The One Thing You'd Save

The One Thing You'd Save

The One Thing You'd Save

The One Thing You'd Save

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Overview

In this provocative discussion-starter about what really matters, Newbery Medalist Linda Sue Park’s linked poems capture the diverse voices of a middle school class answering the question: “If your house were on fire, what one thing would you save?” Recipient of four starred reviews.

"[Park's] message is powerful: We don’t need a great blazing tragedy to determine what we hold most precious in our lives; we can define what’s vital through our thoughts and memories, always at hand, in our heads and hearts—safe, where the flames don’t reach."—New York Times Book Review

When a teacher asks her class what one thing they would save in an emergency, some students know the answer right away. Others come to their decisions more slowly. And some change their minds when they hear their classmates’ responses. A lively dialog ignites as the students discover unexpected facets of one another—and themselves.

With her ear for authentic dialog and knowledge of kids’ priorities and emotions, Linda Sue Park brings the varied voices of an inclusive classroom to life through carefully honed, engaging, and instantly accessible verse. Elegantly illustrated with black-and-white by Robert Sae-Heng art throughout.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780358697275
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 02/14/2023
Pages: 80
Sales rank: 91,664
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 7.80(h) x 0.50(d)
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

About the Author

Linda Sue Park, Newbery Medal winner for A Single Shard and #1 New York Times bestseller for A Long Walk to Water, is the renowned author of many books for young readers, including picture books, poetry, and historical and contemporary fiction. Born in Illinois, Ms. Park has also lived in California, England, and Ireland. She now lives in Western New York. Learn more at lindasuepark.com.



Robert Sae-Heng is an illustrator and teacher who lives in London. www.robertsaeheng.com, Twitter: @robertsaeheng, Instagram: @robertsaeheng

Read an Excerpt

“Imagine that your home is on fire. You’re allowed to save one thing.
Your family and pets are safe, so don’t worry about them.

Your Most Important Thing. Any size. A grand piano? Fine.”

For once we got good homework, not useless stuff like worksheets.
Best part is, Ms. Chang says we don’t have to write anything down,
just think about it so we can discuss it with everyone.

We’re supposed to pretend there’s a fire, and we can save just one thing.
Ms. Chang says size and weight don’t matter—it could be anything.
And don’t worry about family or pets, they’re already safe. Phew!

Makes things harder, though, ’cause I would’ve saved my nana first.
Arthritis—it hurts her to walk. If I tried to get her out,
I’d have to hurry her up and tell her she doesn’t need her good hat.

Wonder what May’s taking. Maybe I’ll give her a call—
HEY, THAT’S IT! MY PHONE! I’ll need it to tell all my friends,
and besides, somebody’s gotta call 9-1-1, right?

One thing? That’s impossible. How can I ever pick just one thing?
I’ve got so much stuff I’d want to take. My books, for a start.
My graphic novels and my manga, my Calvin and Hobbes—

heck, my Neil deGrasse Tyson books, seven all by themselves!
I couldn’t pick a favorite, every one of them is awesome.
Oh man, I hate this, I’m never gonna be able to decide.

“Promise you won’t think it’s stupid?”
“How can I promise that, girl,
when you didn’t tell me what it is yet? You tell me first,
then I tell you what I think, and you want me to be honest, right?”

“Okay. It’s a sweater.”
“A sweater? Which one—oh no. Not that one—”
“Which one? Bet you’re wrong.”
“It’s that nasty blue cardigan, right?
You can’t be serious! Why would you take that ugly thing?”

“I don’t care that it’s ugly—”
“But you hardly ever wear it!
I mean, when I can’t find my phone, it’s super annoying,
but that sweater, you wouldn’t even miss it, so why save it?”

“If you lose your phone, you can always just get another one.
All your stuff gets stored in the cloud, right? But my one gran,
she’s gone, my other gran’s eyes so bad she can’t knit anymore,

so there’s never gonna be another sweater like it
in the whole history of the universe, not ever.
Things that you can’t go buy another one, that’s what you gotta save.”

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