Chris Boot/London, 2010
120 pages
Rating: 5
$30.00
Shelved 770 in the library
Wow. Rich children, impoverished children, and children in-between are shown in this book. 55 kids, ages four through seventeen, from one of ** countries including Israel and Palestine, Nepal, China, Thailand, countries in Africa, the U.S., Italy, Brazil....
A two-page spread for each child. On the left, a photo taken on a neutral background, of the child. Below it, a paragrph telling a little of that child's life, with them filling in some of the blanks like how far away is there school (if they even go to school), what their favorite foods are, what they aspire to be when they "grow up." On the right, a photo of where the child sleeps. For some it's a bedroom. For some it's a field. For some it's an orphanage. For some it's a dirty floor.
"Home for this four-year-old boy and his family is a mattress in a field on the outskirts of Rome, Italy, The family came from Romania by bus, after begging on the streets for enough money to pay for their tickets. When they first arrived in Rome, the camped in a tent, but the police threw them off the site because they were trespassing on private land and did not have the correct documents. Now the family sleep together on the mattress in the open.. When it rains, they hastily erect a tent and use umbrellas for shelter, hoping they will not be spotted by the police. They left Romania without identity documents or work papers and so are unable to obtain legal employment. This boy sits by the curbside while his parents clean car windscreens at traffic lights to earn thirty to fifty cents a time. No one from the boy's family have even been to school. His parents cnnot read or write."
"Kaya is four years old. She lives with her parents in a small apartment in Tokyo, Japan. Most apartments in Japan are small because land is very expensive to buy and there is such a large population to accommodate. Kaya's bedroom is every little girl's dream. It is lined from floor to ceiling with clothes and dolls. Kaya's mother makes all Kaya' dresses - up to three a month, usually. Now Kaya has thirty dresses and coats, thirty pairs of shoes, sandals and boots, and numerous wigs. (The pigtails in the picture are made from hairpieces.) Her friends love to come round to try on her clothes. When she goes to school, however, she has to wear a school uniform. Her favorite foods are meat, potatoes, strawberries,and peaches. She wants to be a cartoonist when she grows up, drawing Japanese 'anime" cartoons."
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