My Sugar Beet Summer

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children's book about 1920s America
children's book about immigration and migration
children's book about life on a farm in the 1920s
children's book about migrant life in America
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forthcoming
girls' historical fiction 20th century
Great Depression era children's fiction
Great Depression historical fiction for kids
Hispanic and Latino middle grade fiction
historical fiction inspired by family stories
juvenile fiction about cultural identity and belonging
juvenile fiction about moving and change
juvenile fiction about travel and new places
Latina girl protagonist historical fiction
Latina heritage story for young readers
Mexican American family history for young readers
Mexican American historical fiction for kids
Mexican American migration history for kids
Michigan sugar beet farm history for kids
Michigan Thumb region historical fiction
middle grade book about family and hard work
middle grade novel about resilience and adaptation
middle grade novel about siblings and responsibility
middle grade story about courage and change
migrant farmworker stories for young readers
migrant worker family story for kids
Saginaw Valley children's historical story
Texas to Michigan migrant story
YA fiction about seasonal farm labor

Product details

  • ISBN 9781611865936
  • Weight: 172g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Michigan State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In 1928, nine-year-old Teresa leaves everything she knows in San Antonioincluding her beloved cat Diamanteand boards a train bound for Michigan, where her parents have found work in the vast sugar beet fields of Saginaw. The long train north is a source of fascination, but stepping into Michigan feels like entering a different worldthe cold wind, the strange houses, and the long days helping on the farm instead of going to school. Teresa cares for her little sisters while her parents tend to the sugar beets. She learns to navigate a life shaped by hard work, migration, and constant change. After the harvest, a new season begins, and the whole family must pack up and make the long trip back to Texas, to plant new roots. Based on the stories the author’s grandparents told her about their lives as Texas migrants in Michigan’s Thumb, My Sugar Beet Summer pulls the reader into Teresa and her family’s life in a new land, on a sugar beet farm on the eve of the Great Depression.

Rachael E. Moreno visited many farmworker camps growing up, and she joined her grandparents as they harvested crops on Michigan vegetable and fruit farms. She is fluent in Spanish and English and learned the music and stories of the farmworkers around campfires. She graduated from Central Michigan University, where she was a Ford fellow, and earned a master’s from the University as a Rockefeller Foundation fellow. Rachael’s career in education included teaching all of the elementary grades and becoming the first Mexican American principal in Michigan. She was also appointed associate superintendent for instruction at Genesee Intermediate School District, consultant at the Michigan Education Association, migrant program director for the State of Michigan, board member at Central Michigan University, including president of the board. She operates a farm in Shiawassee County in her retirement.