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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Summertime and the living is easy
The Newbery Award winning books of the 1930s went through an interesting phase that was never again to be repeated. Starting with "Caddie Woodlawn" (1935), continuing with "Roller Skates" (1936), and capitulating with the delightful "Thimble Summer" (1938) these books all followed spunky independent females with little to no regard for the traditional roles women had...
Published on Mar 13 2004 by E. R. Bird

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars This book just makes you feel good!
Thimble Summer is a fun and easy to read book, that keeps you smiling the whole way through. Garnet and her family are delightful characters, you will be glad to have "met". This story renews a feeling of hope in humanity.
Published on Nov 15 1999


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Summertime and the living is easy, Mar 13 2004
By 
E. R. Bird "Ramseelbird" (Manhattan, NY) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
The Newbery Award winning books of the 1930s went through an interesting phase that was never again to be repeated. Starting with "Caddie Woodlawn" (1935), continuing with "Roller Skates" (1936), and capitulating with the delightful "Thimble Summer" (1938) these books all followed spunky independent females with little to no regard for the traditional roles women had always carried. But while "Caddie" and "Roller Skates" were period pieces that ultimately ended with the girls giving in to society's restraints, "Thimble Summer" trumps this trend. In it, we have a farm girl named Garnet who has a load of exciting summer adventures and who ends her tale wearing sailor pants doing hand stands over and over again in a pasture.

The tale of "Thimble Summer" begins when Garnet finds a silver thimble in a nearby dried lakebed. According to Garner, the summer's wonderful aspects only take place after this key event. Her father receives a loan from the government allowing him to build a new barn. Her family meets and virtually adopts an adorable homeless boy. Garnet shows her favorite pig at the state fair and wins a blue ribbon. All these events are told with a marvelous simplicity and a real sense of being there with Garnet. From the very first page of this book, you notice the author's excellent writing style. About the heat of the summer Enright writes, "It was like being inside of a drum. The sky like a bright skin was stretched tight above the valley, and the earth too, was tight and hard with heat". You're in safe hands with this writer. Don't believe me? Here's another wonderful descriptive passage. "Her shoes hurt her; and with aching feet and her bundle and empty pocketbook she felt like an old, old woman coming home from seeing grandchildren who didn't love her".

But observe this book within its 1938 context. Here's a girl that does a boy's chores. We never see her darn socks or cook, though she's often seen working in the fields. She's nine or so, so she doesn't go about falling in love (not even with the adorable homeless boy). She wears pants most of the time, is never badgered by either parent to be more feminine and (the coup de grace) at the end of the story she plans to someday have a farm of her own. Fabulous. Then there are those wonderful little details about the past. Kids reading this book may not get the references to G-men, Zeppelin shaped balloons, or the running boards of cars. Fortunately these spots of the past are either
self-evident or mercilessly scant.

Is the book flawless then? Almost. There are a couple tiny flaws here and there. The line drawings accompanying the text (drawn by the author herself) are magnificent. Unfortunately, there's one time they belie the text. If you've a child who's overweight in any way, this may not be the best book to show them. While Garnet's best female friend Citronella is continually called "fat", in the book's pictures she's the most average kid you've ever seen (compared to the waiflike Garnet, of course). Any child with body image problems is going to see the pictures, read the text, and come up with some pretty heart-wrenching conclusions. If Garnet is normal then... You get the picture.

I don't really understand why kids don't know this book better. Anyone who's ever wanted to live on a farm in the country would enjoy it. Anyone who's ever wanted to hitchhike like Garnet, spend a night in a library, or swim rivers on their own would like it. It's a pip, this one. It's got moxie. Don't forgo the pleasures of "Thimble Summer" simply because it's old. You'll be missing out on more than you could have possibly imagined.

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5.0 out of 5 stars melissa1007, April 2 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Hardcover)
When I was a little girl, one of the chapters in this book appeared in a volume of the Childcraft Books. The chapter was "Locked In" where the girls have to spend the night in the library. I absolutely loved the story but it wasn't until I was an adult and had daughters of my own the I found this book and was able to read the whole thing to my children. The book is timeless even though it is set in a much simpler time. I highly recommend it to children and adults alike!!!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Thimble Summer, Mar 20 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
I liked this book because it was an adventurous book and it was just a really neat book. Even though I'm twelve, and this book was probally made for eight through ten year olds, I liked this book a lot. It was fun to read about all of Garnet's (the main charatcher of this book) adventures and how she was happy throughout most of this book. The funnest part is when Garnet is able to get a pig. Garnets parents alow Garnet to enter her pig in a contest. When Garnet and her family got to the fair, something bad happens. Read it and you'll find out what it is. It's an exciting and happy book all the way through. (and of course, that's what I think!)

