Protagonist/Central Conflict: Ten-year-old Winnie Foster meets the peculiar Tuck family when she discovers a spring on her family property. The Tucks drank from the spring a long time ago and found themselves immortal. As they tell Winnie about their experiences, Winnie must decide whether or not she will keep the Tucks’ secret or if she’ll drink from the spring and become immortal too.
Bio: 1932-2016; American writer and illustrator; born in Dayton, Ohio; attended Smith College; collaborated with her husband to create her first book The Forty-Ninth Magician; Tuck Everlasting is her most popular and most-loved work that has been adapted into two movies and a play
Other Works: The Search for Delicious (1969); Goody Hall (1971); The Devil’s Storybook (1974); The Eyes of Amaryllis (1977)
Awards: Christopher Award (1976); ALA Notable Book (1976); Horn Book Honor Book (1976); International Reading Association US Honor Book (1978); Lewis Carroll Shelf Award (1978)
CENTRAL THEMESconnected and noted throughout this Teaching Unit:
The Difference Between Immorality and a Life Well-Lived
Found Families Versus Biological Families
All Things Are Connected
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