NEW

Viva Zapata!

Shu-Li and Diego

The Doomsday Mask

Angels Inc.

Broken

Crocodiles Play 

Siena Summer 

The year I was Grounded 

Graveyard Hounds

The King has Goat Ears 

BACKLIST TITLES

All Aboard for Dreamland

Shu-Li and Tamara

The Heretic’s Tomb

Honey Cake 

The Eco-Diary of
Kiran Singer 


The King Has Goat Ears

Baad Animals 

The Emerald Curse 

Abby's Birds 

Fairy Tale Feasts

Bamboo

What Happened This Summer 

Nannycatch Chronicles 

Crocodiles Say 

If I Had a Million Onions 

Zig Zag 

The Clone Conspiracy 

A Telling Time 

For Sure For Sure 

Floyd the Flamingo 

The Sorcerer's Letterbox 

The Bone Collector's Son

Rescuing Einstein's Compass

The Island of the Minotaur

The Alchemist's Portrait

The Sea King

The Jade Necklace 

My Animal Firends

Aziz: The Storyteller

Pacific Tree Frogs 

Pigmalion

Strange Beginnings

Huevos Rancheros

Lucy and the Pirates

The Girl who Lost her Smile 

Mama God, Papa God

Mr. Belinsky's Bagels

Wherever Bears Be

Where are my Onions?

The Zoo at Night

Maudie and the Green Children


Reviews

Viva Zapata!
by Emilie Smith and Margarita Kenefio Tejada and illustrated by Stefan Czernecki

Viva Zapata reviewed in Canadian Bookseller magazine.

"Viva Zapata!" is a wonderful children's book about a childhood episode in the life of Mexican revolutionary hero Emiliano Zapata. though he is only ten years old, Emiliano decides to try to rescue his horse, Sombra, who has been stolen with all the other horses of his father by a gang of bandidos. He has to ride old Lucita because she was so old the bandidos did not bother to steal her. His father refuses to take him on the hunt for the bandidos, so Emiliano sets off alone and rides Lucita late into the night up the foothills of the Popocatepetl volcano, when he discovers the bandidos asleep and his beloved Sombra, along with the other horses. A harrowing night's adventure transpires before young Emiliano slips away with Sombra and the horses, but the thought of the hungry bandidos who must steal horses for a living stays in the mind, both of young Emiliano and the reader. eautiful, dramatic black and white illustrations wrap the story in a fabulous aura. It is a hard world where a life can be decided on whether or not you can make a rough bandido laugh. Emiliano is more than up to the task. "Viva Zapata!" is aimed at readers ages 4 to 8. --The Midwest Book Review

This charming, humorous tale with its striking black and white illustrations stands on its own merits, but an afterword provides contextual information that enlarges the story considerably. The young protagonist, Emiliano, whom we meet as the tale begins, is in fact Emiliano Zapata, who will grow up to be a fighter for the rights of the poor and the leader of the Mexican Revolution.

This book begins on the morning of Emiliano's seventh birthday when his family's old mare, Lucita, gives birth to her last foal. “‘He's black like a shadow,' said Emiliano. ‘I'll call him Sombra.'” Under Emiliano's care, Sombra “grew strong and feisty,” and before long the pair was galloping deep into the countryside, through “tumbledown” villages where the silent children never waved to them.

When he asked his mother why the children seemed so unhappy, his mother replied that it was because they hadn't enough to eat. Then why don't the farmers grow more corn, Emiliano asks his mother. “‘Because they don't have enough land. That's just the way the world is,' she answered. ‘But why is that the way the world is?' Emiliano thought.”

The night before Emiliano's tenth birthday, a gang of banditos, led by Bad Carlos – deliciously evil-looking with several days' growth of spiky black stubble sprouting from his chin – steals all of the horses except the old mare Lucita. Emiliano saddles her up and rides into the foothills. Beneath Popocatepetl volcano, around a campfire, “the Banditos snored in heaps,” and the stolen horses, including Sombra, whinnied their welcome.

Bad Carlos tells Emiliano, “little hombre,” that he can have his horse back if he can make the banditos laugh. None of the tricks that Emiliano and Sombra perform produce anything approximating a laugh. When Emiliano asks why they are so mean, Bad Carlos tells him that it's because they never got enough tortillas to eat when they were little. Emiliano promises the bandits that when he grows up, “No one will go hungry. And no one will need to become a bandito.” No banditos! The banditos laughed so hard that they didn't notice Emiliano spiriting away all the stolen horses. “High above, the moon smiled, lighting the way. She knew. For Emiliano Zapata, this was only the beginning.” -- The Globe and Mail by Susan Perren, Saturday, Aug. 29, 2009

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