Jimmy
the Greatest
by Jairo Buitrago [jP Buitrago]
Jimmy the Greatest is
a simple and sweet story about small towns, poverty, and change. Based on the
text and the illustrations, one learns that Jimmy is from a coastal town that is
so small that it only has a church and a gym. One might guess that the story is
about a Latin American town, when one learns that the author and illustrator of
this imported picture book are both from Columbia. There is also the reference
to an alligator being eaten for lunch, which should signal to most American
children that they are reading about another culture. Otherwise, because the
location is never named, the story remains universal. The story is about a small
poor town, the houses of which are spread far apart on the sandy coast. Its gym
is a two-walled wooden structure with an adjacent boxing ring. Some of its
citizens ride bicycles, many of them eat fish and fruit, and only a few of them
have heard of Mohammed Ali. The gym figures largely in Jimmy's life, who one
days tells his mom he wants to become a boxer and that he'll buy her a new
icebox when he does. Boys especially will enjoy reading about Jimmy's dream to
become a boxer, even if he doesn't have gloves and someone has stolen his shoes.
The story is also about change, which is captured in the detailed illustrations
The first spread reveals villagers wearing Western clothes, one boy eating
ice-cream, and men using nets to hunt fish. As Jimmy grows up and more villagers
read, the number of boxing spectators grows in size and a library is built. By
the final spread, some villagers have moved to big cities, the town has also
grown and become more crowded, and utility poles dot the landscape. There still
aren't any elegant houses or fancy things, but villagers aren't sitting around
waiting to go somewhere else — and Jimmy plans to stay. What a wonderful message
to instill in young people, that one's home can be the greatest place on
earth. -- review submitted by Allison H.-F. - a customer of the Bennett Martin Public Library
Have you read this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?
New Customer Reviews appear regularly in the pages of the BookGuide web site. You can visit the Customer Reviews page to see them all and/or submit your own, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide blog individually as we receive them.
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