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Silver Threads [Hardcover]

Marsha Skrypuch (Author), Michael Martchenko (Illustrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description


Taras Shevchenko writing award winner

Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice Favourites selection

Ontario Library Association "Best Bet for 1996"

Silver Threads is the magical story of Anna and Ivan, two young newly-weds who escape poverty and hardship in Ukraine to start a new life on the Canadian frontier. As they struggle to build their homestead, World War I breaks out. And when Ivan volunteers to fight for his new homeland, tragedy strikes. While Anna works and waits alone, hope comes from an unexpected source.

Based on true events, Silver Threads is a stirring lesson in history and a heart-warming tale of love and faith.


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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 2-5 - This story describes how a brave young husband and wife leave Ukraine to avoid war, only to find themselves confronted with it again in Canada. They take their devotion to one another, their commitment to hard work, and their beloved traditions from the old country with them to their new home. Even when Ivan is placed in an internment camp, Anna lives in hope that the good luck of the spider's web in her house will restore their happiness. As the story unfolds, readers will find themselves learning about several interesting facets of Canadian history, including immigration, the Canadian frontier, the effect of World War I on settlers, and the imprisonment of Ukrainians as enemies. The language is simple enough for younger children to understand in a read-aloud, but the social and political history may be more appropriate for older students. Martchenko, who is well known for his cartoon illustrations, creates a different mood here. Without losing his unique style, he renders artwork that sensitively depicts this lovingly told story and captures period details. - Corrina Austin, Locke's Public School, St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Gr. 2-4. Drawing on her grandparents' experiences as immigrants in early-twentieth-century Canada, Skrypuch tells a moving picture-book story of prejudice, suffering, and strength. A young couple flees their Ukrainian village to escape the husband's forced conscription in the foreign emperor's army. The couple crosses the ocean and finds a new home on the Canadian prairie. When World War I breaks out, the husband tries to enlist for Canada, but, instead, he is arrested as an enemy and interned until long after the war is over. The detailed watercolor paintings show the pioneers' story: both the big picture of the train steaming across the flat, empty Canadian prairie, and the close-ups of the harsh labor, the racism, and the wife struggling alone to keep things going. Add this to the stories of refugees' hardships; it shows the racism then and now. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 32 pages
  • Publisher: Fitzhenry and Whiteside; 1 edition (October 29, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1550419013
  • ISBN-13: 978-1550419016
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 9.2 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,413,561 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Marsha Skrypuch is the author of many books for children and young adults. She has written more novels about the Armenian genocide than any other author in the English speaking world, yet she is not Armenian. "I write about people who must give up everything that is dear to them and travel to a new country. To me, these people are heroic."

Marsha tricked her teachers into thinking she knew how to read until it all caught up with her in grade 4 when she failed the provincial reading exam. Adding insult to injury, they made her repeat the year. As the tallest and oldest kid in the class, she didn't want to be seen learning to read with little skinny books and she was too proud to ask for help, so she taught herself how to read by taking out the fattest book in the children's section of the Brantford Public Library -- Oliver Twist. She kept on renewing it for a whole year. Reading that book was a turning point in her life. She decided that she loved reading, and wanted to write too.

Marsha loves speaking with students of all ages, especially those who are struggling academically or who feel "different".

 

