Harmony comes from an unlikely place.
Arriving in Cateura, Paraguay, in 2006, the musically inclined Argentinean Favio Chávez expected to help the families of “a small village built on a landfill” with a recycling project. The local recyclers, called gancheros, spent their days wading through loads of filthy trash to gather and sell whatever was salvageable. As Favio grew closer to the ganchero community, he worried about the futures of the children. Could he teach them to play instruments in his youth orchestra? One problem: “He had more kids than instruments.” An idea soon struck. Favio roped in a ganchero friend named Nicolás “Colá” Gómez, who repurposed “old drain pipes, door keys, metal forks and spoons, X-ray films, bottle caps, glue canisters,” and more into custom-made instruments over a period of years. At last, the child musicians each got the instrument they needed to create music under the tutelage of Favio. “And what music they made!” Indeed, this remarkable retelling of the surprising origins of the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura, which has since gained international acclaim, motivates by the sheer ingenuity described. Oliver’s text carefully chronicles each step undertaken by Favio in his quest to share a little music and hope with the town of Cateura, a community toiling through the material excesses of the modern world. Uribe’s artwork—full of color yet naturalistic in its depictions—complements the prose. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Like a dose of pure inspiration.
(further information, bibliography) (Informational picture book. 5-10)