Parents' Guide to

Planting Stories: The Life of Librarian and Storyteller Pura Belpré

Planting Stories: The Life of Librarian and Storyteller Pura Belpré Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Regan McMahon By Regan McMahon , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 4+

Lively bio of New York's first Puerto Rican librarian.

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What's the Story?

PLANTING STORIES: THE LIFE OF LIBRARIAN AND STORYTELLER PURA BULPRÉ traces Bulpré's life from when she left her native Puerto Rica for New York City in 1921. She first finds work in a clothing factory, then becomes a bilingual librarian in Harlem. When she find none of her treasured Puerto Rican folktales on the library shelves, she writes her own and gets it published. She also shares folktales with puppets during storytimes at various branches throughout the city. She marries African American composer and violinist Clarence Cameron White and stops working at the library, but then returns years later.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
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Kids say: Not yet rated

This lively picture book biography is a fun, engaging story whether you've ever heard of Pura Bulpré or not. Paola Escobar's illustrations are a big part of why. Her stylized pictures in a warm palette of coral and yellow with green and blue accents are full of movement, excited diverse kids, and visual metaphors, such as plants and trees growing in the library reading room to symbolize the flourishing of the story seeds Bulpré planted. The delightful endpapers offer wallpaper-like spreads featuring the main characters of Bulpré's first published folktale, Pérez y Martina, about a refined cockroach and her dashing mouse suitor.

The actual storyline is very spare. For example, there are no details of what Bulpré did during her break from working at the library -- between her marriage as a young woman and when she returns with gray hair in 1961. But kids won't care. The bottom line is she makes reading, storytelling, and libraries look like a whole lot of fun.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the folktale Pura Bulpré tells in Planting Stories: The Life of Librarian and Storyteller Pura Belpré. Why is it important to hear and read stories in your own language?

  • What's the difference between a folktale and a story written today? What are some of your favorite folktales?

  • What does it mean that Pura had "a wish to plant her story seeds throughout the land"? How is writing or sharing a story like planting a seed?

Book Details

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