Penny from Heaven
Penny from Heaven book cover

Penny from Heaven

Hardcover – July 25, 2006

Price
$15.73
Format
Hardcover
Pages
288
Publisher
Random House Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0375836879
Dimensions
5.4 x 0.95 x 8.51 inches
Weight
15.2 ounces

Description

From School Library Journal Grade 5-7–Penny Falucci, 11, lives with her widowed mother and maternal grandparents, but her father's large, Italian family is tremendously important to her, too. It frustrates her that no one talks about his death, but as the summer of 1953 progresses, several events occur. First, her mother begins dating the milkman, and, when Penny's arm goes through the wringer on the washing machine, things come to a head. Finally, the secrets behind her father's death come out. Aunt Gina tells her about a minor incident that had horrifying consequences for him because of the restrictions placed on Italian Americans during World War II. Penny and her world are clearly drawn and eminently believable, made up of seamlessly interwoven details from everyday life. The period is lovingly re-created, from the fear of catching polio to Penny's use of the word swell. An author's note with photos is included. Recommend this novel to readers who enjoyed Ann M. Martin's A Corner of the Universe (Scholastic, 2002) for another intricate picture of a girl with knotty ties to an imperfect family in a not-too-distant past. –Faith Brautigam, Gail Borden Public Library, Elgin, IL Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Gr. 5-8. Penny lives with her "plain old American" mother and grandparents, but she has an open invitation to visit her deceased father's Italian family, where the delicious aromas are as inviting as the boisterous relatives who welcome her. Against the backdrop of these contrasting 1950s households, the author of Newbery Honor Book Our Only May Amelia (1999) charts the summer of Penny's twelfth birthday, marked by hapless episodes as well as serious tensions arising from the estranged families' refusal to discuss her father's death. Penny is a low-key character, often taking a backseat role in escapades with high-spirited cousin Frankie. However, Holm impressively wraps pathos with comedy in this coming-of-age story, populated by a cast of vivid characters (a burping, farting grandpa; an eccentric uncle who lives in his car--"not exactly normal for people in New Jersey"). Concluding with a photo-illustrated endnote explaining Holm's inspirations in family history, this languidly paced novel will appeal most to readers who appreciate gentle, episodic tales with a nostalgic flavor. Hand selling may be necessary to overcome the staid jacket illustration. Jennifer Mattson Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved Jennifer L. Holm is the author of several highly praised novels, including Our Only May Amelia and the B abymouse series. She lives in Fallston, Maryland, with her husband, Jonathan Hamel, their son Will, and a rather large cat named Princess Leia. From the Trade Paperback edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER ONEMe-me says that Heaven is full of fluffy white clouds and angels.That sounds pretty swell, but how can you sit on a cloud? Wouldn’t you fall right through and smack onto the ground? Like Frankie always says, angels have wings, so what do they have to worry about?My idea of Heaven has nothing to do with clouds or angels. In my Heaven there’s butter pecan ice cream and swimming pools and baseball games. The Brooklyn Dodgers always win, and I have the best seat in the house, right behind the Dodgers’ dugout. That’s the only advantage that I can see to being dead: You get the best seat in the house.I think about Heaven a lot. Not because of the usual reasons, though. I’m only eleven, and I don’t plan on dying until I’m at least a hundred. It’s just that I’m named after that Bing Crosby song “Pennies from Heaven,” and when you’re named after something, you can’t help but think about it.See, my father was crazy about Bing Crosby, and that’s why everyone calls me Penny instead of Barbara Ann Falucci, which is what’s on my birth certificate. No one ever calls me Barbara, except teachers, and sometimes even I forget that it’s my real name. I guess it could be worse. I could be called Clementine, which was the name of another Bing Crosby song that my father really liked. I don’t think I’d make a very good Clementine.Then again, who would?CHAPTER TWOUncle Dominic is sitting in his car. It’s a 1940 Plymouth Roadking. It’s