An educator and author picks books that celebrate newcomers to the U.S.
We teach our students that the U.S. is a nation of immigrants—a place that welcomes and celebrates those with the courage to take a chance and risk everything to seek a better, safer life for their families. But when kids hear about travel bans, border walls, and refugee quotas, they start asking questions. When educators struggle to find the best answers, books can help. We talked to children’s author Ruth Freeman, an English language learner (ELL) teacher from Maine about children’s books that deal with the experiences of students who are new to this country.
“Thankfully, there are more and more books exploring this topic,” Freeman says. “Not only do they allow our ELL students to see themselves represented on the printed page, but they allow other readers to gain more understanding and empathy for newcomers.” Here’s what Freeman had to say about her favorite titles:
Picture Books
<i>My Two Blankets </i>by Irene Kobald and Freya Blackwood (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
What I especially love about this sweet story is how the illustrator has drawn the way a newcomer first hears English. There are streams of symbols and shapes coming out of people’s mouths, not sounds. A new friend teaches her words and she begins to feel at home. As the book says, “Moving is hard—friends make it easier.” She slowly learns to weave her old and new cultures together until, at the end, she comes to know that no matter where she is she will always be herself.
<i>Joseph’s Big Ride </i>by Terry Farish, art by Ken Daley (Annick Press)
A boy who comes to America from a refugee camp desperately wants a bike, and a girl in the neighborhood has one. There is a funny mix up of names. He calls her Whoosh because she rides by so fast. Will the boy find a way to befriend her and get a ride on the bike? The big, bold illustrations help tell this wonderful story about making friends in a new country.
<i>All the Way to America: The Story of a Big Italian Family and a Little Shovel </i>by Dan Yaccarino (Knopf)
A story told about four generations of Italian-Americans with a little shovel that was used differently by each of them. The last character in the story is the author himself! Colorful illustrations, simple text, and a heartwarming message passed down to each generation (work hard, enjoy life, and don’t forget to call home) make for a wonderful picture book.
<i>Stepping Stones: A Refugee Family’s Journey by Margriet Ruurs</i>, artwork by Nizar Ali Badr (Orca Book Publishers)
A beautiful and poignant story, told in English and Arabic, of one family’s journey to escape the war in their country. While the country is not named as Syria, the amazing illustrations are by a Syrian sculptor. Each picture is a collage of polished stones bringing to life the parents, children, and burdens they carry on their backs as they walk to a new life. The sadness of saying goodbye, the bombs, and the lives lost at sea are balanced carefully and sensitively with hopes and dreams for peace in their new home.
Other Recommended Titles
- <i>The Color of Home</i> by Mary Hoffman, illustrated by Karin Littlewood (Dial)
- <i>Grandfather’s Journey </i>by Allen Say (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
- <i>Here I Am </i>by Patti Kim, illustrations by Sonia Sanchez (Capstone)
- <i>I’m New Here </i>by Anne Sibley O’Brien (Charlesbridge)
- <i>The Journey </i>by Francesca Sanna (Flying Eye Books)
- <i>Lailah’s Lunchbox: A Ramadan Story </i>by Reem Faruqi, illustrations by Lea Lyon (Tilbury House)
- <i>My Name is Sangoel </i>by Karen Lynn Williams and Khadra Mohammed, illustrations by Catherine Stock (Eerdmans)
- <i>My Name is Yoon </i>by Helen Recorvits, illustrations by Gabi
- <i>Swiatkowska </i>(Farrar, Straus)
- <i>The Name Jar</i> by Yangsook Choi (Knopf)
- <i>One Green Apple </i>by Eve Bunting, illustrations by Ted Lewin (Clarion)
Middle Grade
<i>Coming to America: A Muslim Family’s Story</i> by Bernard Wolf (Lee and Low Books)
This is the true story of an Egyptian family’s adjustment to life in New York, told through photographs. Readers see the three children settling into their elementary and middle schools. We see the father at his job and the mother going to school to learn English. Pictures of the family shopping, doing homework, praying, and eating dinner together give readers a real sense of what it is like for members of one family as they work hard to pursue a better life.
<i>It Ain’t So Awful, Falafel</i> by Firoozeh Dumas (Clarion Books)
What a fantastically funny book! Set in the 1970s, 11-year-old Zomorod comes from Iran with her family to California and, to fit in, promptly changes her name to Cindy. After several years there, and moving four times, she has become almost a typical American middle school student, except that she still has to explain things to her parents like: snack foods, bean bag chairs, and Gilligan’s Island on TV. However, when the Iran hostage crisis occurs, life for her Iranian family in America turns more serious. A funny, distinctive voice and original story.
<i>One Good Thing About America </i>by Ruth Freeman, illustrations by Kathrin Honesta (Holiday House)
This fictional story was inspired by my wonderful middle and elementary school students. Anaïs was the best English student back home in Congo. Here in Crazy America she feels like she doesn’t know English at all. Nothing makes sense...like chicken fingers on the lunch menu! She writes letters to her grandmother back home who tells her to find one good thing about America every day. Slowly, Anaïs does. Even while she worries about her father and brother left behind in Africa, she discovers pizza, autumn leaves, sledding, friends, and teachers, until, at the end, they tell her she is one good thing about America.
Other Recommended Titles:
- <i>Esperanza Rising </i>by Pam Munoz Ryan (Scholastic)
- <i>Home of the Brave</i> by Katherine Applegate (Feiwel and Friends)
- <i>Inside Out and Back Again </i>by Thanhha Lai (Harper)
- <i>A Long Walk to Water</i> by Linda Sue Park (Clarion Books)
- <i>Lowji Discovers America</i> by Candace Fleming (Atheneum)
- <i>Seedfolks </i>by Paul Fleischman (Harper)
- <i>Shooting Kabul</i> by N. H. Senzai (Simon and Schuster)
Young Adult
<i>Outcasts United: The Story of a Refugee Soccer Team That Changed a Town</i>, adapted for young people by Warren St. John (Delacorte)
This is the inspiring true story of a boys’ soccer team in Georgia made up of refugees and the Jordanian woman who coaches them. Calling themselves the Fugees, the boys struggle to adjust to life in the U.S. while the town of Clarkston, Ga., struggles to adjust to them. Many on the team have traumatic memories of the conflicts they left behind in their home countries. Their coach has to care for her players while finding a practice field, uniforms, and funding. Not just for soccer fans, this is a story of hope, determination, and achievement.
<i>Something About America</i> by Maria Testa (Candlewick)
A girl comes to the U.S. with her family to get medical treatment after she was badly burned in her home in Kosova, Yugoslavia. The story opens when she is 13. She has recovered, but has scars on her neck that she covers with scarves. She tells her story in lyrical free verse, how she feels American, and how her parents do not. Then, an incident in a nearby town raises the issue of hatred and anger towards immigrants and she and her parents must decide how to respond. A beautiful, thoughtful story.
<i>The Sun is Also a Star</i> by Nicola Yoon (Delacorte)
This book has everything: The two main characters who tell the story are distinctive, appealing and funny; there is romance and tension as one of the teenagers is due to be deported to Jamaica the next day with her family. But, on this last day, Natasha falls in love with Daniel, a Korean American. They spend one day together while she tries to stop the deportation. Telling their stories in alternating chapters, this is a touching and captivating novel.
<b>Other Recommended Titles:</b>
- <i>Blue Gold by Elizabeth Stewart (Annick Press)
- <i>Either the Beginning or the End of the World by Terry Farish (Carolrhoda)
- <i>The Good Braider </i>by Terry Farish (Skyscape)
- <i>Out of Nowhere </i>by Maria Padian (Knopf)