LITERATURE
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Renaissance in Charleston: Art and Life in the Carolina Low Country,
1900-1940
Format Hardcover
Subject Literary Criticism & Collections / American
ISBN/SKU 082032518X
Author James M. Hutchisson (Edt)
Publisher Univ of Georgia Pr
Publish Date August 2003
Review
During the first half of the twentieth century, the city of Charleston, South
Carolina underwent a cultural revival known as the Charleston Renaissance. Directed
at a general as well as a scholarly audience, this volume contains 11 essays
on the writing, art, and thought that came from this remarkable community during
the period 1900-1940. Topics include, for example, the avant-garde poetry of
Beatrice Ravenel, the Gullah-inflected modernism of Julia Peterkin's Scarlet
Sister Mary , and the racial politics of historic preservation in Charleston.
Annotation (c) Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
vii
Preface ix
Introduction: The Charleston Renaissance Considered
1 (18)
Harlan Greene
James M. Hutchisson
The Lowcountry Lady and the Over-the-Mountain Man: Josephine Pinckney, Donald
Davidson, and the Burden of Southern Literature
19 (16)
Barbara L. Bellows
To Sell the City of Charleston: The Visual Arts and the Charleston Renaissance
35 (22)
Martha R. Severens
``Mr. Bennett's Amiable Desire'': The Poetry Society of South Carolina and the
Charleston Renaissance
57 (19)
Harlan Greene
Beatrice Ravenel: Avant-Garde Poet of the Charleston Renaissance
76 (20)
Curtis Worthington
Professional Authorship in the Charleston Renaissance: The Career of DuBose
Heyward
96 (19)
James M. Hutchisson
The Only Volume in the Octagon Library: The Early Architecture of Charleston
115 (11)
Gene Waddell
The Legend Is Truer Than the Fact: The Politics of Representation in the Career
of Elizabeth O'Neill Verner
126 (16)
Stephanie E. Yuhl
Gullah-Inflected Modernism: Julia Peterkin's Scarlet Black Madonna
142 (13)
Judith Giblin James
Laura Bragg and Her ``Bright Young Things'': Fostering Change and Social Reform
at the Charleston Museum
155 (21)
Louise Anderson Allen
James T. Sears
Charleston's Racial Politics of Historic Preservation: The Case of Edwin A.
Harleston
176 (23)
Susan V. Donaldson
Appendix: A Who's Who of the Charleston Renaissance 199 (12)
Notes 211 (32)
Selected Bibliography 243 (2)
Contributors 245 (2)
Index
The Chicago Black Renaissance And Women's Activism
Format Hardcover
Subject Social Science / Women's Studies
ISBN/SKU 0252030478
Author Anne Meis Knupfer
Publisher Univ of Illinois Pr
Publish Date November 2005
American Voices of the Chicago Renaissance
Format Hardcover
Subject Literary Criticism & Collections / American
ISBN/SKU 0875802583
Author Lisa Woolley
Publisher Northern Illinois Univ Pr
Publish Date April 2000
Review
Expanding on the view that 20th century Chicago-area writers transformed American
literary standards by emphasizing the everyday speech of modern urban life,
Woolley (English, Wilson College) shows how women and African Americans in particular
negotiated the literary vernacular and linguistic purity movements. Among those
featured in commentary and photos are reformer Jane Addams, poet Carl Sandburg,
editor Harriet Monroe, and writers Marita Bonner and Fenton Johnson who adapted
African- American traditions to the Chicago Renaissance style. Annotation c.
Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Table of Contents
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction 3 (13)
Dialect is A Virus
Chicago's Literary Vernacular amid Linguistic Purity Movements
16 (23)
Carl Sandburg and Vachel Lindsay
Composite Voices of the Open Road
39 (29)
Renaissance Women, Reformers, and Novelists
68 (83)
``The Best Conversation The World Has to Offer''
Chicago's Women Poets and Editors
91 (29)
Fenton Johnson and Marita Bonner
From Chicago Renaissance to Chicago Renaissance
120 (27)
Conclusion
147 (4)
Notes 151 (8)
Works Cited 159 (14)
Index 173

Papers of Clarence Mitchell Jr: Naacp Labor Secretary And Director
Format Hardcover
Subject Political Science / Civics
ISBN/SKU 0821416626
Author Denton L. Watson
Publisher Ohio Univ Pr
Publish Date July 2005

The Ticket To Freedom: The Naacp And The Struggle For Black Political
Integration
Format Hardcover
Subject History / United States / 20th Century
ISBN/SKU 0813028329
Author Manfred Berg
Publisher Univ Pr of Florida
Publish Date June 2005
Not yet published
Review
Berg, a German historian, directs this work to scholars and general readers
in an effort to correct what he views as the underrating of the contributions
of the NAACP to American racial equality. The NAACP took a bold approach, not
accommodating the slow timetable for racial equality favored by whites. The
group pushed ahead with public protests of customs and legal challenges to laws
that segregated and disadvantaged blacks, its efforts culminating in the Brown
v. Board of Education triumph. The NAACP early on targeted lynching as the violent
and grievous signifier of race hatred. The organization saw efforts to secure
voting rights as central to full citizenship for black Americans. Berg details
the growth of the NAACP, its successes and failures, and the major figures who
helped advance the NAACP, including W. E. B. DuBois, Thurgood Marshall, Moorfield
Storey, Walter White, and Oswald Garrison Villard. This book, first written
in German, is part of a series of new perspectives on the history of the South.
((Reviewed May 1, 2005)) Copyright 2005 Booklist Reviews.
Roy Wilkins: Leader Of The Naacp
Format Library
Subject Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography & Autobiography / People Of Color
ISBN/SKU 1931798494
Author Calvin Craig Miller
Publisher Morgan Reynolds Pub
Publish Date May 2005
Table of Contents
From Poverty to Prosperity
9 (12)
Birth of the NAACP
21 (11)
Newspaper Crusader
32 (9)
Return to the South
41 (14)
Time for Change
55 (17)
A New Career
72 (19)
Jim Crow Goes to War
91 (14)
The Fight Becomes Clear
105 (13)
The Top Job
118 (16)
Not Backing Down
134 (17)
Promises Kept
151 (13)
Timeline 164 (1)
Sources 165 (6)
Bibliography 171 (2)
Web sites 173 (1)
Index 174
The First Waco Horror: The Lynching Of Jesse Washington And The
Rise Of The NAACP
Format Hardcover
Subject History / United States / State & Local
ISBN/SKU 1585444162
Author Patricia Bernstein
Publisher Texas A & M Univ Pr
Publish Date March 2005
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 3 (170)
1. "Alert, Pushing, and Rich"
7 (22)
The Setting of the Waco Horror
2. "Active for Good"
29 (34)
The Beginnings of the NAACP
3. "Yours in a Glorious Cause"
63 (15)
The Investigator
4. Prelude to a Lynching
78 (9)
"Slogan Is Harmony and Efficiency"
5. An "Exciting Occurrence"
87 (32)
The Lynching
6. "Enough to Make the Devil Gasp"
119 (8)
How Could This Happen?
7. "The News Will Go Far"
127 (10)
The Immediate Aftermath
8. "Who Is She; a Detective?"
137 (22)
The Investigation
9. "Inject Lynching into the Public Mind"
159 (14)
The Follow-up Reaction
10. "Sheriff Stegall Is Prepared to Defend the Jail" 173 (19)
Change Comes at Last to Waco
Epilogue 192 (15)
"One of the Best Vote-Getters the County Ever Saw"
Notes 207 (28)
Bibliography 235 (10)
Index 245

The NAACP's Legal Strategy Against Segregated Education: 1925-1950
Format Paperback
Subject Political Science / Civil Rights
ISBN/SKU 0807855952
Author Mark V. Tushnet
Publisher Univ of North Carolina Pr
Publish Date January 2005
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
Setting the Course: The Grant from the Garland Fund
1 (20)
The Legal Background: From Margold to Houston
21 (13)
The Influence of the Staff
34 (15)
Thurgood Marshall and the Maryland Connection
49 (21)
Securing the Precedents: Gaines and Alston
70 (12)
The Campaign in the 1940s: Contingencies, Adaptations, and the Problem of Staff
82 (23)
The Strategy of Delay and the Direct Attack on Segregation
105 (33)
Conclusion: Some Lessons from the Campaign
138 (29)
Epilogue 167 (20)
Notes 187 (38)
Bibliography 225 (12)
Index 237

Freedom's Sword: The NAACP and the Struggle Against Racism in America, 1909-1969
Format Hardcover
Subject History / United States / 20th Century
ISBN/SKU 0415949858
Author Gilbert Jonas
Publisher Routledge
Publish Date December 2004
Annotation
The remarkable, lasting achievements of the NAACP's first sixty years at the
forefront of the struggle against American racism are detailed in a history
that provides a detailed history of the organization's formative years and its
role in key events and aspects of the civil rights movement.
Table of Contents
Foreword xiii
Julian Bond
Introduction 1 (6)
Creating a Change Agent: the NAACP's Early Years
During which the new group rejects Booker T. Washington's accommodationist views
for W. E. B. DuBois's militancy
7 (24)
The Law as a Weapon Against Unjust Laws
How Charles Hamilton Houston and Thurgood Marshall crafted the strategy that
produced Brown v. Board of Education
31 (36)
Southern Retaliation Against Negro Determination
The NAACP's assault on Jim Crow places it in mortal combat with the Ku Klux
Klan and the White Citizens Councils
67 (42)
Leading the African-American Quest for Political Power
James Weldon Johnson leads the fight against lynching, then Walter White Defeats
President Hoover's Supreme Court nominee
109 (26)
Comes the Revolution: The Struggle Between The NAACP and the Communist Party
USA
White and Wilkins Thwart the Communist Attempts to Win the Loyalty of American
Negroes
135 (16)
World War II and Its Consequences for Race
The NAACP presses FDR to utilize Negro troops and open up defense industry jobs
to Negroes with Mrs. Roosevelt's help
151 (18)
The Politics of Political Advancement
Passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Bill: As Dr. King leads southern civil rights
confrontations, Roy Wilkins and Clarence Mitchell---with President Johnson's
help---guide the passage of this unprecedented bill through Congress
169 (34)
Revolution at the Ballot Box
The fight for the 1965 voting rights act---led by the NAACP, a broad coalition
joined by LBJ, Dirksen, and Humphrey wins congressional approval of voting rights
bill
203 (28)
Black Workers, White Unions, and the Struggle for Job Equality
A. Philip Randolph and the NAACP challenge the AFL, while looking to John L.
Lewis and the CIO for equity in the workplace
231 (34)
Head to Head with the Garment Workers Union
A case study of conflict between a powerful union and the NAACP: Herbert Hill
exposes the racial labor practices of David Dubinsky and the Ladies Garment
Workers Union
265 (16)
The End of Pretense: Organized Labor Refuses to Desegregate
George Meany and the AFL-CIO reject the NAACP's pleas to open labor's doors
to opportunities for African Americans
281 (22)
Roy Wilkins: The Gentle Giant
Advisor to presidents and the nation's leading spokesman for black Americans,
Wilkins' steady hand on the tiller brings the NAACP to its apogee
303 (54)
The NAACP Develops Financial Muscle
New white income sources drive program expansion---from Ford Foundation to Rockefeller,
from General Motors to AT&T, the nation's neavy financial hitters extend
their support to the NAACP
357 (34)
Epilogue 391 (8)
Notes 399 (72)
Bibliography 471 (10)
Photo Credits 481 (2)
Index

White: The Biography of Walter White, Mr. Naacp
Format Hardcover
Subject Biography & Autobiography / People Of Color
ISBN/SKU 1565847733
Author Kenneth Robert Janken
Publisher W W Norton & Co Inc
Publish Date February 2003
Annotation
A portrait of the late executive secretary of the NAACP documents his efforts
as a civil rights champion and his work to outlaw segregation and racism, noting
how his physical appearance as an African-American with light-colored skin enabled
him to work undercover to expose southern lynch mob activities.
Review
Janken (African American studies, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) has
written the first scholarly biography of Walter White, a major figure in the
struggle for civil rights. Named assistant secretary of the NAACP in 1918 and
secretary in 1931, White was probably most noted for his investigation of lynchings
of African Americans, which culminated in his exposé, Rope and Faggot
(1929). Although his efforts to secure federal antilynching legislation in the
1930s failed, he did bring national attention to the horror of this crime. Under
his leadership, the NAACP also intensified its legal struggle against segregation.
Although essentially positive about White's accomplishments, Janken also notes
his flaws, especially his tendency to micromanage and perhaps to enjoy the celebrity
life a bit too much. This is a model biography of an important and neglected
leader in the search for racial justice. Highly recommended for most libraries.-Anthony
Edmonds, Ball State Univ., Muncie, IN Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Preface: The Man Called White xiii
Becoming Black
1 (28)
Witness for the Prosecution
29 (28)
Ambitions
57 (32)
Socializing and Civil Rights in the Harlem Renaissance
89 (40)
A Crooked Path to Power
129 (32)
A Hard Decade
161 (38)
Walter, Eleanor, and Franklin: The Federal Antilynching Campaign, 1933-1940
199 (34)
Radicals, Liberals, and Labor: The NAACP in the New Deal and the Great Depression
233 (28)
Live from the War Zones: Hollywood, Harlem, Europe, and the Pacific
261 (36)
The Making of a Cold War Liberal
297 (28)
Looking for a Larger Pond
325 (36)
``Mr. NAACP'' Is Dead: The Legacy of Walter White
361 (12)
Notes 373
Bibliography 345 (114)
Index 459
Till Victory Is Won: Famous Black Quotations from the Naacp
Format Paperback
Subject History / United States / 20th Century
ISBN/SKU 0743428250
Author Janet Cheatham Bell (EDT)
Publisher Pocket Books
Publish Date February 2002
Annotation
A collection of more than two hundred quotations--dealing with the topics of
Protecting Civil Rights, Achieving Educational Excellence, Nurturing Economic
Development, Reaching Youth, and Gaining Political Power--features the words
of Hank Aaron, Maya Angelou, colin Powell, Oprah Winfrey, Duke Ellington, Langston
Hughes, and other notable African Americans. Original. 35,000 first printing.
Review
Better suited to the African American studies collection than the reference
shelf, this anthology of approximately 250 inspirational quotations gives a
human, and often emotionally moving, dimension to goals fought for by the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) during its nearly
100-year history. Founders and leaders of the association as well as rank-and-file
members are quoted. NAACP award winners are also included, adding the voices
of celebrities, politicians, and athletes on such issues as educational excellence
and economic development. Ten black-and-white photos illustrate important personalities
and activities of the NAACP, and the book's research value is augmented by a
chronology of events and lists of Springarn Medal winners and NAACP programs.
Bell, editor of Famous Black Quotations and five other quotation anthologies,
has included a four-page bibliography and an index by name of source. The relatively
small number of quotations limits the book's usefulness as a reference source,
as does the omission of information about where and when the quotations first
occurred. Two more comprehensive collections, both recently published, are African
American Quotations (LJ 9/15/98) and Songs of Wisdom: Quotations from Famous
African Americans of the Twentieth Century (LJ 2/1/00). Recommended for public
libraries. Vivian Reed, California State Univ., Long Beach Copyright 2001 Cahners
Business Information.
Table of Contents
``Lift Every Voice and Sing'' xiii
Foreword xv
Julian Bond
Know Something to Believe in Something
1 (8)
Protecting Civil Rights
9 (24)
Achieving Educational Excellence
33 (22)
Nurturing Economic Development
55 (22)
Reaching Youth
77 (24)
Gaining Political Power
101 (24)
A Brief History of the NAACP
125 (24)
Chronology of NAACP Landmarks 149 (8)
Spingarn Medal Winners 157 (12)
Further Reading 169 (4)
NAACP Programs 173 (4)
Call for Centennial Submissions 177 (1)
Contact Information 178 (1)
NAACP Membership Application 179 (2)
Index 181 (6)
About the Author 187