black with chrome trim, and the hubcaps are so shiny, you could use them as a mirror. Uncle Dominic pays my cousin Frankie to shine them up. It’s an awfully nice car; everybody says so. But then, it’s kind of hard to miss. It’s been parked in the side yard of my grandmother Falucci’s house for as long as I can remember.Uncle Dominic lives right there in his car. Nobody in the family thinks it’s weird that Uncle Dominic lives in his car, or if they do, nobody ever says anything. It’s 1953, and it’s not exactly normal for people in New Jersey to live in cars. Most people around here live in houses. But Uncle Dominic’s kind of a hermit. He also likes to wear slippers instead of shoes. Once I asked him why.“They’re comfortable,” he said.Besides living in the car and wearing slippers, Uncle Dominic’s my favorite uncle, and I have a lot of uncles. Sometimes I lose track of them.“Hey, Princess,” Uncle Dominic calls. I lean through the window and hear the announcer on the portable radio. Uncle Dominic likes to listen to ball games in the car. There’s a pillow and a ratty-looking blanket on the backseat. Uncle Dominic says the car’s the only place he can get any rest. He has a lot of trouble falling asleep.“Hi, Uncle Dominic,” I say.“Game’s on,” he says.I start to open the back door, but Uncle Dominic says, “You can sit up front.”Uncle Dominic’s very particular about who’s allowed to sit in his car. Most people have to sit in the back, although Uncle Nunzio always sits up front. I don’t think anyone ever tells Uncle Nunzio what to do.“Who’s winning?” I ask.“Bums are ahead.”I love the Brooklyn Dodgers, and so does Uncle Dominic. We call them Dem Bums. Most people around here like the New York Yankees or the Giants, but not us. Uncle Dominic is staring out the window, like he’s really in the ballpark and watching the game from the bleachers. He’s handsome, with dark hair and brown eyes. Everyone says he looks just like my father. I don’t remember my father because he died when I was just a baby, but I’ve seen photographs, and Uncle Dominic does look like him, except sadder.“Got something for you,” Uncle Dominic says.All my uncles give me presents. Uncle Nunzio gives me fur muffs, and Uncle Ralphie gives me candy, and Uncle Paulie brings me fancy perfumes, and Uncle Sally gives me horseshoes. It’s like Christmas all the time.Uncle Dominic hands me something that looks like a big dark-brown bean.“What is it?”“It’s a lucky bean,” he says. Uncle Dominic is superstitious. “Just found it this morning. It was packed away with some old things. I got it for your father before he died, but I never had a chance to give it to him. I want you to have it.”“Where’d you get it?” I ask.“Florida,” he says.Uncle Dominic loves Florida and goes to Vero Beach every winter, probably because it’s too cold to live in the car then. Even though he lives in this car, he has another car that he uses for driving, a 1950 Cadillac Coupe de Ville. Frankie says he bets Uncle Dominic has a girl down in Florida, but I kind of don’t think so. Most women want a new Frigidaire, not a backseat.“Put it in your pocket,” he says. “It’ll keep you safe.”The lucky bean is big and lumpy. It feels heavy, not the kind of thing to put in a pocket, but Uncle Dominic has this look about his eyes like he might just die if I don’t, and because he is my favorite uncle, I do what I always do.I smile and say, “Thanks, Uncle Dominic.” For a moment the strain leaves his eyes.“Anything for you, Princess,” he says. “Anything.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • It’s1953 and 11-year-old Penny dreams of a summer of butter pecan ice cream, swimming, and baseball. But nothing’s that easy in Penny’s family. For starters, she can’t go swimming because her mother’s afraid she’ll catch polio at the pool. To make matters worse, her favorite uncle is living in a car. Her Nonny cries every time her father’s name is mentioned. And the two sides of her family aren’t speaking to each other!Inspired by Newbery Honor winner Jennifer Holm’s own Italian American family,
  • Penny from Heaven
  • is a shining story about the everyday and the extraordinary, about a time in America’s history, not all that long ago, when being Italian meant that you were the enemy. But most of all, it’s a story about families—about the things that tear them apart and bring them together. And Holm tells it with all the richness and the layers, the love and the laughter of a Sunday dinner at Nonny’s. So pull up a chair and enjoy the feast! Buon appetito!

