Book Descriptions
for The Shepherd's Granddaughter by Anne Laurel Carter
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
From The United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY)
Amani’s childhood is idyllic, surrounded by an extended loving family; living on ancestral land; harvesting olives, grapes, and figs; and following her beloved grandfather with his flock of sheep. Bit by bit, Amani’s world disintegrates as Israeli settlers build roads then settlements, refuse passage to sell crops, then beat and jail her uncle. When Amani spots the father and son settlers with their rifle and binoculars, when she holds her dying sheep in her arms, and when she cannot communicate because she does not know enough English, Amani realizes her idyllic world no longer exists and she must change. The Palestinian-Israeli conflict comes alive through Amani’s eyes and adversities. 2009 USBBY Outstanding International Books List. lmp
From the Publisher
Winner of the Canadian Library Association Book of the Year Award for Children, the Society of School Librarians International Best Book Award and a Jane Addams Children's Book Award Honor Book
Ever since she was a little girl, Amani has wanted to be a shepherd, just like her beloved grandfather, Sido. For generations her family has grazed sheep above the olive groves of the family homestead near Hebron, and she has been steeped in Sido’s stories, especially one about a secret meadow called the Firdoos, where the grass is lush and the sheep grow fat, and about the wolf that once showed him the path there.
But now Amani’s family home is being threatened by encroaching Jewish settlements. As she struggles to find increasingly rare grazing land for her starving sheep, her uncle and brother are tempted to take a more militant stance against the settlers. Then she accidentally meets Jonathan, an American boy visiting his settler father.
Away from the pressures of their families, the two young people discover Sido’s secret meadow, the domain of a lone wolf. And Amani learns that she must share the meadow, and even her sheep, with the wolf, if she is going to continue to use it.