Mollel, Tololwa M. My Rows and Piles of Coins. Illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Clarion Books, 1999.
One of the themes for May in Picture Book Preschool is AFRICA. I have many picture books set on the African continent in my library, but one of my favorites is My Rows and Piles of Coins, which takes place in Tanzania. Tanzanian-born storyteller, actor, and author Tololwa M. Mollel, who eventually moved to Canada as a young man, wrote this and many other stories drawing on the storytelling tradition passed down to him by his grandfather and also on his own experiences growing up in rural Tanzania.
In the book, Saruni, a boy about ten or eleven years old, earns a small number of coins every Saturday when he helps his mother take her goods to the market to sell. Although he is tempted by the many things available for sale in the Saturday outdoor marketplace, Saruni is saving his coins in a secret money box for a special purchase–a bicycle of his own!
One the things I like about this story is that Saruni is saving his money for a bicycle because he thinks it would be exciting to own and ride a bicycle of his own just as his father, Murete, does. But Saruni also wants a bicycle because it will enable him to help his mother carry her goods to market more effectively. He wants to help his mother!
Another element that makes this book stand out is the illustrations by American illustrator E.B. Lewis. Lewis’s watercolor paintings are colorful, vivid, and engaging as they present across each two-page spread giving readers a beautiful picture of life in a Tanzanian village.
Finally, the story is easy to understand, even if it is set in a different culture and place, but it’s complicated enough to have a couple of unexpected twists at the end. Saruni’s quest to help his mother and to buy a bicycle does have a happy ending, but not without some obstacles and surprises along the way. I loved the way the story turned out, with a realistic but satisfying conclusion.
My Rows and Piles of Coins is a Picture Book Preschool selection for Week 22: AFRICA. This picture book was also a Coretta Scott King Award Honor book, an award recognizing outstanding books for children by African American authors and illustrators. This book is available for check out from Meriadoc Homeschool Library.