Review
Gr 6-8-Coming of age during the Vietnam era, Bond made his mark as an early
organizer for SNCC in Atlanta. He became nationally known when he was elected
to the Georgia State House of Representatives but was refused a seat because
of his outspoken antiwar views. When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned his expulsion
and he was seated in the Georgia Legislature, his prominence was ensured and
he was catapulted onto the national stage. In a variety of capacities since
that time, he has actively sought to end racism and discrimination. Captioned,
black-and-white photos show Bond at different stages of his life. A well-put-together,
straightforward introduction to a respected activist.-Janet Woodward, Garfield
High School, Seattle, WA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Table of Contents
``The Infamous Mr. Bond''
7 (10)
Growing Up
10 (12)
School Days
22 (9)
Sitting In
31 (11)
Communications Director
42 (9)
``I'm Julian Bond''
51 (12)
Expelled
63 (11)
Chicago 1968
74 (14)
The Voice of Black America
88 (11)
Chairman of the Board
99 (10)
Race Man
109 (5)
Chronology 114 (2)
Chapter Notes 116 (8)
Further Reading 124 (1)
Internet Addresses 125 (1)
Index 126
Review
Writing styles of individual authors affect the readability of each volume in
this series, ranging from enthusiastic to plodding and prosaic. The books will
be useful where other material on each subject is limited. Unexceptional black-and-white
photos are included as are websites and chronologies. Bib., ind. [Review covers
these African-American Biographies titles: Julian Bond, Matthew Henson, Kweisi
Mfume, Bessie Coleman, Harriet Tubman.] Copyright 2002 Horn Book Guide Reviews
Table of Contents
Introduction 3 (6)
PART I The Selected Writings of James Weldon Johnson, 1920--1937 9 (124)
James Weldon Johnson
A Chronology
Selected Reports of the NAACP Secretary to the Board of Directors, 1920--1929
13 (5)
December 1920
18 (5)
Anti-Lynching
Haiti
Reduction of Southern Representation Arkansas Situation
Ku Klux Klan
Louisville Bond Issue Civil Rights
Publicity
Literature Sent Out
March 1921
23 (4)
Anti-Lynching
New Jersey Legislature
Arkansas Cases Delegation to Senator Harding
National Woman's Party Haitian Mission
Publications
Publicity
Literature Sent Out Spingarn Medal Award
June 1921
27 (7)
Anti-Lynching
Tulsa, Oklahoma, Riots
Relief Fund Arkansas Situation
Jasper County Peonage Cases
Other Peonage Cases
Anti-Lynching Measures
Dyer Bill Inter-racial Commission
Committee on the Census
Haiti Jim Crow
Washington Correspondent
Frank A. Linney
``Birth of a Nation''
Boston Publicity
Publications
Literature Sent Out
August 1921
34 (7)
Anti-Lynching
Tulsa Riot Case
Arkansas Situation
Ray Extradition Case
Maurice Mays Case
Colored Railway Trainmen
Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill
Inter-racial Commission Bill Colored Men in the Navy
Haiti
Pan African Congress
Case of Arthur K. Bird
Morrestown, N.J., Case
Harlem Hospital Publicity
Colored Press
Publicity
February 1922
41 (6)
Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill
Lynching
The Bullock Extradition Case School Histories
Publicity
October 1923
47 (6)
Annual Conference
Twenty-Fourth Infantry
Johnstown, Pa. McCoy Rendition Case
Spruce Pine, N.C., Deportation
Publicity
October 1924
53 (7)
Residential Segregation
Washington Segregation Case
Louisiana Segregation Law
School Segregation
Young Women's Christian Association
Rochester Dental Clinic
Case of Samuel A. Browne William Pickron Rape Case
Louise Thomas
Mamie Pratt Case The Elias Ridge Case
Ellis Island Case
Lonnie Hunter, et al. Oteen Veterans Hospital
Senator Capper and the Ku Klux Klan Race Riot, Bridgewater (Va.)
Publicity
July 1925
60 (5)
Annual Conference
The Seventeenth Annual conference
General Bullard's Slander
Military Training Camps
Twenty-fourth Infantry The Luther Collins Case
The Elmer Williams Case
``Birth of a Nation''
Publicity
February 1926
65 (5)
Washington Segregation Case
Defense Fund
Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill
Anti-Intermarriage Bill
Disfranchisement
Ku Klux Klan (New York)
Lynching
Detroit Mob Violence
Oswald Durant Case
Attack on Fourteen-Year-Old Colored Girl
Case of the Rev. W. A. Price
Publicity
May 1926
70 (6)
Anti-Lynching Legislation
Louisiana Segregation Case
Kansas City, Mo., Segregation Case
Reprint of Decision in Louisville Segregation Case
Ku Klux Klan (Imperial, Pa.)
Mob Violence at Carteret (N.J.) Poteau (Okla.) Schools
Death of Dr. William A. Sinclair Lynching
Detroit Mob Violence Case
Indianapolis Segregation Ordinance
Cornelia Harris (Tennessee ``Incest'' Case)
Case of Mrs. Purnell
Case of Miss Espanola Holliday
Seventeenth Annual Conference
Publicity
November 1926
76 (5)
Washington Segregation Cases
LaBelle, Fla., Lynching Investigation Louisville Libel Case
Ray Vaughn and the United States Naval Academy Football Team
The Sweet Case
Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill Samuel A. Browne Case
New York University Discrimination The Aiken (S.C.) Lynching
Publicity
September 1927
81 (3)
Maurice Mays Case
Los Angeles Bathing Beach Segregation Case Pan African Congress
San Diego Hospital Discrimination
Publicity
October 1927
84 (5)
Extradition Case
The Edward Glass Case
The Samuel Kennedy Case
James Blevins Case
Gary (Indiana) School Desegregation Coffeyville (Kansas) Riot Cases
The Anderson Case (Fort Huron, Mich.)
The Abe Washington Case (Jacksonville, Fla.)
Peonage Investigation
Segregation in Government Departments
Roswell Hamilton Case
Discrimination by Siasconsett (Mass.) Bus Line Publicity
March 1929
89 (5)
Richmond (Va.) Segregation Ordinance
District of Columbia Appropriations Bill
Charleston Public Library Discrimination Case Roy Freeman Case
Robert Bell and Grady Swain
Edward Glass Case
Mr. Francis Willis Rivers Admitted to New York Bar
Smoker for Clarence Darrow
Lynching
Publicity
October 1929
94 (7)
Expulsion of Negro Members of Brooklyn (N.Y.) Protestant Episcopal Church
Shooting of Lincoln University Student by Brooklyn (N.Y.) Policeman
Louisiana Murder Case
Florida White Primary Case Asbury Park (N.J.) Case
Gary (Indiana) School Case
Arkansas White Primary Case
Turley Wright Rape Case
Lynching
Death of Mr. Louis Marshall
Will of Mr. Alfred M. Heinsheimer
Publicity Emergency Fund
Institute of Pacific Relations
Speeches, Essays, and Articles, 1920--1937
101 (32)
``The N.A.A.C.P Fight Against Lynching''
102 (3)
``Is the Negro a Danger to White Culture?''
105 (4)
``Presiding at Annual Mass Meeting Speech''
109 (3)
``Haiti and Our Latin American Policy''
112 (2)
``Achievements and Aims of the N.A.A.C.P.''
114 (2)
``The Militant N.A.A.C.P.''
116 (5)
``Address Before the Twentieth Annual Meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.''
121 (3)
``Leadership and the Times''
124 (9)
PART II The Selected Writings of Walter White, 1929--1955 133 (334)
Walter White
Selected Reports of the NAACP Secretary to the Board of Directors, 1932--1954
137 (3)
February 1932
140 (9)
The Scottsboro Cases
The Texas Primary Case
The Case of Robert Bell and Grady Swain
The Gary (Indiana) School Case
``The Birth of a Nation''
Judge James Baldwin
Senator La Follette's Unemployment Bill
The Villa Lewaro
The Daniel H. Williams Will
The Cutter House, Princeville, Illinois
Annual Conference Committee on Negro Work
The Tom Carraway Case
United States Supreme Court
The Case of Ernest Herring
Lynching
Haiti Rosenwald Offer
Publicity
March 1933
149 (8)
The Wagner Resolution
The Harlem Hospital Inquiry
The Joseph Crawford Extradition Case
The Scottsboro Cases
The Beaver Country (Pa.) Deportation Cases
The Lebanon, Tennessee, Mob Violence Cases
The Doris Weaver Case
University of North Carolina Discrimination Case
The Theodore Jordan Case
The Will Sanders Case
The Jess Hollins Case
Flogging at Clearwater, Florida
``The Green Pastures''
``Run Little Chillun Benefit'' Committee to Call upon President Roosevelt
Mr. Harold Ickes, Secretary of Interior
Publicity
January 1934
157 (6)
Overview
Mississippi Flood Control Project
The N.R.A. Legal Defense
Education
Lynching
Costigan-Wagner Anti-Lynching Bill
The Writers' League against Lynching
Harlem Hospital Committee
Cooperation
February 1936
163 (9)
The Van Nuys Resolution
Senator Borah and Anti-Lynching Legislation
Conference with President Roosevelt
Governor Eugene Talmadge (Georgia)
American Federation of Labor
Scottsboro Defense Committee
Brown, Ellington, and Shields (Kemper County, Miss.)
Amendment to the Lindbergh Kidnapping Law
University of Maryland Case
University of Missouri
``Medical Opportunities for Negroes''
Christmas Seals
Governor Lehman's Offer
National Office Lease
N.A.A.C.P. Birthday Celebration
Monthly Mass Meetings
Publicity
August 1940
172 (7)
Annual Conference
Republican and Democratic Platforms on the Negro
Mob Violence and Lynching at Brownsville, Tennessee Lynching
The Anti-Lynching Bill
Chicago Exposition
Federal Housing Authority Discrimination
Negroes in the Armed Forces The Ku Klux Klan
Norfolk, Virginia, Teachers' Salary Case Wilmington, Ohio, School Segregation
Case
Texas Primary Case
February 1942
179 (10)
National Defense
The American Red Cross
Proposal of Volunteer Negro--White Division
Distribution of Leaflets at Joe Louis Fight Negro Hero at Pearl Harbor
Army Death Penalty Withdrawn Posters, Murals, Etc., Re: Defense and Stamps
Proposed Cuts in Non-Defense Expenditures
Farm Security Administration Loans for Poll Taxes
Speakers Bureau
The Secretary's California Trip Lynching
University Cases---University of Missouri (Bluford vs. Canada)
University of Tennessee Cases
Teachers' Salary Cases Birmingham, Alabama
Atlanta, Georgia (William H. Reeves School Board)
Richmond, Virginia (Antoinette E. Bowler vs. School Board)
Newport News, Virginia (Dorothy Roles vs. School Board) Palm Beach County, Fla.,
Stebbins vs. Board of Public Instruction Hillsborough County, Fla., Hilda T.
Turner vs. Board of Public Instruction
Duval Country, Fla., Mary White Blocker vs. Board of Public Instruction
Marion County, Fla., Stark vs. Board of Public Instruction
September 1945
189 (7)
The Full Employment Act
The Fair Employment Practice Commission
The Pan-African Congress
National Public Housing Conference
National Housing Agency
Delmo (Missouri) Farm Homes
Office of Defense Transportation
The Washington Bureau
School Lunch Bill: H.R. 3370
Senator Eastland's Attack on the Negro Soldier
Voting Records of Senators and Congressmen
Veterans' Discrimination
Congressman Rankin ``Stay Out of Harlem'' Order
Work of the Membership Secretary
November 1947
196 (3)
Report of the President's Committee on Civil Rights
Petition to the United Nations
Probe of Alleged Communists in Hollywood Voting Record of Congressmen Published
in Bulletin
N.A.A.C.P. Sends Greetings to C.I.O. A.F.L. Conventions
Forrestal Asked to Abolish Jim Crow
President Urged to Consider Eight-Point Medical Program
Article by Secretary in Saturday Review of Literature Article by Secretary in
Collier's
April 1951
199 (10)
Annual Convention
Washington Conference on Civil Rights Winstead Amendment
Eighth Orientation Conference
Conference with Finletter
F.E.P.C.
Conferences with Secretary of State Acheson and Mr. Charles Wilson
American Jewish Congress Award to N.A.A.C.P.
Kappa Alpha Psi Contribution
Levittown Contribution to Inc. Fund---Ike Williams
Charges against Miss Loretto Chappell
Ford Foundation
Segregated Hospitals
Electoral College Resolution
Apprentice Training Legislation
Florida and North Carolina Elections
Segregation in the Armed Services Atomic Energy Commission
Investigation of Baltimore Employment Service
Mob Action against Florida Residents
Important Specific Cases
June 1951
209 (7)
Annual Convention
Washington Conference
N.N.P.A.--N.A.A.C.P. Conference--Cocktail Party
Public Housing
Bill to Protect Servicemen
Secretary's Statement Re: MacArthur
Ford Foundation Application
Committee to Defend Dr. Du Bois
Violence against Negroes
Appointment of Negro to Military Court of Appeals
December 1951 and January 1952
216 (5)
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 1952
Madison Square Garden Benefit
Death of Senator Capper
Bombing and Death of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moore
Committee on Government Contract Compliance
Changes in Field Staff
Talmadge Demands Purge of Negroes on T.V.
Stuyvesant Town Evictions Withdrawn
N.A.A.C.P. Annual Meeting
Freedom of Choice Movement
Cost of Segregation
Stork Club
Death of Bishop Gordon
Death of Judge Patterson
Senate Rules Change Inadequate
Loyalty of Philleo Nash
Death of Harold Ickes
May 1954
221 (6)
Philip Murray Award
Virgin Island Bill
Supreme Court Decision in School Cases
Atlanta Conference
Loyalty Investigation of Dr. Bunche
Annual Convention
Speeches, Essays, and Articles, 1929--1955
227 (78)
``I Investigate Lynchings''
228 (9)
``The Negro and the Supreme Court''
237 (9)
``On Racist Textbooks''
246 (2)
``The Negro on the American Stage''
248 (6)
``Discrimination in Federal Control Construction''
254 (4)
``Negro Citizenship''
258 (2)
``Memorandum from Secretary'' Re: The Crisis, March 12, 1934
260 (5)
``Reds vs. the Freedom Train''
265 (1)
``White Hails Film on Anti-Semitism''
266 (2)
``Moral Advance Seen in Report by Committee on Civil Rights''
268 (1)
``Abolition of Racial Segregation at Truman's Inaugural Praised''
269 (2)
``Fate of Democrats in 1950 Seen Hinging on Stand on Civil Rights''
271 (1)
``A Sign of Political Change in the South''
272 (1)
``Fifty Years of Eighting''
273 (4)
``Report of Civil Rights''
277 (4)
``N.A.A.C.P. Forty-second Annual Meeting Speech''
281 (2)
``N.A.A.C.P. Annual Convention Speech''
283 (7)
``N.A.A.C.P. Forty-fourth Annual Meeting Speech''
290 (4)
``N.A.A.C.P. Forty-Fifth Annual Meeting Speech''
294 (7)
PART III The Selected Writings of Roy Wilkins, 1955--1977
Roy Wilkins, A Chronology
301 (4)
Selected Reports of the NAACP Secretary/Executive Director to the Board of Directors,
1955-1973
305 (3)
May 1955
308 (5)
Annual Conference
Annual Convention Board Meeting
Bandung Conference
Supreme Court Decision of May 21---Statement Celebration of May 17, 1954, Decision---Freedom
Day
Killing of Rev. G. W. Lee of Belzoni, Miss.
Request Change in A.A.A.S. Convention Site
Humphrey--Daniel Resolution
Retention of Anti-Bias Ban in Army Bill
Death of Mrs. Bethune
Change in Convention Site by American Psychiatric Association
Eastland Resolution to Investigate Supreme Court
April 1963
313 (3)
Birmingham, Ala.
Reply to Congressman Powell
Clarksdale, Miss.
Firing of Dick Gregory
Freedom Walkers
Interview with U.S. News and World Report
Speaking Engagements
Death of Mrs. A. Philip Randolph
May 1963
316 (6)
Jackson, Miss.
Clarksdale, Miss.
Birmingham, Ala.
Supreme Court Anti-Segregation Ruling
Prince Edward County
Durham, N.C.
Discrimination in Federal Employment
Philadelphia Jim Crow Union
September 1963
322 (3)
Beating of N.A.A.C.P. Official---Shreveport, La.
Birmingham, Ala., Church Bombing
Challenge to Two Southern Governors Strengthened Version of Rights Bill
Inequitable Death Sentence Protested
Christmas-Buying Boycott
Speaking Engagements, Radio, T.V., Etc.
December 1963
325 (2)
Assassination of President Kennedy
President's Message to Congress
The Conference with President Johnson
Civil Rights Legislation
Speaking Engagements
April 1964
327 (3)
Civil Rights Bill
Strategy Meeting of Leadership Conference Dirksen Amendments
New Field Worker
Russian Magazine Article by Executive Secretary
Wallace in Indiana Primary
May and June 1964
330 (6)
Civil Rights Bill
Conference with Former President Eisenhower May 17 Celebration
Tribute to Cardinal Spellman
Goldwater Rights Stand
N.A.A.C.P. Telecast
Medgar Evers Memorial Day New York City Subway Rampage
Death of Prime Minister Nehru
July and August 1964
336 (8)
Speaking Engagements
Republican and Democratic Conventions Hospital Aid to Mississippi Victims
Pre-Convention Rally, Atlantic City, N.J.
Voter Registration
Call to Major Civil Rights Organizations
Board Members Study Mississippi Conditions Signing of Civil Rights Bill
Thanks for Cloture
Death of Senator Clair Engle
October 1964
344 (3)
Speaking Engagements
``Moral Decay'' Film
Congratulations to Dr. King
Urge Clemency for Condemned South Africans
Keating--Kennedy Campaign
Support of Candidates Who Voted for Civil Rights Bill
March 1965
347 (5)
Speaking Engagements
Alabama Voting Drive---March 7 Brutality Selma-to-Montgomery, Ala.
Death of Jimmie Lee Jackson, Rev. James Reeb, and Mrs. Viola Liuzzo
Voting Rights Bill---President's Message to Congress
Wire to Sponsors of Bill
Testimony Before Sub-Committee of House Judiciary Committee
June, July, and August, 1965
352 (4)
Weekened Conference in Birmingham
Visit of British Parliamentary Delegation
Memorial Service for Ambassador Stevenson
Meeting with President Johnson
Personnel Changes
U.S. Policy in Vietnam
Death of Judge Watson
Convention Greetings
Los Angeles Riot
January--March 1971
356 (3)
Speaking and Other Engagements
Angela Davis
Dwight D. Folsom
White House Briefings on Revenue-Sharing
Radio Corporation of America
Death of Whitney M. Young, Jr.
All White Private Academies
Food Stamps and Lunch Programs
First Quarter 1973
359 (4)
Speaking Engagements
N.A.A.C.P. Urges Senate to Reject Nomination of Peter Brennan for Secretary
of Labor
Death of Lyndon Johnson
Death of Elmer A. Carter
Atlanta, Ga., School Desegregation Cases
Speeches, Essays, and Articles, 1955--1977
363 (104)
``The War against the United States''
365 (5)
``Integration Crisis in the South''
370 (5)
``The Film Industry and the Negro''
375 (4)
``Address Given at the National Negro Publishers Association''
379 (5)
``Mr. Wilkins Replies''
384 (3)
``At Youth for Integrated Schools''
387 (3)
``Freedom, Franchise, and Segregation''
390 (9)
``The Meaning of Sit-ins''
399 (7)
``Medgar W. Evers: In Memoriam''
406 (2)
``We Want Freedom Now''
408 (2)
``At American Association of Advertising Agencies''
410 (5)
``At Conflict '66---Virginia Polytechnic Institute''
415 (3)
``At White House Conference `To Fulfill These Rights' ''
418 (2)
``Sail our N.A.A.C.P. Ship `Steady as She Goes' ''
420 (9)
``Voluntary Segregation---A Disaster''
429 (1)
``Toward a Single Society''
430 (7)
``Ego and Race''
437 (1)
``Ralph J. Bunche''
438 (1)
``Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.''
439 (2)
``In Back of the Busing Issue``
441 (1)
``A. Philip Randolph''
442 (2)
``Mayor Tom Bradley of Los Angeles''
444 (1)
``The Task Ahead''
444 (7)
``Come over into Macedonia and Help Us!''
451 (5)
``Black Power or Black Pride''
456 (1)
``How Old the Civil Rights Movement''
457 (1)
``Black Mayors''
458 (2)
``Integration, the Only Way''
460 (1)
``Intelligence Tests''
461 (1)
``Black History Missing''
462 (2)
``Paul Robeson''
464 (1)
``Harassment of Dr. King''
465 (2)
Appendices 467 (40)
NAACP: A Chronology, 1909--1977
467 (31)
The Call: A Lincoln Emancipation Conference
498 (3)
The Committee of Forty
501 (2)
Resolutions
503 (2)
NAACP Officers, Executive Committee, and General Committee, 1910
505 (2)
Notes 507 (2)
Bibliography 509 (4)
Index
Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix (10)
INTRODUCTION xix (8)
Sondra Kathryn Wilson
EDITING THE CRISIS xxvii
W.E.B. Du Bois
Part One: Poetry 3 (44)
GWENDOLYN BENNETT
To Usward
3 (1)
ARNA BONTEMPS
Hope
4 (1)
Dirge
4 (1)
WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE
Scintilla
5 (1)
BENJAMIN GRIFFITH BRAWLEY
The Freedom of the Free
6 (2)
STERLING BROWN
After the Storm
8 (1)
JAMES D. CORROTHERS
The Road to the Bow
9 (1)
JOSEPH S. COTTER, SR.
Shakespeare's Sonnet
10 (1)
COUNTEE CULLEN
Dad
11 (1)
Bread and Wine
12 (1)
Sonnet to Her
12 (1)
ALLISON DAVIS
Gospel for Those Who Must
13 (1)
JESSIE FAUSET
Again It Is September
14 (1)
Recontre
14 (1)
"Courage!" He Said
15 (2)
LESLIE PINCKNEY HILL
The Teacher
17 (1)
Vision of a Lyncher
17 (1)
FRANK HORNE
Letters Found Near a Suicide
18 (5)
Harlem
23 (1)
LANGSTON HUGHES
The Negro Speaks of Rivers
24 (1)
The South
24 (1)
Being Old
25 (1)
ROSCOE C. JAMISON
Negro Soldiers
26 (1)
CHARLES BERTRAM JOHNSON
Old Things
27 (1)
True Wealth
27 (1)
FENTON JOHNSON
My Love
28 (1)
GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON
Prejudice
29 (1)
Motherhood
29 (1)
Decay
29 (1)
Courier
30 (1)
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
Father, Father Abraham
31 (1)
Brothers
31 (3)
Helene
34 (1)
The River
35 (1)
Moods
36 (1)
A Passing Melody
36 (1)
CLAUDE MCKAY
The International Spirit
37 (1)
ALICE DUNBAR NELSON
Sonnet
38 (1)
The Proletariat Speaks
38 (2)
EFFIE LEE NEWSOME
Exodus
40 (1)
Bluebird
40 (1)
The Little Page
41 (1)
ANNE SPENCER
Dunbar
42 (1)
White Things
42 (1)
JEAN TOOMER
Song of the Son
43 (1)
Banking Coal
44 (3)
Part Two: Fiction 47 (144)
FENTON JOHNSON
The Servant
47 (4)
JESSIE FAUSET
Emmy
51 (28)
JAMES D. CORROTHERS
A Man They Didn't Know
79 (10)
CHARLES W. CHESNUTT
The Doll
89 (9)
Mr. Taylor's Funeral
98 (11)
The Marked Tree
109 (13)
ARTHUR HUFF FAUSET
A Tale of the North Carolina Woods
122 (5)
RUDOLPH FISHER
"High Yaller"
127 (18)
EDWIN DRUMMOND SHEEN
The Death Game
145 (15)
ANITA SCOTT COLEMAN
Unfinished Masterpieces
160 (4)
MARITA O. BONNER
Nothing New
164 (8)
Drab Rambles
172 (9)
FRANK HORNE
The Man Who Wanted to Be Red
181 (10)
Part Three: Plays 191 (30)
JOSEPH SEAMON COTTER, JR.
On the Fields of France
191 (3)
WILLIS RICHARDSON
The Broken Banjo
194 (17)
MARITA O. BONNER
Exit, an Illusion
211 (10)
Part Four: Essays 221 (188)
PERSONAL ESSAYS
WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE
Twilight: An Impression
221 (3)
E. FRANKLIN FRAZIER
All God's Chillun Got Eyes
224 (3)
MARITA O. BONNER
On Being Young--a Woman--and Colored
227 (5)
The Young Blood Hungers
232 (5)
LOREN R. MILLER
College
237 (5)
COUNTEE CULLEN
Countee Cullen to His Friends
242 (3)
AUGUSTA SAVAGE
An Autobiography
245 (2)
LITERARY AND CULTURAL ESSAYS
JESSIE FAUSET
New Literature on the Negro
247 (8)
The Symbolism of Bert Williams
255 (5)
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
Placido
260 (3)
Negro Authors and White Publishers
263 (4)
ALAIN LOCKE
Steps Toward the Negro Theatre
267 (6)
CARL DITON
The National Association of Negro Musicians
273 (3)
CLAUDE McKAY
Soviet Russia and the Negro
276 (12)
W. E. B. DU BOIS
ALAIN LOCKE
The Younger Literary Movement
288 (5)
MAUD CUNEY HARE
Antar, Negro Poet of Arabia
293 (11)
WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE
The Negro in Literature
304 (13)
W. E. B. DU BOIS
Criteria of Negro Art
317 (9)
ALLISON DAVIS
Our Negro "Intellectuals"
326 (8)
R. NATHANIEL DETT
A Musical Invasion of Europe
334 (7)
C. RUTH WRIGHT
Negro Authors' Week: An Experiment
341 (4)
SOCIAL ESSAYS 345 (64)
WALTER WHITE
The Work of a Mob
345 (6)
W. E. B. DU BOIS
Documents of the War
351 (9)
Marcus Garvey
360 (6)
MORDECAI WYATT JOHNSON
The Faith of the American Negro
366 (5)
E. FRANKLIN FRAZIER
Cooperation and the Negro
371 (3)
WILLIAM PICKENS
John Brown Day
374 (3)
HORACE MANN BOND
Temperament
377 (8)
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
Three Achievements and Their Significance
385 (9)
ROBERT W. BAGNALL
The Present South
394 (6)
SUSIE WISEMAN YERGAN
Africa--Our Challenge
400 (9)
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES OF CONTRIBUTORS 409 (12)
BIBLIOGRAPHY 421
CAROLYN WEDIN is professor of English at the University of Wisconsin
at Whitewater and the editor of Black and White Sat Down Together: Reminiscences
of an NAACP Founder by Mary White Ovington.
Annotation
A portrait of Ovington and her role in founding the NAACP
Table of Contents
Finding Her Avenue.
Taking Root.
From Social Researcher to Activist.
White Woman in a Colored World.
The NAACP Is Born.
Growing Pains.
Chairman of the Board.
Catalyst to the Harlem Renaissance.
Rifts and Evolution.
Traveling Fund-Raiser.
"Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing."
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index.
Table of Contents
PREFACE vii (6)
DEDICATION AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii
1. Prologue: Making the NAACP Branch "a Necessity" in Chicago
1 (7)
2. Progressive-Era Chicago, 1900-1919
8 (9)
3. From Vigilance Committee to Branch, 1910-1916
17 (27)
4. "The New Negro" in the Black Metropolis, 1917-1924
44 (22)
5. The Black Patriarchy, 1925-1932
66 (24)
6. A. C. MacNeal and the "Whole Loaf or None at All," 1933-1937
90 (19)
7. Crises of Charter and War, 1938-1945
109 (19)
8. Democracy at Work, 1946-1953
128 (33)
9. At the Apex of Militant Activism, 1954-1957
161 (31)
10. Epilogue: The Era of the "Civil Rights Revolution," 1958-1966
192 (11)
NOTES 203 (44)
INDEX 247
Review
*(1896-1909) A well-balanced, readable text details the achievements of selected
African-American men and women who rose above the ignominy of slavery and its
aftermath to make significant contributions in the fields of education, politics,
business, civil rights, and the humanities. Subjects include Booker T. Washington,
Madam C. J. Walker, and Ida Wells-Barnett. Illustrated with black-and-white
photographs. Bib., ind. Copyright 1998 Horn Book Guide Reviews


