<b>2024 Sydney Taylor Book Award Middle Grade Honor Winner</b><br /><b>Spur Awards 2024 Winner for Best Western Juvenile Fiction</b><br /><br /> “Frequent parallels to the Little House series accentuate how different Shoshana’s experience is from the White, Christian, mythically American lives of her classmates . . . . A moving, gently kind coming-to-America story. A lesser-known Jewish American history offers a plainspoken message about assimilation and self-love.” —<i>Kirkus Reviews</i><br /><br /> “Meyer layers richly detailed depictions of Jewish traditions, stunning descriptions of the landscape, and a highly sympathetic narrator to convey an underreported historical arc.” —<i>Publishers Weekly</i><br /><br /> “This character-driven storyline shines in descriptive passages . . . . <i>A Sky Full of Song</i> is a thoughtful piece of middle-grade historical fiction featuring a sympathetic protagonist from an underrepresented community.” —<i>Shelf Awareness</i><br /><br /> “Solid historical fiction that fleshes out the diversity of the pioneer experience.” —<i>School Library Journal</i><br /><br /> “The narrative easily interweaves the issues that Jewish immigrants dealt with in the early 20th century . . . . How Shoshana resolves her feelings . . . makes the ending satisfying without being cloying.” —<i>The Arts Fuse</i><br /><br /> “A different kind of prairie story has arisen, one that seeks in some manner to correct the past.” —<i>The Wall Street Journal</i><br /><br /> “[A] beautifully written novel that also touches on the forced removal of Native Americans.” —<i>Book Riot</i><br /><br /> “Gorgeous, immersive prose captures the closeness of the family’s village, the ever-present threats of violence, and the vastness of the Great Plains. The tension between those who want to preserve their customs and those who want to assimilate as soon as possible is a common theme in Jewish immigration stories, one that Meyer makes fresh and tangible through her focus on a little-known experience and her weaving of music into the story.” —<i>Historical Novel Review</i><p> </p>