The One Thing You'd Save
by Linda Sue Park
A 30-voice Newbery-medalist verse novel that turns a single classroom prompt into a masterclass on empathy and poetic form.
The story
Ms. Chang asks her class a deceptively simple question: if you could save only one thing (no people, no pets — just things), what would it be? The answers arrive as 30 interlinked sijo-form poems, each in a different kid's voice. From a beloved sweater to a grandmother's philodendron cutting to a shell that helps with anxiety, the objects add up to a group portrait of how children hold meaning. Linda Sue Park (Newbery medalist for A Single Shard) adapts the Korean sijo form with an Author's Note that invites readers to try writing their own.
Age verdict
Best for ages 9-11; works 8-13 with adult context for heavier poems.
Our take
Teacher's pick: a short verse novel that works harder in the classroom than on the playground. Parents will love the writing craft and conversation-starter power; kids who favor plot-driven stories may find it quieter than expected.
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Exceptional
30+ kid-voices are distinguishable without tags: May's measured logic, wallet-kid's all-caps shouts, Sophia's restrained grief, fire-survivor's dissociated second-person. Passes the Swap Test effortlessly. Sits at Holes/Wonder voice-craft tier (9).
- Heart-punch Strong
Sophia's Anthony poem lands with engineered precision ('He'd be eight now, if he / were still alive'), the dog-collar kid's 'because it still smells like him,' and the fire-survivor's hospital-ward aftermath all deliver genuine emotional blows. Stronger heart-punches than Because of Winn-Dixie (7), below Bridge to Terabithia (10).
Parents love
- Parent-child conversation starter Exceptional
The prompt itself ('what would YOU save?') is an instant family-conversation starter, Ms. Chang's mind-change models how adults can revise in front of kids, Sophia and the dog-collar kid open grief conversations (including pet loss), and the fire-survivor poem is a natural fire-safety prompt with a built-in disclaimer. Top-tier, matching Wonder (9) for dinner-table generative power.
- Writing quality Strong
Linda Sue Park is a Newbery medalist (A Single Shard) and the sijo-form constraint produces sentence-level musicality of unusual quality — the shell poem's 'loud without being noisy,' the enjambment in Sophia's poem used as emotional engineering. Top-tier craft in its format, matching Brown Girl Dreaming (8-9).
Teachers love
- Writing prompt potential Exceptional
'Find Your Story' back matter IS a literal writing prompt; the Author's Note gives students a structural form to try; every poem is a model for a 'one object, one voice' assignment. Object-as-self-portrait is a transferable creative writing prompt. Peak writing-prompt potential — top-tier like Love That Dog (9).
- Empathy & self-awareness Exceptional
The book's whole structural design (30 kids, 30 perspectives) IS empathy training. Self-awareness models embedded: dog-collar kid revising her own answer in light of Sophia's, sneaker-saver acknowledging class-economic reality, Ms. Chang revising her own plan. Sophia's Anthony poem teaches how to sit with another's grief. Top-tier empathy work, matching Wonder (10) tier closely.
✓ Perfect for
- • Families who love poetry or want a gateway into verse novels
- • Teachers looking for a short, high-craft mentor text for voice and form
- • Classrooms doing social-emotional learning or family-object writing projects
- • Kids who enjoyed Inside Out & Back Again, Love That Dog, or Brown Girl Dreaming
- • Reluctant readers who benefit from white space and short chunks
Not ideal for
Kids who want plot-driven adventure or humor-forward fiction. The book rewards attention to language and emotional nuance rather than forward momentum.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 72
- Chapters
- 8
- Words
- 3k
- Lexile
- 720L
- Difficulty
- Moderate
- POV
- Alternating
- Illustration
- Moderate
- Published
- 2021
- Publisher
- Clarion Books
- Illustrator
- Robert Sae-Heng
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Short length and short poem-units mean most kids finish in one or two sittings. Finishing rate should be high; the concern is re-read engagement rather than completion.
If your kid loved "The One Thing You'd Save"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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