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Recess at 20 Below
by Cindy Lou Aillaud ’77
Alaska Northwest Books, Anchorage, Portland, 2005
Review by George Bedirian
Perhaps more than most books for children, Cindy Lou Aillaud’s
Recess at 20 Below has its feet firmly planted in the real world.
The reason for that, of course, is that it’s illustrated with the
author’s own photographs of children at the school in Delta
Junction, Alaska, where Aillaud teaches physical education. And
it’s probably for that reason too that the book makes the most of
what some might consider an unlikely subject—the way kids cope with
sub-zero temperatures in the far north.
Through a combination of first-person narrative—presumably
spoken by one of the schoolchildren—and engaging images, Aillaud
walks her readers (5 to 10 years old) through a typical winter’s
school-day recess in Alaska. First there’s the laborious process of
dressing to go out: pulling on snow pants, parkas, boots, hats, and
gloves. Then there’s the cumbersomeness of all that gear. Once
everyone’s outside, though, the fun begins—sledding, soccer,
building snow forts, and the usual playground activities of
swinging, seesawing, and sliding. Recess over, everyone clumps back
inside and sheds their winter gear.
Throughout, Aillaud strives to distinguish life in such an
extremity of cold from what most readers may be used to. She
mentions, for example, the danger of touching one’s tongue to cold
metal—“It will stick!”—the difficulty of snowball fighting in
conditions that turn snow to powder, the way frost rimes on your
eyelashes and hair when you breathe hard during play.
For readers who have experienced winter, say in the lower 48,
the world Aillaud depicts will be at once different—and not so
different. A winter that lasts from September to April, with
temperatures remaining at 20 below or colder for weeks on end might
be beyond the experience of most American children. But a
three-month’s winter with below-freezing temperatures—much more
widely familiar—would require similar preparations for keeping
warm, whether for recess or after-school play. And in that respect,
the subtext of Recess at 20 Below is that, as far away as we might
live from one another, we’re not so different from each other after
all.
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