Marcus Garvey: Black Nationalist Leader
Format Library
Subject Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography & Autobiography / People Of Color
ISBN/SKU 0791081591
Author Mary Lawler
Publisher Chelsea House Pub
Publish Date October 2004
Annotation
A biography of the black leader who started a "Back-to-Africa" movement
in the United States, believing blacks would never receive justice in countries
with a white majority.

Creative Conflict in African American Thought: Frederick Douglass, Alexander
Crummell, Booker T. Washington, W. E. B. Du Bois, and Marcus Garvey
Format Paperback
Subject History / United States / 19th Century
ISBN/SKU 0521535379
Author Wilson Jeremiah Moses
Publisher Cambridge Univ Pr
Publish Date May 2004
Table of Contents
Part I. Introduction: Consistency ... the Hobgoblin of Little Minds: 1. The
meaning of struggle
Part II. Frederick Douglass: The Individualist as Race Man: 2. Where honor is
due: Frederick Douglass and representative man
3. Writing freely? Douglass's racialization, and desexualization
4. Frederick Douglass, superstar
Part III. Alexander Crummell: the Anglophile as Afrocentrist: 5. Africa, Christianity,
and civilization
6. Crummell and the new south
7. Crummell, Du Bois, and presentism
Part IV. Booker Taliafero Washington: The Idealist as Materialist: 8. Booker
T. Washington and the meaning of progress
9. Protestant ethic versus conspicuous consumption
Part V. Burghardt Du Bois: The Democrat as Authoritarian: 10. Du Bois on religion
and art
11. Du Bois and democracy: a tragic realism
12. Du Bois protestant perfectionism and progressive pragmatism
Part VI. Marcus Moziah Garvey: The Realist as Romantic: 13. The birth of tragedy:
Garvey's heroic struggles
14. Becoming history: Garvey and the genius of his age
Part VII. Conclusion: Saving Heroes from their Admirers: 15. Reality, contradiction
and the meaning of progress.

Marcus Garvey: Controversial Champion of Black Pride
Format Library
Subject Juvenile Nonfiction / General
ISBN/SKU 0766021688
Author Anne E. Schraff
Publisher Enslow Pub Inc
Publish Date January 2004
Add to cart
Annotation
Chronicles the life of Marcus Garvey, a controversial black leader who began
a crusade for African Americans to fight against oppression in the early years
of the twentieth century.
Review
Reviewed with Kramer's Mahalia Jackson. Gr. 6-10. These two new titles in the
African-American Biographies series offer straightforward introductions to their
subjects. Mahalia Jackson follows the life of the renowned singer from her childhood
in New Orleans to her success as a world-famous gospel singer who made the music
popular through her unique style. A good deal of attention is given to Jackson's
civil rights activism. Marcus Garvey profiles the controversial leader of the
early twentieth century Pan-African movement. Schraff offers some interesting
insight into Garvey's legacy and how his separatist views on race influenced
the later civil rights movement. The writing is not especially engaging in either
book, but these titles offer solid information about their respective subjects.
Included in each book are a chronology, chapter notes, suggestions for further
reading, and recommended Web sites. ((Reviewed February 15, 2004)) Copyright
2004 Booklist Reviews.