Customer Reviews

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A children's picturebook based on true events of history, August 12, 2005
This review is from: Silver Threads (Hardcover)
Written by the grandchild of one of many interned individuals, Silver Threads is a children's picturebook based on true events of history. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Anna and Ivan, a young married couple from the Ukraine began a new life on a homestead on the Canadian frontier. When World War I erupts, Ivan volunteers to fight for his new country, yet Canadian authorities seize him and send him to an internment camp solely because he is from the Ukraine. Anna must continue struggling to provide for herself and keep her homestead's land cleared for years in spite of her husband's absence. Yet she never gives up hope, and on Christmas Day, a miracle occurs. Silver Threads is a story based on Canada's internment of "enemy aliens" - Ukrainian, European, and Japanese citizens who had committed no crime but were hated solely because of where they came from - during and after World War I. The Canadian government has not acknowledged the injustice nor returned the confiscated belongings to this day. Though Silver Threads is ultimately a heartwarming tale, illustrated in beautiful color, it is also a profound introduction to acts of injustice that humans commit against one another.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Award-winning Author and Award-winning Illustrator collaborate on a Folk Fable based on a True Chapter from Canada's History, November 19, 2009
By 
Yaroslava Benko "Mandrivnyk" (Arlington Heights, IL - USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Silver Threads (Paperback)
Recipient of an Ontario Library Association Best Bet and nominated for the Amelia Frances-Howard Gibbon Award, Silver Threads is a classic fable about the power of love. Ukrainian-Canadian award-winning author Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch, once again, collaborates with Ukrainian-Canadian award-winning illustrator Michael Martchenko, resulting in a picture book sure to be treasured (for their previous collaboration, please see my review of Enough).

Silver Threads is complemented throughout by artistic, vibrantly colored, large illustrations depicting a Ukrainian couple from the Bukovyna region of Ukraine who immigrate to the Canadian frontier. Michael Martchenko, an illustrator of over fifty books for children, was awarded the Ruth Schwartz Award for Children's Book Illustration for Thomas' Snowsuit. The front and back large water color illustrations by Martchenko are only the icing on the cake. His illustrations enhance pages, are sometimes panoramic spanning two pages, and many times are full-page works of art. They very much enhance the story and give it a face, as children and adults get to enjoy both the illustrations and the story simultaneously.

Ms. Skrypuch's passion has always been writing stories which capture real life experiences that have been lost or suppressed--In Silver Threads, she continues that fine tradition by drawing on the experiences of her grandparents, George and Anna Forchuk, who were the inspiration for this book.

The story begins in the Bukovyna region of Ukraine. A young Ukrainian couple, Ivan and his wife, Anna, escape the hardships in Ukraine by immigrating to Canada, "a land of milk and honey." A sign posted in their Ukrainian village states that 160 acres of land are available in Canada for anyone who will homestead them. They decide to make the ocean journey to Canada's shores, and from there travel for several days by train. But, before they leave, they sprinkle, for the last time, breadcrumbs in front of the spider web which is in a corner of their house. As he does this, Ivan tells his spider "Little spider, this will be the last time I feed you, but now we will need your good luck more than ever."

Ivan and Anna remove one pane of glass from a window and take the hinges from the door--they take these to Canada. When they arrive, they build a one-room house on the Canadian frontier. The pane of glass serves as their one window; the hinges are used to open and close their new door. And, as in Ukraine, a tiny black spider nestles in a corner, "spinning its threads of silver"; and, as in Ukraine, Ivan sprinkles a few breadcrumbs in front of the spider's web.

One day, Ivan and Anna learn that Canada has gone to war--World War I has begun. Their last night together, before Ivan leaves for the warfront, is Sviat Vechir--Christmas Eve.

For the Christmas Eve Supper, called Sviata Vecheria (Holy Supper), Anna prepares the traditional twelve (symbolic of the apostles) meatless, milkless (due to fasting until Christmas) dishes, and places a kolach (Christmas bread) in the center of the table. The bread is braided into a ring--three rings are placed one on top of the other, with a candle in the center of the top one. The three rings symbolize the Holy Trinity, and the circular form represents Eternity.

A didukh (a sheaf of wheat stalks, which means grandfather; grandsire) is placed in the corner of the room. In Ukraine, the didukh is a very important Christmas tradition since the stalks of grain "symbolize all the ancestors of the family, and it is believed that their spirits reside in it during the holidays." (The illustrations by Martchenko are a wonderful accompaniment to this story.)

Before long, things take a sinister turn. Learn the ensuing story of Ivan, Anna, and their spider. And, learn how the silver threads play a pivotal part in their story.

