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Visiting Day
by Jacqueline Woodson, James Ransome (Illustrator)

   




Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
This poignant picture book chronicles a joyful girl narrator's hard-to-bear anticipation and special preparations for a journey with her grandmother to see her father. Both text and artwork keep the destination a mystery, wisely focusing instead on the excitement of the upcoming reunion. As Woodson's (The Other Side) rhythmic prose, punctuated by the refrain (�only on visiting day�), builds a sense of expectation, Ransome (Satchel Paige), too, underscores the build-up. Wordless spreads depict Grandma fixing the narrator's hair and the pair climbing aboard the bus. Meanwhile, the girl imagines her father making his own preparations. Ransome portrays a handsome man in khaki shirt and slacks; a calendar on the wall marks the days to his daughter's visit, hanging next to her artwork accented with red hearts. Ultimately, �the bus pulls up in front of a big old building where, as Grandma puts it, Daddy is doing a little time.� Ransome shows barbed-wire atop high walls and a guard tower in stern relief against a perfect blue sky. Throughout, he uses a radiant, rich, marine blue (the bus's accents, the girl's dress and a prison guard's uniform) to contrast freedom and captivity. Told completely from a child's perspective, the narrative makes no judgment about what Daddy did or why he's incarcerated. A shared feeling of hope and family togetherness pervades each spread, from Grandma cooking fried chicken in the morning for the bus ride, to the narrator sitting down with crayons when she gets home to make Daddy more pictures. Any child who has been separated from a loved one can identify with the feelings of this winning heroine. Ages 4-up.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
School-Grade 2-A little girl shares a special day that starts early with Grandma frying chicken and braiding the child's hair. In quite another setting, her father is buttoning his plain white shirt against a plain blue-gray background decorated only by a child's drawings taped to the wall and a calendar marking off days. A bus takes Grandma and the narrator to a building with high walls and barbed wire where �Daddy is doing a little time.� It's a happy visit until they must part and her father goes through one door with a guard standing by and the youngster is led away by her grandmother. Back home, she has her crayons out to make pictures for him and awaits his return. The text is spare, gentle, and reassuring, never mentioning the words crime or jail. Ransome's vibrant acrylic paintings fill each page at home with intense pinks, yellows, greens, and blues in contrast to the monotone hue of the prison walls. Both author and illustrator provide notes that relate this story to their own personal experiences. Use this book with children who have an incarcerated parent as well as with those who have no understanding at all about that painful separation. Woodson's Our Gracie Aunt (Hyperion, 2002) is about children separated from their jailed mother.
Susan Pine, New York Public Library
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
 


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When A Parent Goes To Jail : A Comprehensive Guide for Counseling Children of Incarcerated Parents
by Rebecca M. Yaffe, Lonnie F. Hoade, Barbara S. Moody (Illustrator)

  

Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Grade 3-5-Opening with the statement that there are consequences for breaking rules, the authors go through the entire incarceration process from arrest through fingerprinting to appearing before a judge and sentencing. They describe the feelings that children might be having (sad, angry, confused, etc.) and encourage them to talk about these emotions. Changes that might take place at home are mentioned, and visits to the incarcerated person are covered. The book ends by suggesting that there will be an adjustment to be made when the parent is released. The very clear glossary adds to the usefulness of the text, but the poorly drawn artwork, with numerous people with misshapen faces, does little to enhance the book's value. Still, it's a useful choice for guidance counselors when the situation arises.
Anne Knickerbocker, Cedar Brook Elementary School, Houston, TX
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

What a marvelous book! When a Parent Goes to Jail is a timely book that fills a gaping hole on library shelves everywhere. Seemingly, more and more people make bad choices and go to jail. Most have children. And, of course, relatives and new care givers end up taking care of these children. Until this book . . . these natural and foster parents have not had books to read to children that will help them cope with their feelings and the mechanics of their parents' legal situation . . . .a superbly written book that fills a big void . . . .the right book at the right time. Dr. Ken West, Director, Center for Family Education, Lynchburg College
 


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Working With Children and Families Separated by Incarceration: A Handbook for Child Welfare Agencies
by Lois Wright, Cynthia B. Seymour
 

 

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Children With Parents in Prison: Child Welfare Policy, Program, and Practice Issues
by Cynthia Seymour (Editor), Creasie Finney Hairston (Editor)

 


 

 

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Children of Incarcerated Parents
by Katherine Gabel, Denise Johnston

 


Editorial Reviews
4 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
I think that this Author has the right Idea, May 10, 2001
Reviewer: A reader
I think that this author has the right idea, because we spend all of this time and money on the parents and how to reform them, and most of the time they do it all over, meanwhile at home there children are growing up in this environment and they don't think anything is wrong. We need to invest more time in those children, or we will be supporting them will they set in prison just like there parents did.
 

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Six Million Angels: Stories from 20 Years of Angel Tree's Ministry to the Children of Prisoners
by Charles Colson, Mark Earley
 


Book Description
For 20 years, Prison Fellowship's Angel Tree ministry has touched the hearts of prisoners and their families by serving their children. Last year alone 50,000 volunteers from 14,000 churches provided Christmas gifts for more than 600,000 children. The heartwarming stories in this collection celebrate the phenomenal success of Angel Tree's Christmas gift giving and the many other ways the ministry brings love to prisoners' kids. And they testify to the wonderful ways the Lord has blessed Angel Tree families and brought them into His kingdom.--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author
Charles Colson, former aide to President Nixon, founded Prison Fellowship Ministries in 1976, after doing a prison term himself. It has since become the world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families. Colson is also a popular speaker and author, having written 23 books, which collectively have sold more than five million copies. His radio feature "BreakPoint" is aired daily on some 1,000 outlets nationwide.
This text refers to the Paperback edition.

 

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