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(233)
★★★★
25%
(97)
★★★
15%
(58)
★★
7%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Heaven. I'm in heaven.

I work with four other children's librarians in New York City's finest public children's literature collection. One day a co-worker begins to tell me about "Penny From Heaven". She loves it. She adores it. She cannot get enough of it and here, take a copy, cause it's a wonderful wonderful title. I look at it. It's by Jennifer L. Holm, best known at this particular moment in time as the author of "Our Only May Amelia". Holm is one of those rare authors that write a first novel and knock it clean out of the park. Though I never read it, "Amelia" garnered itself some pretty fancy awards, including a highly coveted Newbery Honor. As with every first novelist though, it takes a second and third novel to determine whether or not that author is a star or a one-hit-wonder. At this moment in time, certain librarians all around the country are weeping, laughing, and shrieking in joy over "Penny From Heaven". And admittedly, it is quite a good read.

Penny doesn't have a father, but she has the next best thing. A gigantic Italian-American family with more uncles than she can count and more love than she knows what to do with. When Penny's mother married into the Falucci clan it was a classic case of a WASP out of place. After her father's death, her mother and grandparents do not mingle with her dad's crew and vice-versa. Now Penny's about to turn twelve and all sorts of interesting things are happening. She's beginning to notice boys and to chafe under her mother's overprotective nature. She has a summer job and is getting into more and more trouble with her cousin Frankie. Her dog dies, her hair gets paint stuck in it, and her mother has started to date the least cool fellow in the world: the milkman. When Penny gets involved in a particularly gruesome accident, however, she begins to learn the truth behind her father's mysterious death and to learn a little more about the people who love her so much.

It's interesting to note that there have been a lot of children's books published in 2006 that look back at the early 1950s. There was Guus Kuijer's, "The Book of Everything" and Karen Cushman's drop-dead-gorgeous, "The Loud Silence of Francine Green". Some have speculated that with our current government engaging in wire-taps and scary surveillance measures, authors are looking back at the time of McCarthyism and drawing some distinct parallels. "Penny From Heaven" isn't like that, though. The book takes place in 1953, sure, but its focus is squarely centered on a less publicized atrocity of the era that I'd wager not a lot of adults know a lot about, and certainly not many children. Drawing much of her factual information from Lawrence DiStasi's, "Una Storia Segreta: The Secret History of Italian American Evacuation and Internment During World War II", we learn all about the ways in which Italian Americans were beaten down during the 1940s and even 50s for their country's role in WWII. In Holm's excellent Author's Note we learn that during World War II, "Franklin Roosevelt signed Proclamation 2527, designating 600,000 non-naturalized Italians `enemy aliens'". This sets up the inherent tragedy of the story and the mystery that Penny finds herself unraveling towards its end.

Recently there was a big old brouhaha over a children's book (that shall remain nameless) that talked about an Italian-American family in, what some considered, a derogatory fashion. I think it is safe to say that Holm will never have such an accusation lobbed at her head. With her characters living in New Jersey, it would be easy to fall into the trap of presenting the Italians along stereotypical lines. But there isn't a gangster amongst this crew and what few stereotypes you do find (a grandmother who keeps telling the kids to eat up) are tempered with the clarity of Holm's writing. In many ways the book reads like a tempered version of a Richard Peck novel. There's harmless mischief and kids getting into trouble (i.e. late night treasure hunts, swimming in a public pool, and a dog that sees the world as its bathroom) but somehow it never comes across as rude or crude. Chalk that one up to Holm. I've always maintained that the best books for kids are the ones that stir at least a little humor into their tales, and Holm certainly has gobs of the stuff to spare. Though you wouldn't call, "Penny From Heaven" laugh-out-loud funny, it's consistently amusing and droll. For example, when Penny is getting dressed up for an event and her arm is in a sling, "Frankie has the bright idea of twining flowers all around my sling, which looks sort of fancy, or sort of like something Tarzan would do, depending on how you look at it".

What I can't quite figure out is whether or not this is a book that kids will like as much as adults already do. To answer this I took a quick gander at the reviews of "Our Only May Amelia" as written by children on Amazon. Though there were certainly a couple moans and groans, by and large responses to the book were positive. "Penny From Heaven" also has the added benefit of engaging in Tom Sawyeresque mischief and fun that will strike kids today as amusing. There's a section in this story where Penny gets to go and see a Brooklyn Dodgers game that will strike anyone reading it (even not-so-hot baseball fans like myself) as heavenly.

