Small Steps: The Year I got polio chapter summaries

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Small Steps: The Year I got polio chapter summaries

"Polio is a highly contagious disease. In 1949, there were 42,033 cases reported in the United States. One of those was a twelve-year-old girl in Austin, Minnesota: Peg Schulze. Me."

Chapter 1 of children's book author Peg Kehret's astute memoir is titled "The Diagnosis." It started on a Friday in early September. Peg was looking forward to being in the Homecoming parade that afternoon. During seventh grade chorus, a muscle in her left thigh began to twitch uncontrollably. When Peg tried to stand, her legs buckled and she fell to the floor. Still, she walked the 12 blocks home for lunch. Assuming she had the flu, her parents sent for the doctor and she was taken to the hospital for a spinal tap that confirmed she had polio. Transferred to the Sheltering Arms Hospital in Minneapolis, a special hospital for polio patients, by the next morning, she was paralyzed. Kehret's spunky personality and great sense of humor helped her cope as she struggled through physical therapy, listened to "The Lone Ranger" on the radio with her young roommate, Tommy, who was in an iron lung; flirted with her young doctor, Dr. Bevis; and spent several months in a room with three other polio girls. For seven months she withstood her rehabilitation, finally returning to school and normal life again.

Now, years later, she suffers from post-polio syndrome, like so many polio sufferers. In this tenth anniversary edition of the book, Kehret includes an updated epilogue about her life in the past decade, including coping with the death of her husband. Also included in this edition are twelve new pages of photographs, and information about polio. This brave and terrifying autobiography will draw kids, who love all the gory details. They'll examine the snapshots of Peg, her family, and her hospital friends. They'll be thankful, in this age of AIDS and bird flu and swine flu, that polio is no longer a threat to children. And they'll consider their own lives and wonder how they would have handled a diagnosis and a tough recovery like Peg's.

Reviewed by : JF.

Themes : AUTHORS. AUTOBIOGRAPHY. WOMEN.

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  • She writes in an approachable, familiar way, and readers will be hooked from the first page on.
    School Library Journal

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Small Steps: The Year I got polio chapter summaries

Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio

Small Steps: The Year I got polio chapter summaries

by Peg Kehret

This 2016-2017 Oregon Battle of the Books selection tells the true story of Peg Kehret, who at age 12 contracted three different kinds of polio. Surviving the initial paralysis brought on by the illness, Peg then had to learn how to walk again. This is a story of strength and courage in the face of an uncertain future.

Synopsis

In September 1949, Peg collapses at her school in Minnesota. She goes home with a high fever, and around midnight, she starts to vomit. Her parents take her to the hospital where she is diagnosed with three different kinds of polio.

She spends a little time at Sheltering Arms before she is transferred to University Hospital because she needs a respirator. Peg is placed under an oxygen tent to help her breathe a little easier. After a few days, she is allowed to move out of isolation but all of the things in her room are burned because they may contain the virus. Her new room has a roommate named Tommy who is put into an iron lung. Peg reads to him when she’s feeling better, and they listen to The Lone Ranger.

After she starts to recover, she is moved back to the Sheltering Arms hospital where she rooms with four other girls who have polio, Dorothy, Shirley, Alice and Renee. This story documents her nine months in the hospital and her continuing road to recovery.

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Learn more by visiting Peg Kehret’s website: www.pegkehret.com

About Polio:

In 1952 there were 21,000 cases of paralytic polio in the US. It was one of the most feared diseases of the 20th century. Today, there are none. The United States has been polio free for more than 30 years, but the disease is still occurring in other parts of the world. It would only take one traveler with polio from another country to bring polio back to the United States. Learn more about Polio.

What is the main plot of small steps the year I got polio?

"Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio" by Peg Kehret is an interesting autobiography that gives insight to what people with Polio experienced. The main character, Peg, faints one day during school and has a high temperature so she is taken to the hospital. There she is diagnosed with Polio.

When did Peg get polio?

She contracted polio at age 12 in 1949. She had each of the three types of polio: spinal, respiratory, and the least common kind, bulbar. She was paralyzed from the neck down and had a nine-month hospital stay. The experience changed Kehret's life, as she describes in her memoir Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio.

When did small steps The Year I Got Polio take place?

Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio.