MY THOUGHTS ON “SATURDAYS AND TEACAKES”:
This story is set in the author’s hometown, Heflin, Alabama. I traveled there to get a feel of the place, take pictures, sketch and look for models to portray the main characters in the book. With the help of the town’s local elementary school, I met Luke. I asked him if he wanted to be in my book. The eight-year-old Luke grinned an aw-shucks grin and deflected his sweet smile.
Next, I needed a model for the grandmother. I was thrilled that the author’s own mom volunteered for the role – making this book an even better tribute to his remarkable “Mammaw”.
I read books and studied pictures from the 1960s to make sure the bike, clothes, tools in the kitchen, gas pump, and even the lawn mower in the paintings represented that time. – Chris Soentpiet
BOOK REVIEWS:
“Readers will have a hard time resisting this cover: a grinning boy of nine or ten is lord of the pile of treats in front of him: teacakes he bakes with his grandmother as the culmination of their Saturday visits. Also on the weekly agenda: mowing Mammaw’s lawn and enjoying sandwiches crafted with her just-picked tomatoes. Set in 1964 in Heflin, Alabama, there’s little tension in this vignette–riding his bike there safely through the rural countryside is the hardest part of the boy’s day. The impeccably rendered paintings illustrate with astonishing accuracy the slightly long text and capture the details of the time: gasoline pumps and automobiles in the service station, the boy’s bicycle, and kitchen furnishings that suggest an even earlier time. The author crafted this as a tribute to a childhood tradition with his grandmother, to whom the book is dedicated; while not all of us had his childhood, filled with sunshine and smiles, this nostalgic look back offers up the childhood many of us wish we’d had.” – Kirkus Reviews, February 2004
“Every Saturday morning, the young narrator pedals his bike through town, passing familiar landmarks like the bank and the gas station, until he reaches his grandmother’s house. The two share a special day talking, doing chores, and finally baking and feasting on Mammaw’s special teacakes. Drawing on his childhood in Heflin, AL, the author splendidly re-creates those nostalgic scenes, carefully bringing the memories to life by describing the sunny kitchen, the crunch of gravel under bicycle wheels, and the sweet aroma of the cakes. The brilliant watercolor paintings glow with light and idyllically capture the world of yesterday. Older readers may enjoy sharing this book with their grandparents, and teachers might incorporate it into lessons about writing descriptive memoirs.” – School Library Journal, April 2004
“In this heartwarming nostalgic book, the narrator recalls spending his childhood Saturdays with his grandmother. Every part of the day — riding his bicycle to her house, mowing her lawn, baking and eating sugary teacakes together — is expressed in elegant, evocative prose and resplendent watercolor illustrations.” – Child Magazine, February 2005
“Every Saturday morning, the young narrator pedals his bike through town, passing familiar landmarks like the bank and the gas station, until he reaches his grandmother’s house. The two share a special day talking, doing chores, and finally baking and feasting on Mammaw’s special teacakes. Drawing on his childhood in Heflin, AL, the author splendidly re-creates those nostalgic scenes, carefully bringing the memories to life by describing the sunny kitchen, the crunch of gravel under bicycle wheels, and the sweet aroma of the cakes. The brilliant watercolor paintings glow with light and idyllically capture the world of yesterday. Older readers may enjoy sharing this book with their grandparents, and teachers might incorporate it into lessons about writing descriptive memoirs.” – School Library Journal, April 2004
“The book tells the wonderful story of a boy’s memorable visits to his grandmother every Saturday afternoon. Lester explores that special love between a child and his grandmother with great honesty and integrity, for the story is autobiographical. The time-out-of-time interlude described brings all of us back to our own childhood’s enchanted moments.
The art is by Chris Soentpiet and is nothing less than extraordinary. The detail is so beautiful that the reader is totally enveloped in the magic of the world recreated by Laminack and Soentpiet.
Although the publisher states this books is for ages 4-8, we can see it as a lovely read at many levels, including being read to older family members and friends. We feel it’s something children will go back to again and again for the feelings of comfort and stability it engenders. Just $16.95 for this treasure at your local bookstore.” – Patricia Broderick and Allen Raymond for Teaching K-8, April 2004
AWARDS
- Kansas State Reading Circle 2005
- The Southeastern Booksellers’ Association
- Georgia Children’s Picture Book Award 2005-2006
- Children’s Book Sense 76 Pick 2004
- Master Reading List, Volunteer State Book Award 2006-2007
- Annual Exhibition of the Society of Illustrators 2005
BOOK & CD EDITION AVAILABLE
A book and DVD edition is also available for purchase. Narrated by the author, Lester Laminack, the total running time is about 24 minutes.
ISBN # 978-1-56145-513-3; $19.95
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