Gr. 4-6. Concerned about their daughter's tiny stature, Chig's parents let her delay entering school for two years. Chig (short for Chigger) is still unusually petite in 1933, when she first enters the one-room schoolhouse in quiet Niplak, Indiana. Though the big boys often make fun of her size, she finds a supportive teacher and one good friend at school. Over the next two years, Chig learns that her small stature in no way diminishes her wits or her ability to contribute to her community, where the Depression has hit hard. The proliferation of good outcomes at the story's conclusion seem less realistic than the novel as a whole, but readers who have come to like this unassuming heroine wouldn't have it any other way. With its warm, homespun feel and the occasional tall-tale quality, this chapter book offers a view of the Depression as experienced in one community "deep in the hills and hollers of southern Indiana."
Carolyn PhelanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Product Description
Being small is a big concern for Chig Kalpin. Like the insects that catch folks unawares with their bites on a summer evening, Chig is small enough and silent enough that she’s near about invisible. But she has a heartfelt desire to become a big person, both in stature and in spirit, and soon her adventures culminate with the Great Niplak Train Disaster, where she helps the folks in the hills and hollers of southern Indiana make it through the Great Depression with a little more to spread between the covers of their sandwiches. Haven’t heard of it? Well, as Chig might say, “Set a spell and turn the page.”