Grandma's Records
Author:
Eric Velasquez
Illustrator:
Eric Velasquez
Publication:
2001 by Walker & Co.
Genre:
Fiction
Pages:
32
Current state:
This book has been evaluated and information added. It has been read and any content considerations have been added.
Book Guide
Search for this book used on:
Every summer, Eric goes to live with his grandmother in El Barrio (Spanish Harlem) while his parents work. Through the long hot days, Grandma fills her apartment with the blaring horns and conga drums of Bomba y Plena, salsa, and merengue-the music she grew up with in Puerto Rico-sharing her memories and passions with Eric. But Eric sees Grandma in a new light when she gets them tickets to hear their favorite band in concert. The music sounds so different than it does at home on their scratchy records. And then the lead singer serenades Grandma right in front of the whole audience! Join Eric Velasquez on a magical journey through time and across cultures, as a young boy's passion for music and art is forged by a powerful bond between generations.
From the Worldcat summary of the eBook edition
To view the prequel to this book please sign in.
Content Guide
Please sign in to access all of the topics associated with this book and view other books with the same topics.
Please sign in to access the locations this book takes place in and view other books in the same location.
For information about the lead characters please sign in.
Please sign in to discover interesting content included in the illustrations of this book.
Reviews
Grandma's Records
Reviewed by Erika Alicea
Although it’s a story focusing on a Puerto Rican family living in El Barrio in New York City, anyone can make a connection because music and family is a universal language...
Grandma's Records
In his debut as an author, Velasquez, illustrator of The Sound That Jazz Makes (2000) tells an entertaining first-person...
Find This Book
Search for this book used on:


