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How I Learned Geography

Plot Summary
How I Learned Geography is a touching fictional story recasting a childhood memory.

Driven from home by a "war [that] devastated the land," a family flees to a remote city in the steppes. One day, the father returns from the market not with bread for supper but with a wall-filling map of the world. "'No supper tonight,' Mother said bitterly. 'We'll have the map instead.'" Although hungry, the boy finds sustenance of a different sort in the multicolored map, which provides a literal spot of brightness in the otherwise spare, earth-toned illustrations, as well as a catalyst for soaring, pretend visits to exotic lands. Shulevitz's rhythmic, first-person narrative reads like a fable for young children. Its autobiographical dimension, however, will open up the audience to older grade-schoolers, who will be fascinated by the endnote describing Shulevitz's life as a refugee in Turkestan after the Warsaw blitz, (in World War II) including his childhood sketch of the real map. Whether enjoyed as a reflection of readers' own imaginative travels or used as a creative entree to classroom geography units, this simple, poignant offering will transport children as surely as the map it celebrates.

According to Elizabeth Devereaux, the children’s reviews editor at Publishers Weekly, there is a common theme among Shulevitz's children's books: The destruction of family happiness, the reversal of fortune, the foolish bargain, the impossible task: all these classic themes control this story. She continues to say, "In framing his own story, replacing autobiographical fact with archetypal forms, Shulevitz keeps the focus on the inner world that he has so consistently illuminated. Once again, he reminds us that folly is not the opposite of wisdom, but so close a relative that the two are often mistaken."

Information about the Author
Uri Shulevitz writes in the back of How I Learned Geography as an author's note: "I was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1935. The Warsaw blitz occurred in 1939, when I was four years old. I remember streets caving in buildings burning or crumbling to dust, and a bomb falling into the stairwell of our apartment building. Shortly thereafter, I fled Poland with my family, and for six years we lived in the Soviet Union, most of the time in Central Asia, in the city of Turkestan in what is now Kazakhstan. We eventually arrived in Paris, France, in 1947 and then moved to Israel in 1949. I came to the United States in 1959. The story in this book takes place when I was four or five years old, in the early years of our stay in Turkestan. The original map was lost long ago, so I created the maps here based on my memory of that first one, using collage, pen and ink, and watercolor."

Information about reception and/or awards
Among many accolades, Uri Shulevitz has been awarded the Caldecott Medal and two Caldecott Honor citations.

Information about the Illustrator
Pages 22 and 23 in How I Learned Geography.jpg|thumb|Pages 22 and 23 in How I Learned Geography]] Pages 18 and 19 in How I Learned Geography.jpg|thumb|Pages 18 and 19 in How I Learned Geography]] Uri Shulevitz not only writes, but illustrates his children's books as well. As described by Joanna Rudge Long, who reviewed this book in The Horn Magazine, "Shulevitz's skillfully composed, emotionally charged art, evocative scenes of the family leaving war-torn Europe on foot and traversing Asia's "dusty steppes," with its dour, angular villages, give way to the dreamlike splendor of the boy's escape into imagination." To the left are illustrations taken from the book to show the dreamlike world the boy explores.

Cultural Impact or Controversy
The last line in the book, "I forgave my father. He was right, after all" is embedded with meaning, "though appropriate for younger children, this is a natural to pair with Peter Sis's The Wall (rev. 9/07) for its depiction of a gifted young artist finding inspiration and expressing himself despite profoundly daunting circumstances." This book entails Shulevitz's memories of World War Two throughout his childhood. It allows readers to see the the disaster war brought through a child's perspective, war having an enormous impact on families, communities and the whole country.