Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio

by Peg Kehret

1996

Status

Available

Call number

RC180 .K44

Publication

Albert Whitman & Company (1996), Edition: 41809th, 179 pages

Collection

Description

The author describes her battle against polio when she was thirteen and her efforts to overcome its debilitating effects.

User reviews

LibraryThing member prkcs
An autobiographical account of 1949, when 12 year old Peg Kehret (now a children's author) contracted the only case of polio in her hometown. Overnight she went from a junior high school girl worrying about Homecoming to a paralyzed child fighting for every breath. This book chronicles almost a
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year in her life after being diagnosed with THREE types of polio. It follows her illness, her painful and slow recovery and her months in a rehabilitation hospital as she shared a room with other girls her age suffering from the same terrible illness. For a book about polio, though, it also provides glimpses into the life of a teenage girl in 1949.
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LibraryThing member BoundTogetherForGood
Very good book, written for a young adult. Really helps you to understand what it was like for the author to face a life with polio
LibraryThing member abbylibrarian
When Peg was 12 years old she got polio. At first she was paralyzed from the neck down, but she gradually got better and eventually learned to walk again. This is a very accessible account of one child's battle against a debilitating disease.
LibraryThing member Mrs.Becker
This is one of my favorite books. I would highly recommend it.
LibraryThing member gabbyleow
Small Steps is a wonderful autobiography and simply heart-warming. I couldn't put it down and was just so fascinated by how it was like to be diagnosed with polio. I would definitely recommend it!
LibraryThing member pgreenley
This is a really great autobiography read for upper elementary as it focuses on the struggle Peg Kehret faced as a 12 year old after she contracted polio. Full of historical information but not a boring history text this would create great classroom connections to history and science lessons. I
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also love how Kehret points out her luck in not only the timing of her illness but in her family's ability to deal with the cost and time taken up by the illness especially in contrast to some of the friends she made in the hospital. The social issues reflected in this observation could make for really interesting discussion even in high school classrooms.
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LibraryThing member TaylorLanman
Summary:
When Peg Kehret was twelve years old she was diagnosed with Polio. Throughout this book, she shares her struggles with coping with such an illness. She explains her fears, while mostly keeping a positive attitude about life. She talks about the friendships that she made and the bonds that
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she shared with other children who were also in therehabilitation hospital battling for their lives.

Personal Reaction:
This book really made me look at my life a little closer. After reading this book, I had to step back and think about all that I have been blessed with. These children are so courageous. Her story is not only inspiring, but it is life-changing.

Classroom Extension Ideas:
1. In an upper-level elementary classroom, I would have my students research about Peg Kehret or Polio. I would have them put together a presentation, in groups, about what Peg may have gone through.
2. I would have my students go out and find someone who is struggling, or living with a medical problem. I would have them interview the person if he or she was willing to talk openly about it.
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LibraryThing member Climbing-books
Good for introducing readers to diseases that don't really impact us here in America anymore, but that are still devastating people across the world. Simply because the problem isn't here doesn't mean it ceases to exist elsewhere.
LibraryThing member kristennicoson
Peg Kehret shares her personal experiences with a disease that has been all but wiped from the world through childhood vaccinations. Her account is honest at its core with memories that will make you smile and some that will make you cry.
LibraryThing member CarrieWuj
Great memoir of a specific time in author's life. Hard to imagine the fear that this disease must've caused and how wonderful that it is no longer a threat thanks to vaccinations. As Kehret mentions, she wept with joy when her own daughter was inoculated. From being paralyzed from the neck down at
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age 12, to walking again at age 13, her account of this year of her life made me very grateful for small mercies.
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Awards

Texas Bluebonnet Award (Nominee — 1999)
Young Hoosier Book Award (Nominee — Intermediate — 2001)
Sequoyah Book Award (Nominee — Children's — 1999)
Sasquatch Book Award (Nominee — 1999)
Cardinal Cup (Noteworthy — 1997)
Bluestem Award (Nominee — 2015)
Mark Twain Readers Award (Winner — 1999)
Golden Kite Award (Winner — Nonfiction — 1997)
PEN Center USA Literary Award (Winner — Children's Literature — 1997)
Golden Archer Award (Nominee — Intermediate — 2000)

Language

ISBN

0807574589 / 9780807574584

Barcode

226

LCC

RC180 .K44
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