Modern Black Nationalism: From Marcus Garvey to Louis Farrakhan
Format Paperback
Subject
ISBN/SKU 0814787894
Author William L. Van Deburg (EDT)
Publisher New York Univ Pr
Publish Date January 1997
Review
This wide-ranging selection of 52 documents in 37 sections locates black nationalism's
historical roots and 20th-century sprawl. With an incisive introduction and
headnotes, historian Van Deburg (African American studies, Univ. of Wisconsin,
Madison) insightfully maps the movement's diversity and doctrinal debates, from
its foundations to its expression in the Black Power era and into today. The
persistent vitality and attraction of black nationalism's core concepts of self-definition
and self-determination emerge from the variety of sources interviews, speeches,
pamphlets, and essays. Although the book is without competition as a multifaceted
documentary text of modern black nationalism's theoretical assumptions, operational
agenda, and promotional efforts, it complements Wilson J. Moses's Classical
Black Nationalism: From the American Revolution to Marcus Garvey (New York Univ.
Pr., 1996) and Van Deburg's New Day in Babylon: The Black Power Movement and
American Culture, 1965-1975 (LJ 8/92). Highly recommended for collections on
blacks and U.S. political ideology. Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe
Copyright 1998 Library Journal Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1 (18)
Suggestions for Further Reading 19 (4)
One Foundations of Modern Black Nationalism
Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association
23 (9)
Universal Negro Improvement Association, Declaration of Rights of the Negro
Peoples of the World, 1920
24 (8)
Federal Surveillance of ``Negro Agitators''
32 (2)
Memorandum to Special Agent Ridgely, 1919
33 (1)
J. Edgar Hoover
Cyril Briggs and the African Blood Brotherhood
34 (6)
The African Blood Brotherhood, 1920
35 (3)
Race Catechism, 1918
38 (2)
W. E. B. Du Bois and Pan-Africanism
40 (11)
To the World (Manifesto of the Second Pan-African Congress), 1921
41 (6)
Africa, 1924
47 (4)
Black Nationalism and the Harlem Renaissance
51 (8)
The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain, 1926
52 (5)
Langston Hughes
I Am a Negro--and Beautiful, 1926
57 (2)
Amy Jacques Garvey
Depression-Era Communists and Self-Determination in the Black Belt
59 (5)
Speech on Black Self-Determination, 1931
60 (4)
Clarence A. Hathaway
Uncovering a ``National'' Past
64 (9)
The Suppression of Negro History, 1940
65 (8)
J. A. Rogers
A. Philip Randolph and the March on Washington Movement
73 (5)
Why Should We March? 1942
74 (4)
Richard B. Moore and the Pan-Caribbean Movement
78 (6)
Speech on Caribbean Federation at the Luncheon Meeting for Lord Listowel, 1953
80 (4)
Carlos Cooks and the African Nationalist Pioneer Movement
84 (9)
Speech on the ``Buy Black'' Campaign, 1955
85 (8)
Robert F. Williams and ``Armed Self-Reliance''
93 (4)
Speech from Radio Free Dixie, 1963
94 (3)
Elijah Muhammad and the Nation of Islam
97 (9)
Know Thyself, 1965
99 (2)
The Making of Devil, 1965
101 (2)
A Program for Self-Development, 1965
103 (3)
Malcolm X and the Organization of Afro-American Unity
106 (13)
Basic Unity Program, 1965
108 (11)
Two Black Nationalism in the Black Power Era
The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and Black Empowerment
119 (8)
Position Paper on Black Power, 1966
120 (7)
Frantz Fanon: Raising the Consciousness of the Colonized
127 (6)
Concerning Violence, 1961
128 (5)
Cointelpro and ``Black Nationalist Hate Groups''
133 (3)
Memorandum to Special Agent in Charge, Albany, New York, 1967
134 (2)
J. Edgar Hoover
Black Power Politics
136 (22)
National Black Political Convention, The Gary Declaration, 1972
138 (6)
National Black Political Convention, Model Pledge, 1972
144 (1)
Speech to the Congress of African Peoples, 1970
145 (13)
Amiri Baraka
Black Power in Education
158 (17)
Questions and Answers about Black Studies, 1969
160 (12)
Nathan Hare
Third International Conference on Black Power, Report of the Workshop on Education,
1968
172 (3)
Roy Innis and the Congress of Racial Equality
175 (7)
Separatist Economics: A New Social Contract, 1969
176 (6)
James Forman and the ``Black Manifesto''
182 (6)
Manifesto to the White Christian Churches and the Jewish Synagogues in the United
States of America and All Other Racist Institutions, 1969
183 (5)
Black Power and Black Labor: The League of Revolutionary Black Workers
188 (9)
General Program (Here's Where We're Coming From), 1970
189 (3)
Our Thing Is Drum, 1970
192 (1)
Fight on to Victory: Interview with Ken Cockrel and Mike Hamlin, 1970
193 (4)
Liberating the ``Subjugated Territory''
197 (6)
The Anti-Depression Program of the Republic of New Africa, 1972
198 (5)
``First of all and Finally Africans''
203 (12)
Pan-Africanism--Land and Power, 1969
204 (11)
Stokely Carmichael
Black Art and Black Nationalism
215 (8)
The Role We Want for Black Art, 1969
217 (5)
Jeff Donaldson
Aunt Jemima, 1968
222 (1)
Murry N. DePillars
The Black Church and Black Power
223 (17)
National Committee of Black Churchmen, The Black Declaration of Independence,
1970
225 (4)
The Black Messiah and the Black Revolution, 1969
229 (11)
Albert B. Cleage, Jr.
Revolutionary Nationalism: The Black Panther Party and the Revolutionary Action
Movement
240 (16)
Armed Black Brothers in Richmond Community, 1967
242 (2)
On Meeting the Needs of the People, 1969
244 (5)
Eldridge Cleaver
What We Want, What We Believe: Black Panther Party Platform and Program, 1966
249 (3)
Revolutionary Action Movement, The African American War of National-Liberation,
1965
252 (4)
Black Women and Liberation
256 (19)
Panther Sisters on Women's Liberation, 1969
258 (11)
To My People, 1973
269 (6)
Assata Shakur
Three Black Nationalism and Contemporary Society
Maulana Karenga: ``Keeper of the Tradition''
275 (13)
The Nguzo Saba (The Seven Principles): Their Meaning and Message, 1988
276 (12)
Afrocentricity
288 (7)
The Afrocentric Idea in Education, 1991
289 (6)
Molefi Kete Asante
Melanin and the Dynamics of Genetic Survival
295 (8)
The Neurochemical Basis for Evil, 1988
296 (7)
Frances Cress Welsing
Black Theology and ``The Dream of Freedom''
303 (12)
Black Theology and the Black Church: Where Do We Go from Here? 1977
304 (11)
James H. Cone
Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam
315 (13)
P.O.W.E.R. at Last and Forever, 1985
316 (12)
The Black Belt Question Revisited
328 (5)
Which Way for the Black Belt Thesis? 1984
329 (4)
James Forman
The ``New Afrikan'' Case for Reparations
333 (9)
An Act to Stimulate Economic Growth in the United States and Compensate, in
Part, for the Grievous Wrongs of Slavery and the Unjust Enrichment Which Accrued
to the United States Therefrom, 1987
334 (8)
Imari Obadele
Toward African Liberation
342 (4)
Pan-African Revolutionary Socialist Party, A Plan of Action, 1984
343 (3)
``Political Prisoners and Prisoners-of-War''
346 (21)
The Black Panthers: Interviews with Geronimo ji-jaga Pratt and Mumia Abu-Jamal,
1992
347 (20)
``Forward Ever, Backward Never''
367 (8)
Interview with Charles Lionel James, 1987
368 (7)
Index 375

They Had a Dream: The Civil Rights Struggle from Frederick Douglass to Marcus
Garvey to Martin Luther King and Malcolm X
Format Paperback
Edition REPRINT
Subject
ISBN/SKU 0140349545
Author Jules Archer
Publisher Penguin USA
Publish Date February 1996
Annotation
Traces the evolution of the civil rights movement and its impact on history
through biographical sketches of four prominent, influential African Americans--Frederick
Douglass, Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X. Reprint. SLJ.
PW.
Review
According to PW, dialogue and excerpts from speeches and writings are woven
into thorough accounts of the private lives of four pivotal civil rights leaders
for a "balanced and substantive" look at their lives and contributions.
Ages 10-up. (Feb.) Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information.
Table of Contents
Introduction viii
The History of the Black Struggle in America
1 (35)
Frederick Douglass
36 (46)
Marcus Garvey
82 (38)
Martin Luther King, Jr.
120 (64)
Malcolm X
184 (39)
The Black Struggle Today and Tomorrow
223 (28)
Bibliography and Suggested Further Reading 251 (3)
Index 254

Rasta and Resistance: From Marcus Garvey to Walter Rodney
Format Paperback
Subject
ISBN/SKU 0865430357
Author Horace Campbell
Publisher Africa World Pr
Publish Date May 1987
Table of Contents
Preface ix
Introduction 1 (10)
Do You Remember the Days of Slavery?
11 (32)
Slavery and the Roots of Resistance
11 (3)
Do You Remember on the Slave Ship, How They Brutalised my Very Soul?
14 (1)
When I Hear the Crack of the Whip, my Blood Runs Cold
15 (4)
Resistance to Slavery in Jamaica
19 (2)
Going Back to Africa, Cause I'm Black
21 (1)
Me No No Quashie
22 (2)
Of the Spiritual World and the Material World
24 (2)
Religion and Resistance
26 (1)
The Armed Slave Revolts
26 (5)
From Emancipation to the Morant Bay Rebellion of 1865
31 (4)
Cleave to the Black
35 (8)
Ethiopianism, Pan-Africanism and Garveyism
43 (26)
The Scramble for Africa
44 (3)
Ethiopianism
47 (3)
Pan-Africanism and Garveyism
50 (3)
Garveyism and Racial Consciousness
53 (4)
Garvey and the Symbols of Racial Pride
57 (6)
Garveyism in Jamaica
63 (6)
The Origins of Rasta - Rasta and the Revolt of the Sufferers in Jamaica 1938
69 (24)
The Origins of Rastafari
70 (3)
Rastafari, the Black World and the Italian Invasion of Abyssinia
73 (3)
Rastafari and the Ethiopian World Federation
76 (2)
The Capitalist Depression in Jamaica
78 (3)
And the People Rise Up in 1938
81 (5)
The Transition from Colonialism to Neo-Colonialism
86 (2)
Idealism and Materialism in Jamaica
88 (5)
Man in the Hills: Rasta, the Jamaican State and the Ganja Trade
93 (28)
Locksmen
95 (3)
Rastaman A Lion - from Quashie to Lion
98 (3)
Hail Jah Rastafari
101 (2)
Are Rastas Violent Cultists?
103 (1)
The University Report
104 (2)
Rasta, Ganja and the State
106 (1)
Outlawing a Popular Custom
107 (2)
Kola Nuts and Ganja
109 (3)
Operation Buccaneer
112 (3)
Coptics and the New Subversion
115 (6)
Rasta, Reggae and Cultural Resistance
121 (32)
Rasta and the Rediscovery of the Cultural Heritage of the Slave
121 (3)
The Roots of Reggae
124 (4)
Walter Rodney's Groundings with his Brothers
128 (5)
Dis Ya Reggae Music-Roots, Rock, Reggae
133 (7)
Bob Marley and the Internationalisation of Reggae and Rasta
140 (4)
Marley in Zimbabwe
144 (3)
Bob Marley, Rasta and Uprising
147 (1)
Cultural Resistance and Political Change
148 (5)
The Rastafarians in the Eastern Caribbean
153 (22)
The Nationalist Forebears of the Rasta
154 (4)
The Dreads
158 (1)
Rastas, Union Island and the Sea
159 (3)
The Rastas and the Grenadian Revolution
162 (5)
Rasta, Ganja and Capitalism
167 (2)
Rastas in Trinidad
169 (2)
Rastas, Guyana and the Left
171 (2)
Conclusion
173 (2)
The Rastafari Movement in the Metropole
175 (36)
Rastas and the Decline of the African Liberation Support Committee
175 (2)
The African Liberation Support Committee
177 (3)
The Canadian Dimension
180 (1)
Rasta, the Black Worker, and the British Crisis
181 (3)
The Education System and the Growth of the Rastas
184 (5)
Rastas and the State: The Case of Birmingham
189 (2)
From Shades of Grey to Cashmore's Rastaman
191 (1)
The Shades of Grey Report
192 (3)
Blacks, Rastas and the Prisons
195 (2)
Rasta and the Challenge of the Crisis
197 (2)
Rastafari Women
199 (1)
Whither Rasta? From Cultural Resistance to Organised Resistance
200 (2)
The New Cross Massacre and Uprisings
202 (1)
Uprising in 1981
203 (3)
Conclusion
206 (5)
Repatriation and Rastafari, the Ethiopian Revolution and the Settlement in Shashamane
211 (21)
Back to Africa
211 (1)
The Slaves and the Concept of Repatriation
212 (1)
The Sierra Leone Scheme
213 (1)
The Liberian Settlement
214 (3)
Marcus Garvey, Liberia and Repatriation
217 (1)
Garveyism and Bilbo
218 (2)
Rastafari and Repatriation
220 (4)
The Shashamane Settlement and the Ethiopian Revolution
224 (2)
The Unfolding of the Revolution
226 (3)
Rastas, Repatriation and Africa
229 (3)
Conclusion: Rastafari: From Cultural Resistance to Cultural Liberation 232 (4)
Index 236
The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers
Format Hardcover
Subject
ISBN/SKU 0520044568
Author Robert A. Hill (EDT)
Publisher Univ of California Pr
Publish Date November 1983
Annotation
Letters and archival documents depict the life of Marcus Garvey

Shaky Bones: a story of the Harlem Renaissance
by Pamela Dell
Author: Dell, Pamela
In 1926, a twelve-year-old aspiring poet nicknamed Shaky Bones enters the first
annual Harlem All-School Young Poets Competition.
Maple Plain, Minn.: Traditions Books, c2004, 47 p.
Reviews for this Title:
School Library Journal Review: (The following is a combined review for Gavilan:
A Story of Hollywood during the McCarthy Era and Shaky Bones: A Story of the Harlem
Renaissance.) Gr 4-6–This series blends fact and fiction to describe moments
in American history. Unfortunately, these titles are uneven. The books are attractive,
full of archival black-and-white photographs with informative captions and sidebars
throughout, but the first-person narratives are slight and dry. In Gavilan, seventh-grader
Ben is ostracized when neighborhood kids learn that his father has been blacklisted.
In Shaky Bones, 12-year-old Simon Brocade is growing up in a vibrant cultural
atmosphere and aspires to be a poet, but is confronted with the accusation of
plagiarism. In both titles, conversations are stilted and unfamiliar vocabulary
is highlighted in a distracting manner (in bold and in a larger font) within the
text. While the factual material is well presented, the books are unlikely to
be read for pleasure. Each volume includes a brief history of the period, a time
line, extension activities, and a few additional resources. A fine idea, but not
well executed.–Rita Hunt Smith, Hershey Public Library, PA (Reviewed March
1, 2004) (School Library Journal, vol 50, issue 3, p208)
Other titles associated with this book:
Shaky Bones: a story of the Harlem Renaissance
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
1591870402
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20040620
• TID: 124908

Ebony rising: short fiction of the greater Harlem Renaissance
era
edited by Craig Gable
Author: Various Authors
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, c2004, xlii, 552 p.
Notes:
Fifty-two short stories
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Hope deferred / Alice Dunbar-Nelson -- The closing door / Angelina Weld Grimke
-- Mary Elizabeth / Jessie Redmon Fauset -- The comet / W. E. B. Du Bois --
The foolish and the wise: Sallie Runner is introduced to Socrates / Leila Amos
Pendleton -- The foolish and the wise: Sanctum 777 N. S. D. C. O. U. meets Cleopatra
/ Leila Amos Pendleton -- Becky / Jean Toomer -- Esther / Jean Toomer -- Vignettes
of the dusk / Eric Walrond -- Blue aloes / Ottie B. Graham -- Slackened Caprice
/ Ottie B. Graham -- The city of refuge / Rudolph Fisher -- The golden penknife
/ S. Miller Johnson -- Mademoiselle Tasie / Eloise Bibb Thompson -- Grist in
the mill / Wallace Thurman -- Hannah Byde / Dorothy West -- Muttsy / Zora Neale
Hurston -- The Eatonville anthology / Zora Neale Hurston -- Cordelia the Crude
/ Wallace Thurman -- Smoke, lilies, and jade / Richard Bruce Nugent -- Wedding
day / Gwendolyn B. Bennett -- City love / Eric Walrond -- Lynching for profit
/ George S. Schuyler -- Highball / Claude McKay -- Game / Eugene Gordon -- Masks
/ Eloise Bibb Thompson -- Bathesda of Sinners Run / Maude Irwin Owens -- He
must think it out / Florida Ruffin Ridley -- Anthropoi / John F. Matheus --
Prologue to a life / Dorothy West -- Sanctuary / Nella Larsen -- Door-stops
/ May Miller -- Cross crossings cautiously / Anita Scott Coleman -- Why Adam
ate the apple / Mercedes Gilbert -- The needle's point / J. Saunders Reddiing
-- Crazy Mary / Claude Mckay -- His last day / Chester Himes -- A summer tragedy
/ Arna Bontemps -- Barrel staves / Arna Bontemps -- Why, you reckon / Langston
Hughes -- Spanish blood / Langston Hughes -- John Archer's nose / Rudolph Fisher
-- Mob madness / Marion Vera Cuthbert -- Gesture / Georgia Douglas Johnson --
Pope Pius the only / Richard Bruce Nugent -- Silt / Richard Wright -- The return
of a modern prodigal / Octavia B. Wynbush -- Hate is nothing / Marita Bonner
-- The whipping / Marita Bonner -- A modern fable / Chester Himes -- A matter
of record / Ted Posten -- Girl, colored / Marian Minus.
Other Contributors:
Gable, Craig, 1967-
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0253343984 : Hardcover - University Press
0253216753
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20040920
• TID: 128392

