TeachingBooks
Each Kindness

Book Resume

for Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson and E.B. Lewis

Professional book information and credentials for Each Kindness.

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When the new girl Maya first comes to school, “Her coat was open and the clothes ...read more

  • Publisher's Weekly:
  • Ages 5 - 8
  • Kirkus:
  • Ages 5 - 8
  • School Library Journal:
  • Grades 2 - 5
  • Booklist:
  • K - Grade 3
  • TeachingBooks:*
  • Grades PK-6
  • Word Count:
  • 865
  • Lexile Level:
  • 530L
  • ATOS Reading Level:
  • 3.4
  • Cultural Experience:
  • African American
  • Genre:
  • Realistic Fiction
  • Picture Book
  • Year Published:
  • 2012

The following unabridged reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers. Reviews may be used for educational purposes consistent with the fair use doctrine in your jurisdiction, and may not be reproduced or repurposed without permission from the rights holders.

Note: This section may include reviews for related titles (e.g., same author, series, or related edition).

From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)

When the new girl Maya first comes to school, “Her coat was open and the clothes beneath it looked old and ragged.” Chloe ignores Maya’s smile that first day and every day afterward. And at recess, Chloe and her best friends, Kendra and Sophie, reject Maya’s attempts to play with them or impress them. Kendra calls Maya “Never New,” because “everything she has came from a secondhand store.” Maya isn’t at school the day their teacher brings a bowl of water and a stone to class. She drops in the stone and tells the students that kindness is like the ripples of water: “Each little thing we do goes out, like a ripple, into the world.” Chloe thinks about Maya, and is determined to smile back the next time she sees her. But day after day Maya doesn’t come back, and then the teacher announces Maya has moved away. Jacqueline Woodson’s moving story is anything but predictable as a young African American girl is left feeling regret for kindnesses undone, but also is surely changed. The writing pulses with feeling in Woodson’s quietly powerful narrative set against E. B. Lewis’s light-filled illustrations. Winner, 2013 Charlotte Zolotow Award (Ages 5–9)

CCBC Choices 2013 © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2013. Used with permission.

From School Library Journal

February 1, 2017

EMPATHY; PERSPECTIVE-TAKING; RESPECT FOR OTHERS

Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

From Horn Book

January 1, 2013
At recess, Chloe pointedly gathers her best friends to share secrets while ignoring new-girl Maya's advances of friendship. Maya plays alone, seemingly unbowed by the ostracism, until one day, suddenly, she's gone. A silent, belatedly thoughtful Chloe regrets "each kindness I had never shown." Woodson's affecting story focuses on the withholding of friendship rather than outright bullying; Lewis reflects the pensive mood in sober watercolors.

(Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

From Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from September 17, 2012
When a new and clearly impoverished girl named Maya shows up at school ("Her coat was open and the clothes beneath it looked old and ragged"), Chloe and her friends brush off any attempt to befriend her. Even when Maya valiantly-and heartbreakingly-tries to fit in and entice the girls to play with her, she is rejected. Then one day, Maya is gone, and Chloe realizes that her "chance of a kindness" is "more and more forever gone." Combining realism with shimmering impressionistic washes of color, Lewis turns readers into witnesses as kindness hangs in the balance in the
cafeteria, the classroom, and on the sun-bleached playground asphalt; readers see how the most mundane settings can become tense testing grounds for character. Woodson, who collaborated with Lewis on The Other Side and Coming On Home Soon, again brings an unsparing lyricism to a difficult topic. The question she answers with this story is one that can haunt at any age: what if you're cruel to someone and never get the chance to make it right? Ages 5—8. Agent: Charlotte Sheedy Literary Agency. Illustrator's agent: Dwyer & O'Grady.

From Kirkus

September 15, 2012
Woodson and Lewis' latest collaboration unfolds with harsh beauty and the ominousness of opportunities lost. Narrator Chloe is a little grade-school diva who decides with casual hubris that the new girl, Maya, is just not good enough. Woodson shows through Chloe's own words how she and her friends completely ignore Maya, with her raggedy shoes and second-hand clothes, rebuffing her every overture. Readers never learn precisely why Chloe won't return Maya's smile or play jacks or jump rope with her. Those who have weathered the trenches of childhood understand that such decisions are not about reason; they are about power. The matter-of-fact tone of Chloe's narration paired against the illustrations' visual isolation of Maya creates its own tension. Finally, one day, a teacher demonstrates the ripple effect of kindness, inspiring Chloe--but Maya disappears from the classroom. Suddenly, Chloe is left holding a pebble with the weight of a stone tablet. She gets a hard lesson in missed opportunities. Ripples, good and bad, have repercussions. And sometimes second chances are only the stuff of dreams. Lewis dazzles with frame-worthy illustrations, masterful use of light guiding readers' emotional responses. Something of the flipside to the team's The Other Side (2001), this is a great book for teaching kindness. (Picture book. 5-8)

COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

From School Library Journal

Starred review from September 1, 2012

Gr 2-5-Always on-target navigating difficulties in human relationships, Woodson teams up with Lewis to deal a blow to the pervasive practice-among students of all economic backgrounds-of excluding those less fortunate. When a new student arrives midterm, head down, with broken sandals, she sits right next to Chloe, an African American girl. The teacher introduces the pigtailed new student as Maya, but hardly anyone says hello, nor does Chloe give a welcoming smile. Lyrical and stylistically tight writing act in perfect counterpoint to the gentle but detailed watercolor paintings of a diverse rural classroom. Chloe's best friends "this year" call Maya "Never New" because her clothes are always secondhand. Each time the cheerful, independent Maya invites the clique members to play, they refuse. Woodson's writing, full of revelation and short on reckoning, gives opportunity for countless inferences and deep discussion and dovetails with the illustrations of children's facial expressions from surprising angles, expansive countryside views, and pools of water and windows, which invite readers to pause, reflect, and empathize. When their teacher invites them to throw a pebble in water and watch the ripples radiate to symbolize an act of kindness they share with the class, Chloe stops. Maya no longer is there. Her family has had to move. Had Chloe been kind even once? With growing income disparity, and bullying on the rise, this story of remorse and lost opportunity arrives none too soon.-Sara Lissa Paulson, American Sign Language and English Lower School, New York City

Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

From Booklist

Starred review from August 1, 2012
Grades K-3 *Starred Review* Starting with the title, this quiet, intense picture book is about the small actions that can haunt. As in collaborations such as Coming on Home Soon (2004), Woodson's spare, eloquent free verse and Lewis' beautiful, spacious watercolor paintings tell a story for young kids that will touch all ages. In a first-person voice, Chloe speaks about how a new girl in class, Maya, gets the empty seat next to her and tries to be friends. But Chloe and her clique will have none of the poor white kid in her old ragged clothes, and their meanness intensifies after Maya asks to play with them. Then Maya's family moves away, and she is forever gone, leaving Chloe without the chance to put things right. Chloe's teacher spells out lessons of kindness, but the story is most powerful in the scenes of malicious bullying in the multiracial classroom and in the school yard. It is rare to tell a story of cruelty from the bully's viewpoint, and both the words and pictures powerfully evoke Chloe's shame and sorrow over the kindness she has not shown, as she looks at the empty seat next to her in the classroom, and then, alone and troubled, throws a stone in the water and watches the ripples move out and away. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The combined talents and star power of Woodson and Lewis will undoubtably create plenty of pre-pub. buzz.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

Each Kindness was selected by educational and library professionals to be included on the following state/provincial reading lists.

United States Lists (26)

Arizona

  • Grand Canyon Reader Award, 2015 -- Picture Book category

Arkansas

  • Arkansas Diamond Primary Book Award, 2014-2015, Grades K-3

California

  • California Young Reader Medal, 2016-2017, Picture Books for Older Readers Division, Grades 4-12

Illinois

  • Monarch Award, 2015, for Grades K-3

Indiana

Kansas

  • Bill Martin, Jr. Picture Book Award, 2014, for Grades K-3

Kentucky

  • Kentucky Bluegrass Award, 2014 -- Early Elementary

Louisiana

  • Louisiana Young Readers' Choice Award, 2015, Grades 3-5

Maryland

  • Black-Eyed Susan Book Award, 2013-2014, Picture Book Category for Grades K-3

Mississippi

  • Magnolia Award, 2015, for Grades K-2

Missouri

  • Show Me Readers Award, 2014-2015, Grades 1-3

Nebraska

  • Golden Sower Award, 2014-2015 -- Primary Book category

North Carolina

  • North Carolina Children's Book Award, 2014 - Picture Books for Grades PreK-2

North Dakota

  • Flicker Tale Children's Book Award, 2014 -- Picture Books

Pennsylvania

  • Keystone to Reading Book Award, 2013-2014 -- Primary List
  • Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award, 2013-2014, Grades K-3

South Carolina

  • SCASL Picture Book Awards, 2014-2015, Grades PK-2

Vermont

  • Red Clover Children's Choice Award, 2013-2014, Grades K-4

Virginia

  • Virginia Readers' Choice, 2014-2015, Primary, Grades K-3

Washington

  • Washington Children's Choice Picture Book Award, 2014, Grades K-3

West Virginia

  • West Virginia Children's Choice Book Awards, 2013-2014, for Grades 3-6

Wisconsin

  • 2013-2014 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades K-2
  • 2013-2014 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades PK-12

Wyoming

  • Buckaroo Book Award, 2013-2014, Grades K-3

Jacqueline Woodson on creating Each Kindness:

This primary source recording with Jacqueline Woodson was created to provide readers insights directly from the book's creator into the backstory and making of this book.

Listen to this recording on TeachingBooks

Citation: Woodson, Jacqueline. "Meet-the-Author Recording | Each Kindness." TeachingBooks, https://school.teachingbooks.net/bookResume/t/31660. Accessed 20 May, 2024.

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This Book Resume for Each Kindness is compiled from TeachingBooks, a library of professional resources about children's and young adult books. This page may be shared for educational purposes and must include copyright information. Reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers.

*Grade levels are determined by certified librarians utilizing editorial reviews and additional materials. Relevant age ranges vary depending on the learner, the setting, and the intended purpose of a book.

Retrieved from TeachingBooks on May 20, 2024. © 2001-2024 TeachingBooks.net, LLC. All rights reserved by rights holders.