Luca's Bridge/El Puente de Luca bookcover

Luca's Bridge/El Puente de Luca

The Future of Patterns

Mariana Llanos 

(Author)

Anna López Real 

(Illustrator)
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Description

✭Tejas Star Reading List, 2020-21

✭ALSC Notable Children's Book 2020

Luca has never lived outside the U.S., but when his parents receive a letter in the mail, the family must pack up and leave home for a strange land.

Together in their car, Luca, his brother Paco, and their parents head across the border to Mexico where his parents were born. Luca doesn't understand why he must leave the only home he's ever known, his friends, and his school. He struggles through lonely and disorienting times--reflected both in Real's delicate, symbolic illustrations and through Llanos' description of his dreams--and leans on music, memory, and familial love for support. Luca's Bridge / El puente de Luca is a story for everyone about immigration, deportation, home, and identity.

Product Details

PublisherPenny Candy Books
Publish DateApril 16, 2019
Pages40
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9780998799957
Dimensions8.6 X 6.8 X 0.4 inches | 0.6 pounds

About the Author

Born in Lima, Peru, to two journalists, Mariana Llanos developed an early passion for writing. She studied theater in the prestigious CuatroTablas school in Lima. She has lived in Oklahoma since 2002, where she worked as a teacher in a preschool center. In 2013 Mariana self-published her first book, Tristan Wolf, which won a Finalist in the 2013 Readers' Favorite Book Award. Since then, she has published seven books independently in English and Spanish and through virtual technology has chatted with students from more than 150 schools around the world to promote literacy. In December 2017 she was recognized with a Human Rights Award by the United Nations Association of Oklahoma City and the Human Rights Alliance of Oklahoma for her work promoting literacy.

Reviews

"Teachers, this is a wonderful book for summer camps, assigned for summer reading, or to be used next school year. It works well for studying and discussing themes of immigration, deportation, family separation, music, bridges (metaphorical), childhood, and more." --Mommymaestra.com

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