Angel of Harlem: a novel based on the life of Dr. May Chinn
Kuwana Haulsey
Author: Haulsey, Kuwana, 1973-
Chronicles the odyssey of Dr. May Chinn from aspiring musician, through her
struggles against racism to become a doctor, to her friendships with Langston
Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, to her accomplishments in 1920s New York City.
New York: One World/Ballantine Books, 2004, 340 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: May Edward Chinn (1896–1980), the first black
female doctor in New York City, is the inspiration for Haulsey's (TheRed Moon)
stirring second novel. May's mother, Lulu, makes tremendous sacrifices for her
talented daughter, working to send May to the best schools and to secure a piano
for May to explore her musical talent. A high school pregnancy is a hurdle,
but Lulu arranges for the baby's informal adoption, and May aces the entrance
examination for Columbia's Teacher's College. When a racist professor forces
her away from music, she turns to science, doggedly continuing through medical
school despite setbacks and discouragement, earning the grudging respect of
her colleagues, the gratitude of her patients and the attention of a series
of suitors. After she completes an internship at Harlem Hospital (the first
black woman to do so), she works in a sanatorium before eventually opening her
own practice. The novel is faithful to the known details of Chinn's life, and
the vibrancy of 1920s Harlem shines through in Chinn's fictitious encounters
with prominent historical figures of the time, from Zora Neale Hurston and Langston
Hughes to Jean Toomer, Fats Waller and Wallace Thurman. Haulsey's respectful
homage to Chinn and her accomplishments will bring overdue attention to this
notable figure in African-American history. Agent, Eileen Cope at Lowenstein/Yost
Associates. (Sept. 28)
— Staff (Reviewed September 6, 2004) (Publishers Weekly, vol 251, issue
36, p46)
Other titles associated with this book:
Novel based on the life of Dr. May Chinn
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0375508708 : Hardcover
0375761330 : Paperback
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20050220
• TID: 131382
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, copyright 1993, 277 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews Fourteen black women write of racism and exploitation, passing
southern folkways, social and color discrimination within the black community,
and love and corruption among upper-class whites--all in styles that range from
romantic melodrama to social realism, irony to broad humor. Many of the 28 stories
here--written during the flowering of black literary culture in the 20's and
30's and most published originally in African-American magazines (The Crisis,
Opportunity, etc.)--have never before been reprinted. For those who know Harlem
Renaissance names like Jessie Redmon Fauset and Nella Larsen without having
found examples of their work, Knopf's anthology provides a convenient introduction,
although--perhaps typical for magazine fiction--many of the pieces are less
valuable as literature than for what they reveal about the cultural context.
Dorothy West writes affectingly of family situations impinged upon by racial
issues. In Marita Bonner's more tragic vision, the narrator of "One Boy's
Story" plays out a bloody, mythic drama. Leila Amos Pendleton's uneducated
protagonist insists Socrates ("Sockertees") and Cleopatra ("Clea
Patrick") were black; in spite of the Afrocentric vision, her dialect stories
would probably not pass muster today. The "wonder-quality of her soul"
can't stop Angelina Weld Grimkª's tragic Agnes from a desperate act of
violence. Zora Neale Hurston's "John Redding Goes to Sea," written
while Hurston was an undergraduate at Howard, confirms her critical standing
by showing her youthful skill and talent. Editor Knopf (Univ. of Wisconsin)
also provides historical background, brief bios for 11 authors; her discussion
of the fiction rarely goes beyond summary and sometimes reveals surprise endings.
Not always a great read, but the only anthology of its kind.
(Kirkus Reviews, March 1, 1993)
Other Contributors:
Knopf, Marcy, 1969-: editor; McKay, Nellie Y.
Other titles associated with this book:
Harlem renaissance stories by women
Women's Harlem Renaissance stories
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0813519446 : Hardcover - University Press
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 000147
Home to Harlem
by Claude McKay ; foreword by Wayne F. Cooper
Author: McKay, Claude, 1890-1948
Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1987, c1928, xxvi, 340 p
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
1555530230
1555530249
1874509980 : Paperback
0911860274 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Added to NoveList: 20040620
• TID: 124567

Here in Harlem: poems in many voices
by Walter Dean Myers
Author: Myers, Walter Dean, 1937-
Acclaimed writer Walter Dean Myers celebrates the people of Harlem with these
powerful and soulful first-person poems in the voices of the residents who make
up the legendary neighborhood: basketball players, teachers, mail carriers,
jazz artists, maids,veterans, nannies, students, and more. Exhilarating and
electric, these poems capture the energy and resilience of a neighborhood and
a people.
New York: Holiday House, 2004, 88 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ In this Whitman-esque ode to time and the
city, the "crazy quilt patterns" of Harlem are reflected in the voices
of the neighborhood's "big-time people and its struggling folk," of
little girls and blind old veterans, poets and mechanics, boxers and nannies,
ballplayers and blues singers, laborers and jazz artists. Echoes of Cullen,
Hughes, and Hurston, Baldwin, Wright, and DuBois, Marcus, Malcolm, and Martin,
Booker T., Van Der Zee, and the Duke reverberate in this chorus of voices, modeled
on Edgar Lee Masters's Spoon River Anthology. The volume celebrates the varied
music of the neighborhood—plaintive, joyful, expansive, sly, and bluesy—and
photographs from the author's collection offer a superb visual complement. One
of Myers's best—and that's saying a lot. Sure to be a classic. (Poetry.
12+)
(Kirkus Reviews, November 15, 2004)
Features about this author or title:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 2005 -> Older Readers Category
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
YALSA Best Books for Young Adults -> 2005
Author Web Sites:
1. About Walter Dean Myers : Features author-supplied biographical information
and an interview.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0823418537 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20050120
• TID: 131195
Best short stories by Negro writers, The: an anthology from 1899 to the present
Author: Various Authors
Other Contributors: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967: editor
Boston,: Little, Brown, [1967], xvii, 508 p.
Notes:
Later edition published as: The Best Short Stories by Black Writers (Boston:
Back Bay Books)
Other titles associated with this book:
The Best short stories by Black writers
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 121587

Lift every voice and sing: a pictorial tribute to the Negro National Anthem
by James Weldon Johnson
Author: Johnson, James Weldon, 1871-1938
Twenty-two black-and-white photographs accompany this version of the song that
has come to be considered the African American national anthem.
New York: Jum at the Sun/Hyperion Books for Children, 2000, [32] p.
Publishers Weekly Review: In honor of this song's centennial anniversary, this volume collects 22 often stirring black-and-white archival photographs to illustrate Johnson's powerful lyrics, set to music by his brother, John Rosamond Johnson. Smith's rather spotty introduction offers a brief biographical sketch of the siblings and outlines the genesis of the song (though it is the back jacket flap that suggests that James W. Johnson was asked by the Florida high school where he served as principal to compose the song for a celebration of Abraham Lincoln's birthday). Two decades later, in 1920, the NAACP proclaimed the composition "The Negro National Anthem." Crisply reproduced photographs ranging from the sobering to the uplifting correspond to the words of the anthem. "Out from the gloomy past,/ Till now we stand at last/ Where the white gleam/ of our bright star is cast" shows an enchanting toddler girl in a white wool coat and matching hat holding hands with two adults among a crowd. A photograph of Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech is paired with "Lest our feet stray from the places,/ Our God, where we met Thee.... " Other memorable shots include the scarred back of a captive man ("Stony the road we trod,/ Bitter the chastening rod"), an exhausted boy cotton-picker asleep in the fields and a girl learning to read. Unfortunately, though the photos are credited, they neither include the year nor the context in which they were taken. The melody line concludes the book, and the many children featured in the photographs will draw a young audience into this affecting volume. All ages. (Jan.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews Celebrating the centenary of the song frequently dubbed "The
Negro National Anthem," this matches those stirring lyrics to equally heartfelt
black-and-white photos. Ranging from family groups, choirs, and crowds to a
whip-scarred back, wrinkled hands and a tear-streaked cheek. Included are civil-rights
marchers, cotton pickers, portraits formal and candid, the famous, and the unknown.
The photographs are so well chosen and so thoughtfully laid out that it's a
shame more recognition is not given to the book's designer. Introduced with
a personal and historical note by Henrietta M. Smith, capped by James Weldon
Johnson's brother's simple musical arrangement, it's a fitting tribute to a
long struggle. Read it—better yet, sing it—to children, and let
them pore over the powerful pictures. (musical notation, photo credits) (Picture
book. 6+)
(Kirkus Reviews, November 15, 2000)
Other Contributors:
Johnson, John Rosamond, 1873-1954
Other titles associated with this book:
Lift every voice & sing
Lift ev'ry voice and sing
Pictorial tribute to the Negro National Anthem
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0786806265 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0786825421
0802782507 : Hardcover - Juvenile
014118387X : Paperback
0802774423 : Paperback
0802782515 : Library binding - Juvenile
0606087990 : DEMCO Turtleback
9997483197 : Hardcover - Juvenile
9997506499 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20050120
• TID: 131221
Conquest, The: the story of a Negro pioneer
Introduction by Leathern Dorsey
Author: Micheaux, Oscar, 1884-1951
Lincoln, NE: Bison Books, copyright 1994, 311 p.
Notes:
Originally published in 1913
Other Contributors:
Dorsey, Leathern
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0803282095 : Paperback - University Press
0743460588 : Paperback
0836986326 : Hardcover - Reference
0585266352 : E-Book
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 045204
Journal of Biddy Owens, The: the Negro leagues
by Walter Dean Myers
Author: Myers, Walter Dean, 1937-
Teenager Biddy Owens' 1948 journal about working for the Birmingham Black Barons
includes the games and the players, racism the team faces from New Orleans to
Chicago, and his family's resistance to his becoming a professional baseball
player. Includes a historical note about the evolution of the Negro Leagues.
New York: Scholastic, 2001, 141 p.
Gr. 5-7. In this fictional journal, part of the My Name Is America series, 17-year-old Biddy Owens tells of his year as “equipment manager, scorekeeper, errand boy, and sometimes right fielder” for the Birmingham Black Barons. The year is 1948, the last year of the Negro Leagues, and the book offers not just one boy’s experiences and growth but also an appreciation of the trials and triumphs of black ballplayers, particularly in the South. Biddy’s episodic story takes readers from his home, where economic troubles strain relations, to the road, where a remark like “We don’t serve no nigras here” is commonplace to the ballparks of America, in which the playing field is generally level (if a little rocky). The book has two other notable aspects. First, the writing is infused with a love of baseball that is never sappy. And second, this novel clearly portrays the ongoing racial prejudice of the era without making that the focus of the story. A very readable addition to the series.
(Reviewed February 1, 2001) -- Carolyn Phelan
School Library Journal Review: Gr 5 Up–Myers writes in the voice of the 17-year-old equipment manager for the 1948 Birmingham Black Barons baseball team. Through Biddy's journal, readers are introduced not only to the last great year of the Negro Leagues, but also to the institutional racism and blatant bigotry that existed in mid-20th-century America. The teen documents the action of the games, records the jokes and discussions that take place on the long bus rides to distant ball parks, complains about his younger sister, and writes about his hopes and desires for the future. A sometimes right fielder, he realizes that he will never be a great player and turns his dreams to attending college and becoming a journalist or sports writer. Intertwined with detailed descriptions of hits, runs, wins, and losses, Biddy describes his anger at not being served at a five-and-dime lunch counter and his yearning to stand up for his rights. Myers refers to actual players of the time: everyone talks about Jackie Robinson and Satchel Paige; Willie Mays is a member of the Birmingham Black Barons; and Biddy meets Hank Aaron, who plays for the Indiana Clowns. A final section includes a fictional epilogue, a historical note, black-and-white photos, and information about the author. Direct readers who want more information to Patricia McKissack's Black Diamond: The Story of the Negro Baseball League (Scholastic, 1994).–Shawn Brommer, South Central Library System, Madison, WI (Reviewed April 1, 2001) (School Library Journal, vol 47, issue 4, p146)
Kirkus Reviews Biddy Owens, 17, "equipment manager, scorekeeper, errand
boy, and sometimes right fielder" for the Birmingham Black Barons, narrates
in diary form the twilight time of the Negro Leagues. This solid entry in the
"My Name Is America" series must cover a lot of ground—Jim Crow
laws, the beginnings of civil-rights unrest, the integration of the major leagues,
adolescent yearnings (soft-pedaled), and baseball, baseball, baseball—but
Myers (Bad Boy, above, etc.) handles it all with relative ease. There is rather
more exposition of life in the South than would likely have appeared in a contemporary
journal, but this is not too intrusive and is quickly overshadowed by Biddy's
agreeable voice as he weighs a baseball career (unlikely, given his admittedly
limited ability) against going to college. Biddy's family comes to life as honestly
as the historical figures he works with on a day-to-day basis. Baseball legends
Satchel Paige, Willie Mays, and Hank Aaron all make cameo appearances, but the
characters who dominate are those whose careers largely ended with the Negro
Leagues: the 1948 Black Barons, led by second baseman and manager Piper Davis,
whose fierce determination to win carries the team—and the reader—through
a grueling pennant race to what was to become the last Negro League World Series.
The tale is suffused with pride and affection for these first-class ballplayers
who labored as second-class citizens, and with a real wistfulness at the passing
of an era. Rich historical context, fully realized characters, great baseball
action, and trademark Myers humor combine to make this one a homerun. (Fiction.
9-14)
(Kirkus Reviews, March 15, 2001)
Features about this author or title:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Sports -> Baseball
Author Web Sites:
1. About Walter Dean Myers : Features author-supplied biographical information
and an interview.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0439095034 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 095988
SURVEYS, HANDBOOKS, TREATISES
Patton, Sharon F. African-American Art. N6538.N5 P371 1998.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Driskell, David C., ed. African American Aesthetics: a Postmodernist View.This collection builds on the pioneering work of Locke, Herring and Porter. African-American art is discussed in the context of American art, in illustrated scholarly essays.

Hooks, Bell. Art on My Mind: Visual Politics.

Vlach, John M. The Afro-American Tradition in Decorative Arts. Folio Originally published to accompany a major exhibition, this is a pioneering work on folk traditions.

Fine, Elsa Honig. The Afro-American Artist: a Search for Identity. This well-illustrated historical survey from the colonial period on, includes extensive notes and bibliography.
Atkinson, J. Edward. Black Dimensions in Contemporary American Art. A visual survey of 50 artists, with short introductory essays by Edward Spriggs, then Director of the Studio Museum in Harlem, and David Driskell.
Dover, Cedric. American Negro Art. A heavily illustrated survey from the colonial period to the 20th century. Artist and general index, selected portraits of artists, and bibliography. An important contribution following in the footsteps of Locke and Porter.

Porter, James A. Modern Negro Art.By the first African-American art historian, the "father of Black art history," this is the classic work on the subject, the "first to denote and define the African impulse in the visual arts in the U.S." Porter also arranged the first exhibition of contemporary African art in the U.S. (1951, Howard University). David Driskell's introduction to the 1992 edition is an important review of the development of African-American art history.
Locke, Alain. Negro Art: Past and Present. Locke was the "first major advocate, critic, patron, and writer on Afro-American art." His landmark work surveys the linkages of African-American art to the legacy of African art. For an excellent bibliography of Locke's publications see Note 18, p. 25 in Against the Odds listed on p. 4 of this bibliography.
Du Bois, W.E.B. The Negro American Artisan. Du Bois' huge body of work includes this important title, probably the first survey of African-American art. (See also the W.E.B. Du Bois WWW site in Internet Resources.)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ENCYCLOPEDIAS AND DICTIONARIES
African-American Mosaic: a Library of Congress Resource Guide for the Study of Black History and Culture. Main Library Reference. An essential recent publication; see also the WWW Page listed under Internet Resources.

Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History.Main Library Reference. This major 5-volume work includes entries on art collections in vol. 1, painting and sculpture in vol. 4, and many cross-references and biographies of figures such as James A. Porter.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCE WORKS
Part A. The following three titles should be consulted first:

Cederholm. Afro-American Artists: a Bio-Bibliographical Directory. The first major biographical dictionary of African-American artists, covering the colonial period to 1973. Includes exhibition catalogs; reviews; periodicals, including newspapers; and books. The A-Z entries include brief biographical information, lists of works and exhibitions, collections and reference sources for each artist. An essential work.

Igoe. 250 years of Afro-American Art: an Annotated Bibliography. A comprehensive work including 3900 artists covering three centuries. Generally, photographers, architects and designers are excluded. Basic, Artist, and Subject (topical and organizational) bibliographies, with appendices on anonymous artists and artist groups.
Thomison. The Black Artist in America: an Index to Reproductions.Listing Black artists from the colonial period to the present, this source is useful as a biographical work; it cites reproductions that have appeared in books, periodicals and catalogs through 1990, including most media as well as folk art. Selective subject index, bibliography, list of institutions, audiovisual materials and exhibition catalogs.
Part B.

ISBN 1878271385
11 x 11 inches (27.9 x 27.9 cm), Hardcover binding, 96 pages
150 b/w illus,
Out of print and out of stock (publication date 1/1/1992)
A PAPress publication; Carton quantity: 25
$22.95
Jack Travis has put together an elegant volume of essays, biographical sketches,
and photographs of architectural work entitled African American Architects in
Current Practice ... In black-and-white photos and drawings, he makes a clean
edged presentation of the works of 35 African-American architects by what they
do ... Supplementing the projects are short bios of the architects and an essay
by each, all of which deepen the definition of the architects to who they are.
—Stephanie Stubbs, AIA Memo
"A long overdue book. Jack's edited monograph gives due recognition to
the contribution of African Americans that have remained invisible. The book
... begins with introductory essays, followed by the practies that are profiled,
and ending with summary information, including a chronology of landmark events,
list of distinguished practitioners, and professional resources."
—Roberta Feldman, FAE
Commentaries by Vincent Scully, Dean Harry G. Robinson III, Sharon E. Sutton,
Eugene Kohn, Harvey Gantt, and Michael Adams supplement the profiles of the
architects. These distinguished educators and professionals provide a wideranging
overview of the role of black Americans in the pratice and education of architecture.
Afro-American Folk Art and Crafts. . Covers quilters, sculptors, instrument-makers, basketmakers, builders, blacksmiths and potters from the colonial period. A lengthy bibliography, subject guide, filmography, and important essays such as Robert Farris Thompson's 1969 essay on African influences.
Black Artists on Art. This 2-volume work by Samella Lewis is an illustrated survey of several hundred contemporary (1969) African-American artists and Black artists working in the U.S. Includes artists' statements and brief biographical entries at the end of the volumes.

Black Photographers, 1840-1940: an Illustrated Bio-Bibliography. and An Illustrated Bio-Bibliography of Black Photographers, 1940-1988. . Deborah Willis-Thomas' groundbreaking companion volumes are heavily illustrated, with excellent bibliographies and exhibition chronologies. Short biographical entries include exhibitions and collections in which works are included, as well as a selected bibliography.
Directory of People of Color in the Visual Arts. 759 artists, art historians, critics and arts administrators are listed, with indexes by state, ethnicity and discipline.
Folk Artists Biographical Index. Ethnicity is indicated in the artist entries; since a large proportion of folk artists are African-American this is an important source.
Free Within Ourselves: African-American Artists in the Collection of the National Museum of American Art. While not a biographical work per se, this serves as a reference work, a cross-section of 31 artists from one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of African-American art (including the work of self-taught artists) from the colonial to contemporary period. Many illustrations, excellent bibliography of archival resources, books, exhibition catalogs, and articles, and a list of the African-American artists represented in the NMAA (105 as of 1992) which are searchable online (see Inventory of American Painting in the Internet section).
Twentieth-Century African-American Writers and Artists. An A-Z work which includes about 80 "prominent" painters and sculptors (i.e. who have exhibited in major museums.). Summary of artist's life, short critical note, exhibition and collections list and selected bibliography.
20th Century American Folk, Self-taught, and Outsider Art. Guide to the artists, organizations, publishers,museums, and listing by state. Bibliography of books, exhibition catalogs and articles. NB: Excludes decoys, quilts and pottery.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDEXES, BIBLIOGRAPHIES, AND LIBRARY CATALOGS
African-American Traditions in Song, Sermon, Tale, and Dance, 1600s-1920: an Annotated Bibliography of Literature, Collections, and Artworks.
*Art Abstracts (1984-present). Indexes about 300 journals in the visual arts; covering topices from architecture to video.
*Art Index Retrospective 1929-1984.
*Artbibliographies Modern (1974-present). Indexes articles, books, dissertations, and exhibition catalogs on twentieth-century art.
*Arts and Humanities Citation Index. A major index for the arts and humanities,covering a broad range of scholarly journals.
*BHA: Bibliography of the History of Art (1973-present, including RILA and RAA). The major scholarly resource for the history of art.
Catalog of the Library of the National Museum of African Art. Includes a number of citations under the heading African-American Art and it sub-headings.
Davis. Black Artists in the United States: an Annotated Bibliography of Books, Articles, and Dissertations on Black Artists, 1779-1979. The annotated entries also include general periodicals such as Ebony, Encore, The Messenger, Afro-American Woman's Journal, etc. Includes an index.
Design and Applied Arts Index. Index Shelves. Use heading Black Designers and its cross-references.
Ethnoarts Index. Index Shelves. See subject index under African Diaspora. Indexes books, articles, chapters, conference papers, theses, dissertations, exhibition reviews, and auction catalogs.
Holmes. The Complete Annotated Resource Guide to Black American Art: Books, Doctoral Dissertations, Exhibition Catalogs, Periodicals, Films, Slides, Large Prints, Speakers, Filmstrips, Video Tapes, Black Museums, Art alleries...Comprehensive but dated; useful for the many citations of exhibitions without catalogs, but only ephemeral checklists, etc. (list by organization). Also a helpful chronology from 1875 to 1980, of books, films, exhibitions, etc.
Karpel. Arts in America: a Bibliography. The major, though dated, bibliography for American art. Includes bibliographies, collections and exhibition catalogs, a list of serials and periodicals, index by medium, etc. Uses term Blacks, with numerous sub-headings. (Also uses Afro-Americans but fewer citations under that heading. See the Index volume (4).
*Newspaper Abstracts (1989-Present). An excellent source for exhibition reviews, book reviews, and articles on African-American art, covering a wide range of newspapers.
Staats. African Americans and the Visual Arts: a Resource Guide to Books, Articles, and Dissertations, 1900-1990. A basic, un-annotated, bibliography from a wide range of sources.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COLLECTION AND EXHIBITION CATALOGS: a selection
African-American Artists, 1880-1987: Selections from the Evans-Tibbs Collection.
One of the premier collections and archives of African-American artists' work
in the U.S., the Evans-Tibbs Collection is located in Washington, DC.
Africobra: the First Twenty Years. Africobra was a political movement with a black ideology founded in the 1960s.
Afro-American Collection, Fisk University. The collections at Fisk, including many African objects brought back by missionaries, were begun in the 19th century. The Harmon Foundation gave Fisk approximately 400 works of art in 1968. David Driskell, a former director, provides an essay in this catalog of 63 artists. Selected bibliography.
Against the Odds: African-American Artists and the Harmon Foundation. The Foundation provided support to African-American artists beginning in the '30s. In the late '60s, its collections were dispersed among Fisk and Hampton Universities, the National Museum of American Art, and the National Portrait Gallery. This catalog includes an essay on early exhibitions of African-American art, and the Foundation's early activities. Biographical entries on the artists, and the exhibition record of the Foundation.
Baking in the Sun: Visionary Images from the South: Selections from the Collection of Sylvia Warren Lowe. This catalog includes 16 'outsider' artists, both Black and White, 180 works of art; and a chapter on Africanisms in Afro-American visionary art.
Barnett-Aden Collection. Founded in 1943 by James V. Herring and Alonzo J. Aden of Howard University, this gallery welcomed artists of every race. The catalog of this rich collection includes a brief survey of African-American art of the 19th and 20th centuries, and is heavily illustrated (120 ills.); biographies of the artists.
Black Art Ancestral Legacy: the African Impulse in African-American Art. An essential work, a major exhibition catalog with scholarly essays. Forty-nine artists are represented, with substantial biographical entries and photos of the artists.
Black Folk Art in America, 1930-1980. Another major exhibition.
Black History and Artistry: Work by Self-Taught Painters from the Blanchard-Hill Collection.
Blues Aesthetic: Black Culture and Modernism.
Caribbean Festival Arts.
Exhibition of African Negro Art [Howard University, 1953]. Curated by James V. Herring, who founded the Art Department at Howard, the first such program in a predominantly black institution of higher learning; in the '30s, Howard was the center for African-American art.
Exhibition of Productions by Negro Artists [Harmon Foundation]. 1933 Permanent Reserve II.
Faces of the Gods: Art and Altars of Africa and the African Americas. An essential exhibition catalog by Robert Farris Thompson.
Harmon and Harriet Kelley Collection of African American Art. A fine private collection assembled in just the space of a decade. Includes both trained and folk artists, 124 pieces/70 artists in this exhibition.
Hidden Heritage: Afro-American Art, 1800-1950. An exhibition curated by David Driskell to include artists not in the 1976 "Two Centuries" exhibition.
Negro Artists: an Illustrated Review of Their Achievements. Permanent Reserve II. Another exhibition of the Harmon Foundation.
Next Generation: Southern Black Aesthetic. An exhibition at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem, NC, which often features African-American artists.
Two Centuries of Black American Art. A landmark exhibition, the largest of its type at the time, of 63 artists from numerous public and private collections. Curated by David Driskell.
United American Healthcare Corporation Collection. Established in 1992, this Detroit collection includes 20th century works by African-American artists; the catalog features 10 artists from the collection, with 72 works of art.
Walter O. Evans Collection of African American Art. A major private collection of 19th and 20th century African-American art; catalog of a traveling exhibition.

