make Mama proud. But he's not sure education is the way to manhood, especially since he doesn't like school. With the Great Depression on, Charlie thinks it would be much manlier to quit the 4th grade and go to work like his friend Ray. From Christmas 1932 to Christmas 1933, Charlie finds plenty of fun and adventure in his ethnic neighborhood. He discovers that sledding on a car hood results in embarrassment and a very snowy bottom. He finds that a "dead" pheasant that isn't quite as dead as he thought can make a big mess in a Ford Model B. He learns that if you take a job harvesting onions before school, you get your feet filthy on just the day they make you take your shoes off to be weighed and measured-but you also earn a whole dime for your work. By night, Charlie writes in his diary to make Mama proud. But by day, he watches Ray, who now dresses like a man, smokes like a man, and earns a man's wage. Charlie wonders why his mama and sisters should live on cabbage soup and the occasional package of broken cookies while "the man of the family" sits in school writing a poem called "Spring is Here." The decision Charlie makes next will determine the course of his life and his understanding of what it really means to be a man.