Book Descriptions
for Leo and the Lesser Lion by Sandra Forrester
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Twelve-year-old Bayliss and her big brother Leo were a team. He was the beloved instigator of countless pranks and schemes, she was his devoted follower. Now an accident has killed Leo and left Bayliss heartbroken. Struggling with a painful, slow recovery from a broken back, Bayliss grieves in a household where emotional pain is private. Set during the Depression, Sandra Forrester’s rewarding novel chronicles Bayliss’s physical recovery and her attempt to make sense of the tragedy that has changed the shape of her world. The gradual realization that she and Leo might have shut out their goody-two-shoes sister Kathleen with their closeness and conspiracies is one of many revelations. The story is full of surprises, including the many-faceted responses of the people around Bayliss when she announces her decision to pursue sainthood. (Perhaps it’s why she survived, she reasons, although she asks the nuns for information about “the ones who started out bad.”) The outcome is somewhat predictable when Bayliss’s family takes in two orphaned sisters, but the girls’ presence illuminates many things for Bayliss in a story populated with distinctive, believable, human characters, not the least of which is the strong-willed, spirited girl at its core. (Ages 10–13)
CCBC Choices 2010. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2010. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
A heartwarming family story set during the Depression that reads like a classic.
Everyone's been down on their luck since the Depression hit. But as long as Mary Bayliss Pettigrew has her beloved older brother, Leo, to pull pranks with, even the hardest times can be fun. Then one day, there’s a terrible accident, and when Bayliss wakes up afterward, she must face the heartbreaking prospect of life without Leo.
And that’s when her parents break the news: they’re going to be fostering two homeless little girls, and Bayliss can’t bear the thought of anyone taking Leo’s place. But opening her heart to these weary travelers might just be the key to rebuilding her grieving family.
Everyone's been down on their luck since the Depression hit. But as long as Mary Bayliss Pettigrew has her beloved older brother, Leo, to pull pranks with, even the hardest times can be fun. Then one day, there’s a terrible accident, and when Bayliss wakes up afterward, she must face the heartbreaking prospect of life without Leo.
And that’s when her parents break the news: they’re going to be fostering two homeless little girls, and Bayliss can’t bear the thought of anyone taking Leo’s place. But opening her heart to these weary travelers might just be the key to rebuilding her grieving family.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.