Almost to freedom
by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson ; illustrations by Colin Bootman
Author: Nelson, Vaunda Micheaux
Tells the story of a young girl's dramatic escape from slavery via the Underground
Railroad, from the perspective of her beloved rag doll.
Minneapolis, Minn.: Carolrhoda Books, c2003, 1 v. (unpaged)
Reviews for this Title:
Booklist Review: Gr. 1-3. Lindy’s beloved rag doll, Sally, tells how Lindy’s
family escapes on the Underground Railroad to find freedom “in a place
called North.” The doll’s narrative and Bootman’s dark, dramatic
paintings bring close the child’s daily experience: the cruel separation
and physical punishment, and then the adventure of running away and hiding.
At times it’s hard to distinguish Sally from Lindy--why not just let the
child tell the story herself? But then there’s an anguished twist in the
plot: the child and her doll are separated. Lindy gets away, but in the turmoil
she leaves her doll behind. When another escaping child finds Sally and hugs
her to herself, the story comes full circle. That’s a powerful way to
express the sorrow of loving families torn apart, and Bootman’s stirring
portraits, many of them set at night, in rich shades of purple and brown, show
that the small rag doll bears witness to historical events of cruelty and courage.
-- Hazel Rochman (BookList, 09-15-2003, p247)
School Library Journal Review: Gr 1-4???A compelling story told from the point of view of an enslaved child's beloved rag doll. Made for young Lindy by her mama, Miz Rachel, the hand-stitched toy is the girl's most prized possession. She tells her, "Your name be Sally. We gonna be best friends." When the child's father is sold and Lindy is beaten for asking Massa's son how to spell her name, the horrid conditions of the cotton plantation become intolerable. One night Miz Rachel wakes Lindy and they run for their lives. They are reunited with Mr. Henry and the fugitive family heads North to freedom. They are given shelter at a station on the Underground Railroad, but must flee from slave catchers in the middle of the night. In the frantic scramble, Sally is left behind. The doll is lonely for her friend and worries for the safety of Lindy and her folks. When another child and her mother are sheltered in the basement, the doll joins her new best friend on her trip to Freedom. This accessible story is told in language that is within the experience of a young child and makes its impact without frightening or overwhelming readers. It is ultimately a story of hope and resilience, love and friendship. The evocative oil paintings are expertly rendered and effectively convey the powerful emotions of the tale. A fine addition to most collections.???Luann Toth, School Library Journal --Luann Toth (Reviewed December 1, 2003) (School Library Journal, vol 49, issue 12, p122)
Kirkus Reviews A doll's-eye view of slavery and escape fails to succeed. Miz
Rachel fashioned Sally out of cloth for her little girl, Lindy. Doll and girl
spend all their time together in the field working, at the meetings where freedom
is discussed, and even when Lindy's papa is sold "down the river."
Every last familiar plot twist is here: the difficult field work, the cruel
overseers, the beating Lindy endures when she is caught writing words in the
sand, the harrowing escape, the reunion with Lindy's papa, who has somehow managed
to meet his family on a darkened river road, and the kindly white couple who
hides the threesome in a cellar. Dark, expressive paintings accompany the narrative,
though the brilliantly white headscarves seem oddly misplaced during the nighttime
escape. The dialect fluctuates haphazardly from sentence to sentence losing
the voice altogether. The unusual choice of a doll as narrator may appeal to
some readers. Reread Deborah Hopkinson's Under the Quilt of Night (2001) instead.
(author's note, limited glossary) (Picture book. 6-10)
(Kirkus Reviews, August 1, 2003)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Illustrators category -> 2004
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Coretta
Scott King Honor Books -> Illustrators category -> 2004
3. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Other Contributors:
Bootman, Colin: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
157505342X : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
1575056747 : E-Book - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20040220
• TID: 122271
Amazing Grace
Illustrated by Caroline Binch
Author: Hoffman, Mary, 1945-
Although a classmate says that she cannot play Peter Pan in the school play
because she is Black, Grace discovers that she can do anything she sets her
mind to do.
New York: Dial Books for Young Readers, 1991, unpaged.
Publishers Weekly Review: "Grace was a girl who loved stories." Empowered by the strength of her imagination and the love of her mother and Nana, this dramatic, creative girl constantly adopts roles and identities: Joan of Arc, Anansi the Spider, Hiawatha, Mowgli, Aladdin. When her class plans a presentation of Peter Pan , "Grace knew who she wanted to be." She holds fast despite her classmates' demurrals; Nana, meanwhile, reminds her granddaughter that she can do anything she imagines. When Nana takes Grace to see a famous black ballerina--"from back home in Trinidad"--the determined youngster is aroused by the performance, and wins the role of her dreams. Featuring colloquial dialogue and endearing characters, Hoffman's ( My Grandma Has Black Hair ) tale is truly inspiring. First-timer Birch contributes evocative, carefully detailed watercolor paintings, which add their own share of emotional power and personal passion. Ages 4-8. (Sept.)
Kirkus Reviews Grace loves to act out her favorite stories, taking every part
from Joan of Arc to Mowgli. But when her class learns that they will be doing
Peter Pan, the other kids tell Grace she can't have the lead: Peter's neither
black nor a girl. Fortunately, Nana and Ma have contagious confidence in Grace's
ability, and at the tryouts the class also agrees that Grace is best. It's easy
to catch the wholesomely assertive spirit here--as Binch does, in this excellent
debut, with her detailed, realistic watercolors; vibrant Grace almost springs
from the page.
(Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 1991)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 1992
2. Picture Book Extender - The Other Side
3. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
4. Teaching with Fiction - Exploring Strong Female Characters in Picture Books
5. Teaching with Fiction - R-E-S-P-E-C-T... It's What All Children Need to See
Author Web Sites:
1. Mary Hoffman, Children's Writer : Features author, book and contact information,
news, a web journal, links, and an about-the-author quiz.
Other Contributors:
Binch, Caroline: illus
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0803710402 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0871298090 : Paperback - Juvenile
1854303341 : Hardcover - Juvenile
1854303368 : Hardcover - Juvenile
1854303384 : Hardcover
1854303392 : Hardcover - Religious
0613692306 : Prebind - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 110637
Aunt Harriet's Underground Railroad in the sky
Faith Ringgold
Author: Ringgold, Faith
With Harriet Tubman as her guide, Cassie retraces the steps escaping slaves
took on the Underground Railroad in order to reunite with her younger brother.
New York: Crown, c1992, 1 v. (unpaged)
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: /*STARRED REVIEW*/ Ages 6-9. Cassie, who flew above New York in Tar Beach, now soars among the stars with her little brother Be Be. They come across a mysterious freedom train in the sky and meet Harriet Tubman. While Be Be hops aboard the train right away, Cassie holds back and has to trail it on foot, following the path of her slave ancestors, who took the Underground Railroad north to freedom. Aided by Tubman's whispering voice, Cassie escapes from a plantation, hides in woods and swamps, and learns to recognize safe houses where people will help her. Finally, she flies over Niagara Falls to Canada and freedom, celebrates with Aunt Harriet and Be Be. If the best way to understand others is to walk a mile in their shoes, Cassie learns her people's history well; so will readers of this impressive picture book. Ringgold's dynamic paintings combine historical fact with strongly realized emotions. One powerful double-page spread, based on a recurring dream of Tubman's, shows Aunt Harriet and Be Be flying toward each other within a circle of women dressed in white. Two pages of historical notes on Tubman and the Underground Railroad, including a map and bibliography, round out the volume. While primitive art is not new to picture books, few artists have used it with the narrative and emotional resonance that Ringgold creates in this impressive book. ((Reviewed Nov. 1, 1992)) -- Carolyn Phelan
School Library Journal Review: Gr 2 Up-- Using the symbolic motif of flying as she did in Tar Beach (Crown, 1991), Ringgold reintroduces Cassie and Be Be Lightfoot, who soar above oceans that look like cups of tea and meet a "ramshackled train in the sky" whose conductor is Harriet Tubman. Aunt Harriet, as she is called, explains that the railroad in the sky retraces her route to freedom every 100 years. Meanwhile, Be Be jumps on board. Cassie, who misses the train, must follow, living the slave existence, always one step behind, hoping to rejoin her brother in Canada. What follows is a compelling journey in which the author masterfully integrates fantasy and historical fact in such a way that readers join Cassie in experiencing the fear and the mystery of such a trip. The spare but eloquent text conveys much information, and the artist's flat, primitive illustrations in acrylic on canvas paper lend power and symbolism to one of the most dramatic chapters in American history. Everywhere, Cassie finds clues leading her to Be Be. Everywhere, she receives whispered directions from Aunt Harriet that lead her forward. Everywhere, the threat of capture lurks in the background in the form of the sinister chalkwhite faces of bounty hunters. Although adults may have difficulty with literal interpretation, children with only basic background will recognize that the story is both fact and fantasy--history and allegory. With gripping immediacy, Ringgold puts readers in the story on the side of the victims, insuring, through powerful words and images, "that we will never forget the cost of freedom." Groundbreaking! --Kate McClelland, Perrot Memorial Library, Greenwich, CT
Publishers Weekly Review: Cassie and Be Be, the young protagonists of Ringgold's
Tar Beach , literally wing their way through American history in this otherworldly
journey. On a fantastical flight, the kids encounter an "old ramshackled
train in the sky"--a remnant of the Underground Railroad whose conductor
is Harriet Tubman. Rambunctious Be Be boards the train, leaving his worried
sister to follow behind with only directions from "Aunt Harriet" and
the kindness of strangers to guide her. Despite this work's laudable aims, its
weighty subject matter, heavy symbolism and glitches in logic will likely prove
daunting to young readers. The children's ability to fly is never explained,
while the text mentions their earthbound parents' concern for them. A sense
of time is apparent only in the final spread, which places the action in 1949,
the 100th anniversary of Tubman's first flight to freedom. Ringgold's rich oils
are somewhat more surreal than those in her acclaimed Tar Beach , portraying
faceless hordes of slaves; other paintings present such historical details as
Southern swamps and farmhouses. Cassie, Be Be and Harriet resonate with pride
and energy, but their spirits can't help this work take flight. Ages 4-9. (Feb.)
Other related features:
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Jane Addams Book Award -> Picture Books
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Oprah's Kids' Reading List -> 6-to-9 Years
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Jane
Addams Book Award -> Picture Books
4. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> Slavery in the US
5. Explore Fiction - Easy -> Explore Fiction -> Family -> Brothers
and Sisters -> Brother and Sister
6. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
7. Teaching with Fiction - Picture Books for Middle and High School Students
Author Web Sites:
1. Faith Ringgold's Web Site : Ringgold shares information about herself, her
books, and works in progress..
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0517587688 : Library binding - Juvenile
051758767X
0517885433 : Paperback - Juvenile
0785784837 : Prebind
0606084789 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0780759494 : Prebind
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 114036
Beauty, her basket
by Sandra Belton ; pictures by Cozbi A. Cabrera
Author: Belton, Sandra
While visiting her grandmother in the Sea Islands, a young girl hears about
her African heritage and learns to weave a sea grass basket.
New York: Greenwillow Books, 2004, 32 p.
School Library Journal Review: Gr 1-4–Inside Nana's house in the Sea
Islands is a basket that smells of the sea and is woven from grasses that grow
by the shore. Nana calls it "Beauty, Her Basket." Her granddaughter,
intrigued by this curious name, wants to know its origin, and, on the day this
story takes place, Nana has promised to tell her. She explains how "Way
back in the olden day" those "made to slave" brought with them
from Africa the secrets of how to make nets for catching fish, pots for carrying
water from the sea, and "the knowing of how to make the basket." And,
although so much was ugly in the slave times, the basket, like flowers, is "always
a child of beauty." Nana's Gullah patois and the serious subject matter
make this a somewhat challenging book. Full-bleed illustrations in darkly brilliant
acrylics float and swirl across the page, complementing the lush, evocative
tone of the text. Libraries with a focus on regional literature will want to
purchase this one.–Anna DeWind Walls, Milwaukee Public Library (Reviewed
June 1, 2004) (School Library Journal, vol 50, issue 6, p96)
Other related features:
1. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Other Contributors:
Cabrera, Cozbi S.: illustrator
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0688178219 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0688178227
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20040620
• TID: 125174
Black cowboy, wild horses: a true story
Julius Lester ; [illustrator] Jerry Pinkney
Author: Lester, Julius
A black cowboy is so in tune with wild mustangs that they accept him into the
herd, thus enabling him singlehandedly to take them to the corral.
New York: Dial Books, c1998, 1 v. (unpaged)
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: Ages 5-9. One of every three cowboys who helped tame the Wild West was either Mexican or black. This is the true story of one of the latter, Bob Lemmons. In language rich with simile and metaphor, Lester's account focuses on the former slave's uncanny tracking abilities as he trails a herd of mustangs as well as his mission to tame the wild horses and lead them back to the corral. Pinkney's earth-colored gouache and watercolor paintings add the look of the Texas plains to Lester's account and capture the energy of the horses as they gallop across sweeping, double-page spreads. Lester and Pinkney's manifest love and respect for the West and cowboys of color, whose contributions have been too long overlooked, distinguish their latest collaboration. ((Reviewed May 1, 1998)) -- Michael Cart
School Library Journal Review: Gr 2-4--Pinkney and Lester add a picture-book chapter to the lore of this nation's "true West" with the retelling of a story of a wild horse hunt by the black cowboy Bob Lemmons. He and his stallion, Warrior, wander on the prairie until they find the tracks of the animals they seek. Bob then spends days in a very slow approach to the herd. Horse and rider finally join the herd and are accepted by the wild horses, until at last Bob challenges the lead stallion for control. On Warrior's back, he fights the stallion, defeats him, and then leads the animals into captivity in the ranch corral. Throughout, both text and pictures emphasize the blending of all life. The linkages between the cowboy, the animals, and the natural world are so strong that lines separating them are blurred. Lester and Pinkney's stated aims were to recast their childhood love of cowboys and the Old West with more recent historical research into the contributions of men of color, both black and Hispanic. They have done that, and achieved something else as well: youngsters will reflect on the relationships between humans and other animals. Pinkney's pictures were never better, making it all the more unfortunate that text boxes cover some of the action. Lester's overuse of metaphor is also a drawback. Still, this book will inspire heavy-duty thinking on the part of young readers.--Ruth Semrau, formerly at Lovejoy School, Allen, TX
Publishers Weekly Review: A spirit of freedom pervades the pages of this picture
book, accompanied by the sound of thundering hooves and the feel of the heat
and dust of the plains. Based on an incident in the life of Texas cowboy Bob
Lemmons, the tale centers on his success in corralling a herd of wild mustangs
with only the aid of his horse. Possessed of a legendary tracking ability, Lemmons,
a former slave, follows the drove day and night, infiltrating the herd astride
his black steed, Warrior. In a dramatic climax, he defeats the mustang stallion
for possession of the herd. Lester and Pinkney, who previously collaborated
on John Henry and Sam and the Tigers, reunite in an impressive display of teamwork,
transporting readers, through the alchemy of visual and verbal imagery, to the
heart of the action. The resulting sense of immediacy offers a vivid taste of
the cowboy life, whether it's hunkering down all night during a sluicing rain
or riding under the wide-open skies. Lester studs his seamless prose with powerful
descriptions, such as when a hawk is "suspended on cold threads of unseen
winds," or the mustangs sweep toward the corral as "a dark surge of
flesh flashing across the plains like black lightning." The fluid brushwork
of Pinkney's watercolors seem tailor-made for the flow of muscle, mane and tail
of wild mustangs galloping across the prairie. Notable for the light it sheds
on a fascinating slice of Americana, this book is essential for anyone interested
in the Wild West. Ages 5-up. (May)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Julius Lester
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1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Parents' Choice Award -> Story Books category -> 1998 -> Silver Awards
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Parents' Choice Award -> Story Books category -> 1998 -> Silver Awards
3. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
4. Teaching with Fiction - Galloping through Reading with a Good Horse Book
Author Web Sites:
1. About Julius Lester : Features biographical information and reviews of selected
titles.
Other Contributors:
Pinkney, Jerry: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0803717873 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0803717881
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 111814
Coming on home soon
by Jacqueline Woodson ; illustrated by E.B. Lewis
Author: Woodson, Jacqueline
After Mama takes a job in Chicago during World War II, Ada Ruth stays with Grandma
but misses her mother who loves her more than rain and snow.
New York: Putnam's, c2004, 32 p.
School Library Journal Review: /* Starred Review */ K-Gr 3–A beautifully written and illustrated story from the creators of The Other Side (Putnam, 2001), set during World War II. Ada Ruth waits for the return of her mother, who left home in search of a job. "They're hiring colored women in Chicago since all the men are off fighting in the war." Perfectly matched words and illustrations masterfully bring to life all the emotions that the girl is experiencing as she, her grandmother, and a stray kitten that has come to stay all try to comfort and console one another. As snow continues to fall, the large watercolor pages are filled with scenes of wistful longing–looking out the window, bringing in firewood, giving the kitten some milk, knitting, listening to news on the radio, and capturing the disappointment when the postman passes without stopping. Finally, a letter arrives and, with it, some much-needed money. The first line of the letter reads, "Tell Ada Ruth I'll be coming on home soon." Now, images convey a warm sense of anticipation. The final painting shows a woman with her back to readers approaching a house… home. A tender, heartfelt story that will touch readers.–Mary N. Oluonye, Shaker Heights Public Library, OH (Reviewed October 1, 2004) (School Library Journal, vol 50, issue 10, p137)
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ In a perfect pairing with Woodson's text,
Lewis manages to make his rich watercolors glow with the light of memory in
a simple story of another time of war. His figures and objects fill the real
space they inhabit, however, and appear fully present in our consciousness.
Ada Ruth misses her mama, who has gone off to work cleaning railroad cars in
Chicago. During WWII, when the men were fighting, women were needed to work—even,
as Ada Ruth's mother says, colored women. When a starving kitten comes to their
door, Ada's grandmother doesn't see how they can keep it, but puts down a saucer
of milk just the same. The narrative is filled with quietness: as the snow falls;
as Ada and Grandma wait for the mail that will bring news and money; as the
kitten insinuates itself into mealtimes, skimpy or not. Longing, loneliness,
pride, and doing what needs to be done shine off the pages and into the hearts
of readers. (Picture book. 5-8)
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 2004)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Jacqueline Woodson
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1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 2005 -> Middle Readers Category
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Booklist Editors' Choice -> Books for Youth: Young Readers Category ->
2004
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Caldecott Honor Books -> 2005
4. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Booklist
Editors' Choice -> Books for Youth: Young Readers Category -> 2004
5. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Caldecott
Honor Books -> 2005
6. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Charlotte
Zolotow Honor Books -> 2005
7. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Author Web Sites:
1. Jacqueline Woodson's Web Site : Woodson shares information on herself and
her books.
Other Contributors:
Lewis, Earl B.: illustrator
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0399237488 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20041120
• TID: 129301
Ellington was not a street
written by Ntozake Shange ; illustrations by Kadir Nelson
Author: Shange, Ntozake
A poem from the author's first collection of poetry pays tribute to the community
of talented artists that frequented her childhood home.
New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2004, 40 p.
Goin' someplace special
Patricia C. McKissack ; [illustrated by] Jerry Pinkney
Author: McKissack, Pat, 1944-
In segregated 1950s Nashville, a young African American girl braves a series
of indignities and obstacles to get to one of the few integrated places in town:
the public library.
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, c2001, 36 p.