Many authors have lately been drawing on family histories and their roles in history so as to tell excellent children's books. Like "Penny From Heaven", Sheila P. Moses's, "The Legend of Buddy Bush" was one of the first to include actual photographs of the people that characters in the book were based on. On the Italian-American end of the spectrum, Donna Jo Napoli's, "The King of Mulberry Street" goes a little farther back in time but rests just as squarely on historical record and family legend. Such books usually come across as unusually well-researched and written. "Penny From Heaven" is no exception. A fine fine novel, a great read-aloud, and an in-depth look at a time in history that has gotten too little attention until now. Holm knocks it out of the park again.
53 people found this helpful
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The 1950s return with a bang

Two things struck me as I read Jennifer L. Holm's latest novel, "Penny From Heaven." The first is that I can't believe the 1950s are History (with a capital H). When I was a kid, we dressed up for 50s day or for Halloween to make fun of our parents. To make fun of me, my kids are going to have to dress like Depeche Mode or Madonna or the like. The second thing, most relevant to the following review, is that "Penny From Heaven" is a story that really sneaks up on you. It starts out quietly and then, wow...hang on for the ride!

Eleven-year-old Penny's summer begins as most summers have before. She lives at home with her mother and grandparents. The house is quiet, mom works long hours as a secretary, and Penny's grandparents are slightly eccentric. Me-me (Grandma) is kind, but a horrible cook who favors wholesome "American" food like meatloaf and liver. Pop-pop (Grandpa) is given to inappropriate comments and overestimating his plumbing abilities.

Fortunately, Penny has her deceased father's siblings, cousins, mothers, nephews, nieces, aunts and uncles to spoil her, feed her, and employ her in the family store. They're a large, Italian-American family with lots of love, food, kids and quarrels. But the Faluccis have something in common with Penny's other family--they won't tell her the secret about her father's death. Everyone--from her mom's family to her father's--gives Penny a vague answer: Penny's father died in a hospital.

Penny spends her summer hanging out, playing baseball, and delivering groceries with her cousin and best friend, Frankie, a twelve-year-old boy on the verge of real trouble with the law. She's having a good time until something dramatic happens. Her mother begins dating. And not just anybody...She begins dating Mr. Mulligan, the milkman.

All these threads come together in a dramatic conclusion that had me reading over the chaos of three boys stomping and screaming through the house (average age: 6). "Penny From Heaven" is one of those stories that will stay with me a long time. Highly recommended for children ages 8-14.
25 people found this helpful
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Warm & comforting read

Penny from Heaven is one of the most comforting books I have enjoyed in a long time. The cover art echoes the time period of the 1950s. Penny is a beloved child. Her father is dead and no one will really explain the circumstances surrounding his death but she is surrounded by an extended family of grandparents, aunts and uncles who love her and care for her. She and her Uncle Dominic share a passion for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Her slightly deliquent cousin Frankie is her best friend. Her dog, Scarlett O'Hara is a un-house-broken-nightmare.

When her mother begins dating again, Penny's secure world begins to tilt. A terrible accident brings family secrets to light but then allows Penny and her mother to move on.

This is not a novel with sweeping action sequences. It is a warm and gentle read about family.

Fans of books like Pam Munoz Ryan's Esperanza Rising and Holm's earlier book, Our Only May Amelia will especially enjoy this read.
20 people found this helpful
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Condescending

This Newbery honor book is of the "U.S. government killed my daddy" variety (a close second in popularity to the "my sister is dying of a disease you never heard of" theme). The book takes special care to make sure that its readers understand that there was no reason whatsoever for the U.S. government to be concerned about short wave radios in the possession of illegal immigrants from Axis countries during World War II. After all, even though the Axis had drawn up plans to land agents all along the east coast to organize internal strife among Axis residents in the U.S., and had actually landed agents on Long Island from a U-boat, that clearly doesn't qualify as a reason. And in any case, we shouldn't be suggesting that there might be a reason for such an arrest to children, who aren't as sophisticated as we are and might make the wrong choice as to what to think if we introduced any ambiguity. This sort of book warms the heart of the Newbery committee and fellow-traveling children's librarians everywhere. But children know when they're being condescended to, and I suspect that many copies of this book will look like my public library copy - with a dog-ear on page 34 and every later page completely pristine.
14 people found this helpful
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A Slice of 1950's Life, with Excellent Writing and Engaging Characters

Penny from Heaven is set in 1953 in a neighborhood somewhere near New York City. It's the story of Penny Falucci, who turns 12 that summer. Penny's story is based on tales from Jennifer Holm's Italian-American relatives, and carries a ring of authenticity. Penny's father died when she was a baby, under mysterious circumstances, and she lives with her mother and "plain old American" grandparents. She also spends time with her father's large, boisterous Italian family. She is especially close to her engaging scamp of a cousin, Frankie, and her reclusive uncle Dominic (who lives primarily in his car, and wears bedroom slippers most of the time).