~

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5.0 out of 5 stars A Magic Thimble, Feb 16 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
I really loved this book because it was about a girl who was easy for me to relate to. One very hot summer Garnet finds a thimble and that summer was the best. It rained that very night, and a new boy comes to live with them. And Garnet thinks it's all because of the thimble. It is really a great book to read. Every day I couldn't wait to read one more chapter. I got wrapped up once I started reading, and couldn't stop.If you want to read it, go read it!
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2.0 out of 5 stars 1939 Newbery Medal winner; childish, simplistic, a fast read, Jan 9 2001
By 
Lisa Ebeling "laa-laa" (smalltown, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Hardcover)
This is an appropriate selection for younger readers and for adults who enjoy childhood reminiscences about hard work and the simple pleasures that make all that hard work pay off.

SYNOPSIS: 9 1/2-year old Garnet Linden lives on a Wisconsin farm with her parents, older brother Jay and younger brother Donald and enjoys the typical pleasures of childhood near a small midwest town: swimming in the river, hitching a ride into town, and the county fair. The night that Garnet finds a silver thimble in the river bed the drought breaks and the crops are saved, so her father is kept from financial ruin. The thimble brings even more good luck: her father receives a government loan with which to replace their old barn and a 13-year-old orphan, Eric Swanstrom, stumbles upon the Lindens as they're firing limestone at midnight with which to make cement, plaster and whitewash for the barn. Eric stays on with the family and helps with the chores and replaces Garnet as Jay's best friend and constant companion. Garnet deepens her friendship with neighbor Citronella Hauser, 11, and they have adventures of their own together. Mr. Freebody, another neighbor, always looks out for Garnet and provides a concerned ear and offers good advice. She feels that all her good fortune is due to the magic silver thimble she found and vows to always refer to this special summer as the "Thimble Summer."

I think, deep down, everyone wishes he or she had a childhood this idyllic. Although I grew up in a city, I did spend weeks at a time on my grandparents' farms (I was lucky; my grandparents on both sides were very small-scale dairy farmers) during my childhood, and I enjoyed the rustic charms of farm living. I loved gathering eggs in the henhouse, climbing the tree that grew out of a creek-bank, catching frogs in the pond with my cousins, and catching crawdads in a culvert--all on my grandparents' farm! My other Grandma had a huge watering-trough that was fun, a spooky spring-house, and numerous sheds and barns to explore. "Thimble Summer" has a way of bringing back many of these memories.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Well written, Mar 23 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
I loved this book when I was a child and it still is pretty darn good today. This is one of those books that really made you feel like you were in the story, especially in the weather descriptions. You almost feel as though you're out in the rainstorm cooling off from all that blazing heat!

Everything about this story makes the reader feel good. It is a simple story without endless action, which can be quite soothing after a day spent racing around.

A quiet book that merited its awards and continues to be a good read today.

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3.0 out of 5 stars This book just makes you feel good!, Nov 15 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
Thimble Summer is a fun and easy to read book, that keeps you smiling the whole way through. Garnet and her family are delightful characters, you will be glad to have "met". This story renews a feeling of hope in humanity.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A not so great book by a good author, Sep 13 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
I didn't like this book very much, because there was hardly any excitment
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3.0 out of 5 stars CAN A THIMBLE BE MAGIC OR BRING GOOD LUCK?, July 10 1999
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
This is a quiet and gentle read about life on a Wisconsin farm in the 1930's, when great grand- parents still recall tales about Indians. Nine- year-old Garnet Linden (well, yes, she's blond but not necessarily Scandinavian) reminds us of Laura Ingalls, for she is plucky, mischievous and strong-willed. It was a simpler age, with simple pleasures: safe hitchiking, swimming in the creek, barn-raisings, ice cream and County Fairs. But farmers had it tough then what with drought and financial worries until the harvest was in. Garnet's brother, Jay, has decided that he does Not want to be a farmer, but what about the new orphan boy who shows up one night by the lime kiln? Is he farmer material perhaps?

There is not much of a plot--just events strung out like beads on a necklace. But it is a laid-back kind of book which young girls will enjoy. The illustrations are delightful; we see bubbly Garnet chasing chickens, locked in (I won't say where!), and on the cover she proudly holds her pet pig. One theme is that you really should be grateful to have Good Neighbors. Also that you need special eyes to recognize treasures when you find them. From the creek, then from the woods--what will she do with hers?

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4.0 out of 5 stars A magical summer!, May 23 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Thimble Summer (Paperback)
This is a small book about a nine-year-old blond girl named Garnet Linden living on a farm with her family in Wisconsin in the 1930s. One day in the first few weeks of summer she finds a silver thimble and imagines that it has magic. The reader follows her through the summer and, by the end of the book, we find that she is convinced it is magical because she had such an eventful summer, which included the awarding of a blue ribbon for her young pig Timmy at the local fair. This book by Elizabeth Enright won the 1939 Newbery Award for best contribution to American children's literature.
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Thimble Summer
Thimble Summer by Elizabeth Enright (Paperback - April 29 2008)
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