About In A Cloud of Dust
2016 Rainforest of Reading Award Winner
2016 Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award shortlist
2016 Ontario Library Association Blue Spruce Award shortlist
2015 Resource Links The Year's Best selection
Soaked in warm golds and oranges, Deines's oil paintings glow with a sense of promise as the children race around the schoolyard on their bikes. Fullerton says quite a bit with few words in her verselike prose, and a detailed author's note discusses the vital role bicycles play in communities across Africa and supplies information about bicycle donation organizations.-Publishers Weekly
Oil paintings in rich shades of orange show the children surrounded by clouds of dust...and the simple text reads aloud smoothly, making the book a good introduction for a discussion of different yet similar lives. An author's note, appropriate for adults sharing this story with children, explains the need for bicycles in southern African countries and provides the names of organizations that work to fill that need. A nice addition to primary-grade 'values' collections.-Kirkus Reviews
Notable for its message of putting others before oneself, the story is buoyed by illustrations that shimmer with movement, light, and feeling. Shades of ochre, amber, and pale gold radiate from each two-page spread, conveying through oil paint the warmth and grittiness of this village and its children. An author's note explains the role of and constant need for bicycles in Africa.-Booklist
Fullerton's inviting text is spare and poetic.... Deines' radiant oil paintings glow...-Quill & Quire
This glowing book is a wonderful introduction for young readers to life in a culture where many things are different, but some things are exactly the same.-The National Reading Campaign
Highly recommended for classroom investigation and discussion and learning about good citizenship.-Resource Links
[Deines'] rich oil paintings, with their solid figures and warm palette, are very much up to the task of giving readers the sense of life in Africa. The joy of the children who have received a life-changing gift leaps off the pages....Fullerton...has provided a spare text that touches neatly on all the key points of the story.-CM Magazine
In a Cloud of Dust...teaches a powerful lesson about sharing, and can be used by parents and teachers to show children there are others in the world who are less fortunate.-The Montreal Gazette
The dusty Tanzanian countryside and the children's joyous faces, rendered realistically in Deines's artwork, shows how simple acts can transform a child's life.-Foreword Magazine
Fullerton notes that in Tanzania and other parts of Africa, there are still millions of people who cannot afford transportation....Some NGOs donate bicycles and open bicycle libraries where children can sign out a bicycle. In a Cloud of Dust lists organizations in North America that donate bicycles to Africa....Learning more about these organizations and doing fundraising in your classroom could be great book extensions for intermediate students. In a Cloud of Dust demonstrates kindness and the idea of paying it forward. The message in the book is terrific and can be embedded throughout the curriculum, specifically focusing on equality, citizenship and social justice. This book would be appropriate for junior and intermediate levels.-ETFO Voice Magazine
Alma Fullerton's text is modest in its quantity but weighty in its simple message of compassion and support...Brian Deines' illustrations are incomparable, effectively portraying the dusty and lengthy distances over Anna must travel to school...highly evocative of the landscape and mood of the remote areas of Anna's Tanzanian home...-CanLit for LittleCanadians
This look at an experience foreign to most readers in the United States hits on some easy-to-spot universals of children around the world, including the experience of learning, of disappointment, and of playing with friends.-Matthew Winner, 10 Books for Universal Human Rights Month
Highly recommended for preschool, elementary and public libraries to increase awareness of life in different cultures and parts of the world.-Oregon Coast Youth Book Preview Center
Glowing oil painting in golds and oranges spotlight the simple, uplifting story about sharing.-Omnilibros