When Esperanza and her family arrive in the United States from Cuba,
they rent a little house, una casita. It may be small, but they soon
prove that there's room enough to share with a whole community.
"It was a little house. Una casita . . .
It was small.
It smelled like old wet socks. . .
But even though they were far from home,
The family was together."
As Esperanza and her family settle into their new house, they all do
their part to make it a home. When other immigrant families need a place
to stay, it seems only natural for the family in la casita to help.
Together they turn the house into a place where other new immigrants can
help one another. Esperanza is always the first to welcome them to la
casita. It's a safe place in a new land.
Terry Catasus Jennings first came from Cuba to the U.S. in 1961, when
she was twelve years old. With The Little House of Hope, she tells an
inspiring, semi-autobiographical story of how immigrants can help each
other find their footing in a new country.
A Spanish edition, La Casita de Esperanza, will be released
simultaneously.
A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection
A New York Public Library Best Book of the Year