Penny lives in an oddly fractured world. Her life with her mother and grandparents is both different and separate from her time with her father's family. Her father's family is more colorful and lively, and the food that they eat is much, much tastier. And her uncles buy her presents all the time. There's a poignant scene in which her Uncle Dominic gives her Dodgers tickets for the game on her birthday (her first game ever), and she begs off of her mother's carefully planned celebration. What's wonderful about the scene is that Jennifer Holm conveys both Penny's 12-year-old longing and excitement, and her mother's wistful resignation.

I'm not generally a fan of stories that are episode driven, rather than being plot-driven. However, I will make exceptions for characters that I really like (e.g Anne of Green Gables), and/or truly excellent writing (e.g. the Melendy books by Elizabeth Enright). Both of these exceptions (engaging writing and characterization) apply to Penny from Heaven. Also, there is an ongoing mystery concerning the death of Penny's father, and some suspense concerning Penny's mother's possible remarriage, and the fate of young Frankie.

But what really makes this book special to me is that the characterization is detailed and realistic. I especially enjoyed Frankie, with his schemes and risk-taking, and his hidden vulnerability. Penny's grandfather is also entertaining, burping without restraint, and pretending to be hard of hearing. Her Italian grandmother, Nonny, cooks all the time, fights with her daughter-in-law, only speaks Italian, and always wears black. I can imagine readers thinking that she's a bit of a stereotype, but I personally thought that she was dead on. I also liked the former dancer, Aunt Gina, and the generous, yet powerful, Uncle Nunzio.

The other nice thing about this book is that it's a snapshot of life in the 1950s. Penny isn't allowed to swim in the public pool or go to the movies, for fear that she'll catch polio, and end up in iron lung. World War II is still casting a shadow over people's lives. Penny's relatives speak English instead of Italian, because speaking Italian was a mark of suspicion during the war. Her maternal grandfather continues to shed tears over death of his nephew, a pilot shot down during the war. The little things stand out, too: the way that Penny and Frankie know everyone in the area, both by name and by history, and the fact that the butcher shop and the milkman deliver.

Penny from Heaven has an old-fashioned feel, focusing on somewhat quirky characters, and mostly ordinary life events. There's much for an adult like myself to love about this book: the writing, the pathos, the suspense, the humor. I'll be interested to see if kids like it, too. I hope that do. I'll certainly recommend it to them.

This book review was originally published on my blog, Jen Robinson's Book Page, on October 14, 2006.
10 people found this helpful
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Strong Female Protagonist - strong writing

This delightful piece of historical fiction set in New Jersey in the 1950's explores the life of "Penny" who lives with a single mother and grandparents, but who has a whole other life on Sundays with her father's family, a large Italian American one with uncles who dote on her. The mystery that threads itself through this story is that no one will talk about her father, and how and why he died. Or, why the families do not intereact, except through her.

Strong writing, a strong female protagonist, and interesting sub-plots all make for a delightful coming-of-age story, very appropriate for the upper elementary and middle school audience.
6 people found this helpful
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wonderful, beautiful book

I don't know where to begin with this book, except to say it's wonderful, and you should read it. It's about a lot of things - a girl named Penny, her Italian relatives, the Dodgers, and butter pecan ice cream. It really makes you stop and think of how much research the author must've done to write this book, because you feel like you're right there in the 50's along with all the characters. Like it's happening now. It made me laugh a little and cry a little, and smile a whole lot.

Every time it rains, it rains

Pennies from heaven.

Don't you know each cloud contains

Pennies from heaven.

Trade them for a package of

Sunshine and flowers.

If you want the things you love,

You must have showers.

So when you hear it thunder,

Don't run under a tree.

There'll be pennies from heaven for you and me.

~From "Pennies from Heaven" by John Burke and Arthur Johnston
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Really good from beginning to end!!!

The price was a steal! The book itself is AWESOME... Made me cry, laugh and really want to keep reading it. I loved it!!! I would definitely purchase from this site again!