From School Library Journal
Grade 1-3?As Lena helps her grandmother make apple strudel, the woman tells her a story about her childhood in Hungary. One day, she and a friend are approached by a wandering beggar. They race to the house, frightened, but Mother decides that the man should have some of their just-made strudel. He repays their kindness by playing sweet, sad music on his violin. Each year he returns, has his piece of strudel, and plays, until finally one season the harvest comes, but the beggar does not. Father says that "Perhaps our friend isn't hungry anymore." He tells the children to listen closely, and they hear the wanderer's music in the sounds of the country night. Comparisons with Patricia Polacco's Thunder Cake (Philomel, 1990) are bound to occur. Similarities include the grandmother from the old country, the child who helps prepare a treat, the sharing of food in the spirit of kindness, and the recipe on the last page. Even the watercolor-and-pencil illustrations have a similar, though softer, look. But with its message of continuity and love, Hippely's sweet story stands on its own.?Ruth Semrau, formerly at Lovejoy School, Allen, TX
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Ages 4^-7. As Lena's grandmother makes strudel, she tells Lena a story about when she was a little girl in Hungary helping her mama bake. An old fellow in tattered clothes asks for a piece of bread, but Mama can't give bread when there is fresh strudel in the house. The man gratefully accepts and, to the family's surprise, repays them--with a song from his violin. Each year he comes back, until one year he doesn't, and Papa tells his girls that perhaps the man is no longer hungry, and if they listen carefully, they might still hear his song. The story, hauntingly sweet, is matched by the dreamy watercolors in autumnal shades. However, the narrative frame features a grandmother who looks more like Lena's great-grandmother. White-haired, stooped, this grandmother remembers a childhood where people wear costumes that seem to be from the turn of the century. This quibble aside, children will enjoy the story's warmth. A recipe for strudel is appended.
Ilene Cooper