I have just discovered another author who writes those
sweet, little heart warmers. Kate
Beasley, not only are you just adorable (got to hear her talk on The Yarn
podcast), but Gertie is a cutie pie. Gertie’s Leap to Greatness is Kate’s
first published trade book, and it is a good one.
Reminiscent of Because of
Winn-Dixie and Raymie Nightingale
by Kate DiCamillo or Dear Hank Williams
by Kimberly Willis Holt, this book is sure to find its way into classrooms as wonderful
read alouds and/or engaging self-selections.
No matter what, though, it demands to be discussed.
Gertie is on a mission.
Her mom left her with her daddy and her Aunt Rae, and Gertie is
determined to show her mom just how great she is and what a mistake it was to
leave the family. It is definitely not
because Gertie wants her mom back, no siree; it is definitely just to show her
how great she is!
Because her mom moved just across town when she left and
owns the house with the big “For Sale” sign in the front yard, Gertie is forced
every day, as her school bus creeps past the house, to face the fact that her
mom is leaving for good without even acknowledging that she still has a
daughter. But Gertie does not want her
mom back; good Lord, she does not! She
just wants to look her mom in the face and see the regret in her eyes when she
realizes just how great her daughter is.
So, Gertie begins phase one of the mission…only there is a problem…a
Mary Sue Spivey problem.
Mary Sue is the new girl in town, and she is perfect; she is
great. But, Gertie wanted to be the
greatest, and this is where the mission gets complicated. Just so that she can prove herself to her
mother (She definitely doesn’t want her back!), Gertie has to defeat Mary Sue
and steal the lead in the school play, teach herself all of the fifth-grade
material in one weekend without losing her best friend, eat a whole bowl of
chocolates, and defend the honor of her dad who is not destroying the earth out
there on that oil rig. In the process,
Gertie does some not-so-great things, and she learns that maybe even
seat-stealers have their own heartbreaking missions. Will Gertie choose to do the right thing in
the end? Will she leap to
greatness? That is what readers will
want to know; that is why they won’t want to leave Gertie’s sweet and funny little
story.
But, here is the little caveat. Readers will probably put the book down and
still want to know why. I wanted to know why. In fact, I said aloud when I finished the
book, “Kate Beasley did not tell me why.”
I was so upset until I realized that maybe that is the point. We don’t know why bad things happen to kids or why parents make really poor decisions. Sometimes those things just never get
explained, and we have to find our own greatness without knowing the answers to
the why questions. It’s hard, but it is real. We can be great in spite of the fact that
others are not so great. Go Gertie!
Gertie’s Leap to
Greatness by Kate Beasley, 249 pages from Farrar Straus Giroux/New York
(2016). ISBN # 978-0-374-30261-0
Ideal for readers in elementary grades (especially those who
need to grapple with how to be great when life does not treat you so great)
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