Every Day After by Laura Golden, 216 pages
This is a short, sweet little story about a little girl
growing up during the Great Depression.
Lizzie’s father has been gone a month.
He left after he lost his job.
Lizzie is convinced that he is looking for work and they will hear from
him any day but since he left her mother has withdrawn into herself and doesn’t
speak or move, unless Lizzie moves her.
Lizzie has been doing all of the housework and the mending that her
mother had been taking in to earn some money.
Unfortunately, this means that Lizzie hasn’t been able to spend as much
time on schoolwork and her grades have begun to slip. Erin, her rival, is thrilled that she may
come in first instead of Lizzie and mocks Lizzie about it every chance she
gets. She also threatens to tell that
Lizzie’s mom isn’t well because then her mom may go into an institution and
Lizzie into an orphanage. Then, a foreclosure
notice comes from the bank. Even though
Lizzie is only 11, she is determined to hold things together until her father
returns. Even kids who don’t usually
like historical fiction might like this book because Lizzie is such a likable,
determined person.
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