All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little

Little, Jean. All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts. Toronto: Scholastic Canada, 2014. Print.The Dear Canada Series is a strong, well-written series of novels bringing different periods of Canadian history to life through the voices of girls living at the time. There is a constant high...

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Published in:The Deakin Review of Children's Literature
Main Author: Deakin, Andrea
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta Libraries 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/deakinreview/article/view/22674
https://doi.org/10.20361/G23S41
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spelling ftunivalbertaojs:oai:ejournals.library.ualberta.ca:article/22674 2023-05-15T16:16:45+02:00 All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little Deakin, Andrea 2014-07-22 http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/deakinreview/article/view/22674 https://doi.org/10.20361/G23S41 en eng University of Alberta Libraries The Deakin Review of Children's Literature; Vol 4, No 1 (2014) 1927-1484 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2014 ftunivalbertaojs https://doi.org/10.20361/G23S41 2016-05-08T20:39:53Z Little, Jean. All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts. Toronto: Scholastic Canada, 2014. Print.The Dear Canada Series is a strong, well-written series of novels bringing different periods of Canadian history to life through the voices of girls living at the time. There is a constant high quality of writing throughout the series and the books cover both moments of high drama, like the Halifax explosion, and also descriptions of the continuing stress of displacement and immigration.Jean Little is a fine writer whose descriptions vividly bring a scene to life and whose compassion exposes character and allows the reader to become one with her heroine.All Fall Down is the story of the Frank Slide in Alberta in 1902, but it does not begin there. We meet Abby and her family in Montreal and are thrown headlong into her story with the first sentence: “This morning my father was killed.” There has been an industrial accident and the family is left in turmoil. Here we begin to see the stresses Abby’s mother faces- no money, a child with Down Syndrome, and three other children to care for. Help comes from her mother’s brother who has opened a hotel in Frank, Alberta. He offers to take them all in. A three day train journey from Montreal takes them to Frank where their uncle and aunt greet them with kindness and concern. Little builds the situation in Frank; the prejudice against the Down Syndrome little brother, the prejudice, also against a friend Abby makes - Bird, a First Nations girl, and the changes in Abby’s older brother and sister as they, too, have to find a new place in the tiny community.The plot lines are skilfully woven- Abby’s growing skills and abilities, the family finding a place in the community, disease ,and strained relations with the First Nations people to the extent of ignoring a continual warning from Bird’s grandfather that the mountain would walk.Then the mountain walks.The first part of the book enables the reader to become so familiar with the family and the Frank community that the tragedy is all the more telling.All Fall Down is a strong engaging story, all the more effective because of the compassion with which a skilful writer, like Jean Little, has brought her people to life.Highly Recommended: 4 out of 4 stars Reviewer: Andrea DeakinAndrea has been involved with books since she was class librarian in Primary School, Student Librarian in Grammar School, student librarian for the Education Faculty when she was a student, and school librarian in schools both in England and in Canada, except for the first two years in Canada where she arrived in 1959. When she retired from teaching ( English and History) she was invited to review in February 1971, and continued to review for press, radio, and finally on the Internet (Deakin Newsletter from Okanagan College) until she retired in 2011. Forty years seemed sufficient- although she still cannot keep her nose out of good children's and YA fare. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations University of Alberta: Journal Hosting Canada Deakin ENVELOPE(171.667,171.667,-84.667,-84.667) The Deakin Review of Children's Literature 4 1
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description Little, Jean. All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts. Toronto: Scholastic Canada, 2014. Print.The Dear Canada Series is a strong, well-written series of novels bringing different periods of Canadian history to life through the voices of girls living at the time. There is a constant high quality of writing throughout the series and the books cover both moments of high drama, like the Halifax explosion, and also descriptions of the continuing stress of displacement and immigration.Jean Little is a fine writer whose descriptions vividly bring a scene to life and whose compassion exposes character and allows the reader to become one with her heroine.All Fall Down is the story of the Frank Slide in Alberta in 1902, but it does not begin there. We meet Abby and her family in Montreal and are thrown headlong into her story with the first sentence: “This morning my father was killed.” There has been an industrial accident and the family is left in turmoil. Here we begin to see the stresses Abby’s mother faces- no money, a child with Down Syndrome, and three other children to care for. Help comes from her mother’s brother who has opened a hotel in Frank, Alberta. He offers to take them all in. A three day train journey from Montreal takes them to Frank where their uncle and aunt greet them with kindness and concern. Little builds the situation in Frank; the prejudice against the Down Syndrome little brother, the prejudice, also against a friend Abby makes - Bird, a First Nations girl, and the changes in Abby’s older brother and sister as they, too, have to find a new place in the tiny community.The plot lines are skilfully woven- Abby’s growing skills and abilities, the family finding a place in the community, disease ,and strained relations with the First Nations people to the extent of ignoring a continual warning from Bird’s grandfather that the mountain would walk.Then the mountain walks.The first part of the book enables the reader to become so familiar with the family and the Frank community that the tragedy is all the more telling.All Fall Down is a strong engaging story, all the more effective because of the compassion with which a skilful writer, like Jean Little, has brought her people to life.Highly Recommended: 4 out of 4 stars Reviewer: Andrea DeakinAndrea has been involved with books since she was class librarian in Primary School, Student Librarian in Grammar School, student librarian for the Education Faculty when she was a student, and school librarian in schools both in England and in Canada, except for the first two years in Canada where she arrived in 1959. When she retired from teaching ( English and History) she was invited to review in February 1971, and continued to review for press, radio, and finally on the Internet (Deakin Newsletter from Okanagan College) until she retired in 2011. Forty years seemed sufficient- although she still cannot keep her nose out of good children's and YA fare.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Deakin, Andrea
spellingShingle Deakin, Andrea
All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little
author_facet Deakin, Andrea
author_sort Deakin, Andrea
title All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little
title_short All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little
title_full All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little
title_fullStr All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little
title_full_unstemmed All Fall Down: The Landslide Diary of Abby Roberts by J. Little
title_sort all fall down: the landslide diary of abby roberts by j. little
publisher University of Alberta Libraries
publishDate 2014
url http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/deakinreview/article/view/22674
https://doi.org/10.20361/G23S41
long_lat ENVELOPE(171.667,171.667,-84.667,-84.667)
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op_source The Deakin Review of Children's Literature; Vol 4, No 1 (2014)
1927-1484
op_doi https://doi.org/10.20361/G23S41
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