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Paperback Kit Learns a Lesson: A School Story Book

ISBN: 1584850183

ISBN13: 9781584850182

Kit Learns a Lesson: A School Story

(Book #2 in the American Girl: Kit Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Kit hopes her dad will find a job soon so that everything can return to normal. But a trip to the soup kitchen shows Kit how much the Depression has changed everything. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Happy Thanksgiving From Kit and the 'Bothersome Boarders'!

Kit is upset that the "bothersome boarders" who have moved in with her family will be celebrating Thanksgiving with her. But when she finds that her father may have to leave his family behind, in an attempt to find a job in Chicago, Kit's thoughts quickly change, and she begins trying to come up with a way for her father to earn money, without going away. With the help of her best friend Ruthie, and an unlikely ally, who goes by the name of Stirling, Kit realizes that there is plenty of money to be earned right here in Cincinnati, and that maybe, just maybe, having a house full of boarders isn't the worst thing in the world. After all, if there are boarders in the house, Kit's father doesn't have to move away. The fact that Kit wants to be a newspaper reporter intrigued me from the first time I saw this series, and made me want to read them. I adored MEET KIT, and was excited to read her Thanksgiving story KIT LEARNS A LESSON, and I was not disappointed. As in the first installment of Kit's life, we are treated to her spunky ways, and share a journey with the spirited young girl as she makes new friends - unlikely ones, at that - and comes to terms with the fact that her family must take in boarders, or they will be separated. An enjoyable history story, to say the least, that will teach young readers the true meaning of Thanksgiving. Erika Sorocco Book Review Columnist for The Community Bugle Newspaper

Another great Kit book

This is another in the American Girls Short Stories series about Kit Kittredge, a nine-year-old girl living in Cincinnati, Ohio. It is 1934, the Great Depression is deepening, and Kit begins to find out just how bad things are. Having spent her time waiting for her father to get a job, so that they can send away their intrusive boarders, she visits a soup kitchen and makes a disturbing discovery. As with the other Kit books, this one gives a frank look into life during the Great Depression, while also teaching a lesson. In this book, Kit learns that a lesson in cooperation and thankfulness. Again, Walter Rane's illustrations are excellent, and add greatly to the story. Also, the final chapter is about school children during the Depression. As always, my daughter and I love this book, and recommend it to you.

Excellent book!

In 1932 Kit finds that she has hard lessons to learn about the Great Depression, both at home and at school. Like the first book they have to have boarders living in their house because of the money situations. Her father lost his job and Kit is praying that her father will get a job. Every day Kit's father pretends to go on job interviews so Kit thinks that it will turn out all right (even though he doesn't.) At school one day Kit was asked to take the Thanksgiving basket to the food pantry and there she finds out that her father is depending on the food pantry for food. She is ashamed that this is true. To find out if her father gets a job you have to read the book.

A pleasant enough story.... but oh so perfect!

As with the other books in the series, this was a pleasant enough story for younger readers about a little girl growing up during America's past. But as with those other books, all of the conflicts are solved far too easily. The plot of this book is easily summed up. The setting is during the Great Depression. Kit and her two friends get into a fight at school with a mean classmate. Their punishment is delivering the class donations to the soup kitchen. There, Kit sees her father on the line for free food. She realizes how bad her family's situation is. Her father tells her he has to go away to find work. Kit finds a way to increase the income of the family's boardinghouse, and her father gets to stay. Lack of realism here, I'd say. If that was real life during the Depression, her dad probably would have had to leave. But I won't fault the publisher for toning down the harsher aspects of history - I read this series when I was as young as seven.
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