As an aside, I'll share the legend of the Ukrainian Christmas spider web, which goes like this: A poor family couldn't afford a decorated Christmas tree, so the mother hung a few nuts and fruits on the small tree outside their door to cheer up her children. On Christmas Eve, in answer to her prayers, the spiders spun their webs all over the tree. At sunrise, as the sunrays caught the dew on the spider webs, they glittered and sparkled, turning the webs into silver and gold. And, to this day, the legend is remembered annually when spider web ornaments adorn Ukrainian Christmas trees.

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch (member, Canadian Society of Children's Authors, Illustrators and Performers) has been a keynote speaker; a panelist; a Writer in Residence at St. John's Kilmarnock School, 2004-5; taught at the Maritime Writers' Workshop in July 2003; and, has been nominated for numerous awards, including: in 2006, BC Stellar Award nomination for Nobody's Child; in 2004, Alberta Rocky Mountain Book Award nomination for Hope's War; in 2002, Nominated for the W.O. Mitchell Literary Prize for her body of work and mentorship of other writers; in 2006, named Canadian Ukrainian Woman of Influence by the World Congress of Ukrainian Women's Organizations; and, in 2001, recipient of Resource Links `Best of the Best 2001' in picture book category for `Enough.'

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch is also editor of `Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukrainian Stories (`Kobzar's Children')' and contributor of two of its stories. Please see my review of that book, as well as my review of Ms. Skrypuch's other fine children's book, Enough.

The publication of Silver Threads was sponsored by the Canada Council through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP), and the Ontario Arts Council; the project has been funded, in part, by the Government of Canada through BPIDP, and the Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko. Originally published in Canada by Viking, Toronto, 1996 and Penguin Books Canada, 1996, this edition was published by Fitzhenry & Whiteside in 2004 in both Canada and in the United States.

The last page of the book lists additional resources: Online links: Teacher's Guide to Silver Threads, and information on Ukrainian internment during World War I; and, a book: In Fear of the Barbed Wire Fence: Canada's First National Internment Operations and the Ukrainian Canadians, 1914-1920 by Lubomyr Y. Luciuk and Ron Sorobey, translated by Marco Carynnyk and Marta Carynnyk.

Albeit a folk fable about the power of love, the subject matter, nonetheless, concerns a true chapter from the pages of Canada's history. Silver Threads introduces the child very aptly to "an all-but-forgotten indignity in Canadian history." At the end of the story is a page entitled, Historical Note, which narrates the real-life occurrence from those pages.

Canadian school children should learn of the over twenty internment camps that were set up across Canada during World War I. "Thousands of innocent Ukrainians (up to 5,000) and other Europeans were imprisoned as `enemy aliens.' These were men, women and children who had done no wrong, but were hated because of where they had come from. They were forced to do heavy labor, and their personal belongings were taken." It wasn't until two years after World War I ended that the government of Canada shut down these internment camps. The author's grandfather, George Forchuk, was interned at Jasper in 1914--and, together with his wife, Anna, he was an inspiration for this story.

Update: August 12, 1995, a plaque and monument were unveiled at Castle Mountain Internment Camp; and on June 1, 1996, Parks Canada placed three trilingual plaques at Cave & Basin, Banff National Park. On October 12, 1996, a plaque and monument were unveiled at Jasper National Park. Photos and more information are available on the website of InfoUkes.

Heartily recommended for all--not just children, and not just Canadians--a hearty five stars plus for Silver Threads--it's a wonderfully told story with beautiful illustrations, and a fine addition to every library.

Addendum: Readers, you're invited to visit each of my reviews--most of them have photos that I took in Ukraine (over 600)--you'll learn lots about Ukraine and Ukrainians. The image gallery shows smaller photos, which are out of sequence. The preferable way is to see each review through my profile page since photos that are germane to that particular book/VHS/DVD are posted there with notes and are in sequential order.

To visit my reviews: click on my pseudonym, Mandrivnyk, to get to my profile page; click on the tab called review; scroll to the bottom of the section, and click on see all reviews; click on each title, and on the left-hand side, click on see all images. The thumbnail images at the top of the page show whether photos have notes; roll your mouse over the image to find notes posted.

Also, you're invited to visit my Listmania lists, which have materials sorted by subject matter.
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