School Library Journal Review: Gr 3-5-'Tricia Ann's first solo trip out of her neighborhood reveals the segregation of 1950s' Nashville and the pride a young African-American girl takes in her heritage and her sense of self-worth. In an eye-opening journey, McKissack takes the child through an experience based upon her own personal history and the multiple indignities of the period. She experiences a city bus ride and segregated parks, restaurants, hotels, and theaters and travels toward "Someplace Special." In the end, readers see that 'Tricia Ann's destination is the integrated public library, a haven for all in a historical era of courage and change. Dialogue illustrates her confidence and intelligence as she bravely searches for truth in a city of Jim Crow signs. Pinkney re-creates the city in detailed pencil-and-watercolor art angled over full-page spreads, highlighting the young girl with vibrant color in each illustration. A thought-provoking story for group sharing and independent readers.-Mary Elam, Forman Elementary School, Plano, TX Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Publishers Weekly Review: McKissack draws from her childhood in Nashville for
this instructive picture book. "I don't know if I'm ready to turn you loose
in the world," Mama Frances tells her granddaughter when she asks if she
can go by herself to "Someplace Special" (the destination remains
unidentified until the end of the story). 'Tricia Ann does obtain permission,
and begins a bittersweet journey downtown, her pride battered by the indignities
of Jim Crow laws. She's ejected from a hotel lobby and snubbed as she walks
by a movie theater ("Colored people can't come in the front door,"
she hears a girl explaining to her brother. "They got to go 'round back
and sit up in the Buzzard's Roost"). She almost gives up, but, buoyed by
the encouragement of adult acquaintances ("Carry yo'self proud," one
of her grandmother's friends tells her from the Colored section on the bus),
she finally arrives at Someplace Special—a place Mama Frances calls "a
doorway to freedom"—the public library. An afterword explains McKissack's
connection to the tale, and by putting such a personal face on segregation she
makes its injustices painfully real for her audience. Pinkney's (previously
paired with McKissack for Mirandy and Brother Wind) luminescent watercolors
evoke the '50s, from fashions to finned cars, and he captures every ounce of
'Tricia Ann's eagerness, humiliation and quiet triumph at the end. Ages 4-8.
(Sept.)
— Staff (Reviewed August 6, 2001) (Publishers Weekly, vol 248, issue 32,
p89)
Kirkus Reviews In a story that will endear itself to children's librarians
and, for that matter, all library lovers, 'Tricia Ann begs her grandmother to
be allowed to go alone to Someplace Special. Mama Frances acquiesces, sending
her off with instructions: " 'And no matter what, hold yo' head up and
act like you b'long to somebody.' " 'Tricia Ann's special place is not
revealed until the end, but on the way there, the humiliating racism she encounters
on the city bus, in the park, and in a downtown hotel almost causes her to give
up. " 'Getting to Someplace Special isn't worth it,' she sobbed."
When she recalls her grandmother's words: " 'You are somebody, a human
being—no better, no worse than anybody else in this world,' " she
regains the determination to continue her journey, in spite of blatant segregation
and harsh Jim Crow laws. " Public Library: All Are Welcome" reads
the sign above the front door of Someplace Special; Mama Frances calls it "a
doorway to freedom." Every plot element contributes to the theme, leaving
McKissack's autobiographical work open to charges of didacticism. But no one
can argue with its main themes: segregation is bad, learning and libraries are
good. Pinkney's trademark watercolors teem with realistically drawn people,
lush city scenes, and a spunky main character whose turquoise dress, enlivened
with yellow flowers and trim, jumps out of every picture. A lengthy author's
endnote fills in the background for adults on McKissack's childhood experiences
with the Nashville Public Library. This library quietly integrated all of its
facilities in the late 1950s, and provided her with the story's inspiration.
A natural for group sharing; leave plenty of time for the questions and discussion
that are sure to follow. (Picture book. 5-9)
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 2001)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 2002
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Award -> Illustrators category
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Parents' Choice Award -> Picture Books category -> 2001 -> Gold Awards
4. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Coretta
Scott King Award -> Illustrators category
5. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Parents'
Choice Award -> Picture Books category -> 2001 -> Gold Awards
6. Picture Book Extender - The Other Side
7. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
8. Teaching with Fiction - Fiction from the 50 States: Tennessee, North Carolina,
and South Carolina
9. Teaching with Fiction - 'It's Not Fair!' Picture Books About Equality, Justice
and Fairness
Author Web Sites:
1. About Pat McKissack : Features a biography of the author and details on selected
books.
Other Contributors:
Pinkney, Jerry: ill
Other titles associated with this book:
Someplace special
Going someplace special
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0689818858 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 116924
Hot day on Abbott Avenue
by Karen English ; illustrated by Javaka Steptoe
Author: English, Karen
After having a fight, two friends spend the day ignoring each other, until the
lure of a game of jump rope helps them to forget about being mad.
New York: Clarion Books, 2004, 32 p.
School Library Journal Review: /* Starred Review */ PreS-Gr 3–Innovative illustrations add depth and texture to an evocative text. It's a sunny summer day, but close friends Kishi and Renée are on the outs and stubbornly refuse to play together. Their tempers flare right along with the temperature, but eventually the sweltering midday heat subsides and both are lured from their porches by a vigorous game of double Dutch. By the time the ice-cream man turns the corner, all is forgiven and forgotten. Steptoe's found-object and cut-paper collages highlight facial features and depict oppressive summertime weather to perfection. The characters' full, pouting lips and clingy, perspiration-drenched clothes are made of sheer crepe paper; faces, eyelids, and limbs are cut from cardstock; and substantial twists of raffia and twine become jump ropes and dreadlocks. The images are busy without being cluttered. English's simple narrative consists mostly of two to three sentences per page and ends on a gratifying note. This book cheerfully illustrates the significance of a short memory in a lasting friendship.–Catherine Threadgill, Charleston County Public Library, SC (Reviewed July 1, 2004) (School Library Journal, vol 50, issue 7, p75)
Kirkus Reviews It's a hot day—it's also a "best-friend-breakup day."
As Miss Johnson works her crossword puzzle and dozes, as Mr. Paul weeds his
flower bed, Kishi and RenÉe remain resolutely apart: it appears that
Kishi bought the very last blue ice pop, even though she knows that's RenÉe's
favorite. It's a "never-speak-to-her-again-even-if-she-was-the-last-person-on-earth
day." But then the siren song of jump-rope chanting calls and the girls
are reunited in double-dutch—finding final resolution in one last, shared
blue ice pop. English has childhood spats down pat, the apocalyptic sundering
of a friendship miraculously healed by play. Steptoe's textured collage illustrations
feature tissue-paper clothing over paper skin, all set against a background
of rough wooden boards. He renders facial features in a highly naturalistic
manner, with outsized lips and flat noses; it's an effect that may initially
be off-putting for readers accustomed to smooth prettiness, but the total effect
is both original and emotionally effective (particularly when the girls are
squinty-mad, the ugliness of their emotions showing up clearly on their faces).
The final scenes, of play and ice pops, are full of movement and energy and
joy. "So good!" (Picture book. 5-8)
(Kirkus Reviews, May 1, 2004)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 2005 -> Young Readers Category
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
School Library Journal Best Books -> 2004
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> School
Library Journal Best Books -> 2004
4. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
5. Teaching with Fiction - Making Amends: Apology and Forgiveness
Other Contributors:
Steptoe, Javaka, 1971-: illustrator
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0395985277 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20040820
• TID: 126322
Max found two sticks
Brian Pinkney
Author: Pinkney, Brian
Although he doesn't feel like talking, a young boy responds to questions by
drumming on various objects, including a bucket, hat boxes, and garbage cans,
echoing the city sounds around him.
New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, c1994, 1 v. (unpaged)
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: /*STARRED REVIEW*/ Ages 4-8. Max makes music that imitates the sounds of the city around him and the rhythms within himself. Sitting on the steps of his house, the small boy finds two sticks and taps on his thighs; then he pats on Grandfather's window-washing bucket, and it's like light rain falling on the windows. When Mother comes home from shopping, he taps on her hatboxes and on his friends' soda bottles. He imagines the sound of a marching band in the clouds. On the neighborhood garbage cans he pounds out the sound of the subway thundering down the tracks. The text is a spare, rhythmic accompaniment to Pinkney's scratchboard illustrations of oil paint and gouache, which swirl and circle through the double-page spreads, filling them with energy and movement. The small solitary boy doesn't feel like talking, but his music communicates with the world. In a great climax, a marching band--just like the one he imagined--comes sweeping around the corner and the last drummer tosses Max his spare set of sticks. "Thanks," Max calls, and he doesn't miss a beat. ((Reviewed Apr. 1, 1994)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: Gr 1-3-On a day when Max doesn't feel like talking to anyone, a strong breeze shakes two heavy twigs to the ground in front of his brownstone home. Picking them up, the young African-American boy begins to beat out a rhythm that imitates the sound of pigeons startled into flight. Soon he is tapping out the beat of everything around him-rain against the windows, the chiming of church bells, and the thundering sound of a train on its tracks. The snappy text reverberates with the rhythmic song of the city, and Pinkney's swirling, scratchboard-oil paintings have a music of their own. This is an effective depiction of the way in which self-expression takes on momentum, as Max's quiet introspection turns into an exuberant celebration of the world around him.-Anna DeWind, Milwaukee Public Library
Publishers Weekly Review: Max doesn't much feel like talking, so he lets his drumsticks (two twigs, actually) respond to questions and imitate the sounds of his city neighborhood--pigeons startled into flight, rain tapping against a window, a train thundering down the elevated track. By linking Max's "drums" to activities from each previous page (for example, his grandfather is seen washing windows on one page, and in the next, Max is drumming on the cleaning bucket), Pinkney unobtrusively tugs the story forward. The fluid lines of his distinctive scratchboard illustrations fairly swirl with energy, visually translating Max's joy in creating rhythm and sound (Pinkney is well suited to the task, having been a drummer since the age of eight). A serendipitous ending finds the drummer from a passing marching band tossing a spare set of real drumsticks to the delighted Max. Ages 4-8. Children's BOMC alternate. (Feb.)
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ Sitting on his stoop near the end of a
tidy block of row houses, Max seizes on a couple of sticks that blow from a
tree and begins tapping: on his own thighs; on the bottom of Grandpa's window-washing
bucket; on a hatbox his mother brings home, bottles, a garbage can. Unobtrusively,
Pinkney slips in new information about Max's family in each spread, as the boy
experiments creatively with what's at hand, imitates rhythms he hears ("the
sound of pigeons, startled into flight," church bells, the wheels of the
train where his father's a conductor). In a satisfying conclusion, the drummer
in a passing band tosses Max his extra drumsticks. Pinkney's scratchboard illustrations,
designed with a sure hand and overlaid with rich, subtle shades of sky blue,
leaf green, and brick applied in free, painterly strokes, are superb; they vividly
convey the imagination and vitality of this budding young musician. A perfect
marriage of idea and art.
(Kirkus Reviews, January 15, 1994)
Other related features:
1. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Other titles associated with this book:
Two sticks
Stick drumming
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0671787764 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 113603
Mirandy and Brother Wind
by Patricia C. McKissack ; illustrated by Jerry Pinkney
Author: McKissack, Pat, 1944-
To win first prize in the Junior Cakewalk, Mirandy tries to capture the wind
for her partner.
New York: Knopf, c1988, [32] p.
Publishers Weekly Review: As a prefatory note explains, this picture book was inspired by a photo of the author's grandparents winning a cakewalk"a dance rooted in Afro-American culture"and her grandfather's boast that, in her dancing, his wife had captured the wind. In the book, Mirandy determines to catch Brother Wind and have him for her partner in the upcoming junior cakewalk. She tries a number of tactics springing from folk wisdom, and finally succeeds in trapping her prey in the barn. At the contest, Mirandy chooses to dance with her friend Ezelbut, with Brother Wind to do her bidding, the two friends win the cakewalk in style. Told in spirited dialect and rendered in lavish, sweeping watercolors, this provides an intriguing look at a time gone by. As a story, however, it proves somewhat disappointing. After the colorful description of cakewalking in the author's note and the anticipation created through Mirandy's own eagerness, the brief and rather static scenes portraying the dance itself are a letdown. Ages 4-8. (Oct.)
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ When Ma Dear tells Mirandy that "whoever
catch the Wind can make him do their bidding," Mirandy vows that she'll
dance with the Wind at her first cakewalk. She tries one thing and then another
to catch him--pepper to make him sneeze, the advice of the conjure woman--while
scorning her friend Ezel as too clumsy to dance with. But when Orlinda makes
fun of Ezel's dancing, Mirandy leaps to his defense and chooses him as her partner--and
together they win the junior cakewalk with such style and grace that Grandmama
says, "Them chullin' is dancing with the Wind!" As she did in Flossie
and the Fox, McKissack has created in Mirandy a character full of vigor, humor,
and imagination. Pinkney captures the liveliness of the story in his expansive
paintings, dappled with impressionistic hues; these are prosperous, happy country
folk of a few years ago (McKissack notes that her grandparents won a similar
contest in this Afro-American dance in 1906). The half-imaginary wind is shown,
top-hatted, in evanescent blues. An entertaining, unusual story.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1988)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 1989
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Caldecott Honor Books -> 1989
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Award -> Illustrators category
4. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Caldecott
Honor Books -> 1989
5. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Coretta
Scott King Award -> Illustrators category
6. Explore Fiction - Easy -> Explore Fiction -> Activities -> Artistic
Activities -> Dancing
7. Explore Fiction - Easy -> Explore Fiction -> Places -> North America
-> United States -> South
8. Features for Teachers - Wind Dramas
9. Picture Book Extender - When the Wind Stops
10. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Author Web Sites:
1. About Pat McKissack : Features a biography of the author and details on selected
books.
Other Contributors:
Pinkney, Jerry: illus
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0394887654 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0394987659
0679883339 : Paperback - Juvenile
0613024230 : Prebind
0606108777 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0679826688 : Hardcover - Audio
0780768418 : Prebind
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 112637
When I am old with you
story by Angela Johnson ; pictures by David Soman
Author: Johnson, Angela, 1961-
A child imagines being old with Grandaddy and joining him in such activities
as playing cards all day, visiting the ocean, and eating bacon on the porch.
New York: Orchard Books, c1990, [32] p.
Publishers Weekly Review: "When I am old with you, Grandaddy," says a small black child, "I will sit in a big rocking chair beside you and talk about everything." And he does, rushing and tripping through all the activities they share--walking on the beach, riding the tractor, visiting friends. As in Johnson and Soman's Tell Me a Story, Mama , the success of this serene book depends on its portrayal of the relationship between a child and an adult. Although the repeated line "when I am old with you" is unnecessarily coy, and the plotless text is somewhat static, the joy the two characters have in each other's company is richly evoked by Soman's vivid, burnished watercolors. Yellow halos of light surround the fireflies, a summer wind blows embroidered curtains through a farmhouse window, morning sun reflects on the water--but most beguiling are the faces of the child and his grandfather, which shine with warmth and love. Ages 4-7. (Aug.)
Kirkus Reviews The author and illustrator of Tell Me a Story, Mama (1989) collaborate
on another portrait of a warm intergenerational relationship. Here, a little
gift imagines what it will be like when she's as old as Grandaddy: they'll still
be doing the same things together--fishing, exploring the attic, playing, or
chatting in their old rockers. Younger listeners will respond to the affection
between the two, even though they'll miss the gentle subtext as the child reassures
her grandfather: "We won't be sad" when "we remember when this
field was a forest"; "We can look at the old pictures. . .It might
make us cry. . .but that's O.K." Older children should find the story a
good opening for discussion of their concerns about aging. Soman's watercolors
are lovely, his people sensitively characterized, his settings deftly suggested
with watery strokes. Only the cartoonish style used to depict the incidental
animals strikes a discordant note. A pleasant, thoughtful addition to the books
about African-Americans, and grand. parents.
(Kirkus Reviews, July 15, 1990)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 1991
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 1991
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 1991
4. Explore Fiction - Easy -> Explore Fiction -> Family -> Extended
Families -> Grandfathers
5. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
6. Teaching with Fiction - Learning the Knowledge of the Elders -- Intergenerational
Stories
Author Web Sites:
1. About Angela Johnson : A short biography of the author and description of
her books.
Other Contributors:
Soman, David: illus
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0531058840 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0531084841
0531070352 : Paperback - Juvenile
0606056963 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0613377958 : Prebind
0780732960 : Prebind
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 111048
Working cotton
written by Sherley Anne Williams ; illustrated by Carole Byard
Author: Williams, Sherley Anne, 1944-1999
A young black girl relates the daily events of her family's migrant life in
the cotton fields of central California.
San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, c1992, 1 v. (unpaged)
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: /*STARRED REVIEW*/ Ages 4 and up. "The rows of cotton stretch as far as I can see." The voice is that of Shelan, a migrant child laborer in the cotton fields of central California, and the words hold both physical reality and bitter metaphor. She tells of a long day of work with her family--from the cold smoky dawn to night. Byard's double-page acrylic paintings set the soft whiteness of the cotton crop against landscapes and portraits of glowing color, and the sense of beauty and space underlines the child's confinement. The text, based on Williams' Peacock Poems (a National Book Award nominee), is spare, colloquial, and immediate, a way of life concentrated in a single day. The family is warm, but friendship is fleeting when "you hardly ever see the same kids twice, 'specially after we moves to a new field.'" There's no self-pity or squalor, and no false nobility either, but rather a sense of bone-weariness and lost potential and no end in sight: "It's a long time to night." Williams says in a note that she drew on her childhood experience in the cotton fields of Fresno: her book speaks for children everywhere at work far from home. With its restrained, poetic text and impressionist paintings, this is a picture book for older readers, too. ((Reviewed Sept. 1, 1992)) -- Hazel Rochman
Publishers Weekly Review: A hot, arduous and typical day in the life of a family of migrant cotton pickers is the subject of Williams's striking first picture book. Shelan describes how her parents, brothers and sisters arrive at the cottonfields before dawn and toil till night to fill sacks with the fluffy white harvest. At times both gritty and poetic, Williams's text is written completely in Shelan's dialect. Though the phrasing may require careful reading, it adds a necessary authenticity to the story while presenting a difficult way of life. However, the author does not pass a negative judgment here: her characters play, sing and admire nature--when they have the chance. Bayard's intense acrylic paintings capture the beauty of the California landscape as well as the intensity of human struggle--thoughtfully reflected in her cast's sweaty faces. Vast fields of white cotton tufts against an endless blue sky create an appropriate sense of isolation. Though some may object to the portrayal of African Americans picking cotton, Shelan's family is to be respected for embracing life and doing whatever it takes to make their way in the world. An auspicious debut. Ages 4-8. (Sept.)
Kirkus Reviews We gets to the fields early, before it's even light. Sometimes
I still be asleep." In grave cadences, young Shelan describes a day of
picking with her migrant family. In one of Byard's powerful, impressionistic
acrylics (repeated on the jacket), Shelan stares penetratingly at readers as
she Mumps wearily amid pries of cotton; otherwise, the figures here are stooped,
shadowy, tragically impersonal images with lowered eyes. The artist and poet
(the text is reworked from two of Williams's Peacock Poems, 1975) effectively
capture a strong sense of family, of exhaustion at day's end, and, most poignantly,
Shelan's isolation--children she meets in one field are generally gone by the
next, and there seems to be no life for her or her family beyond their work.
A brief, deeply felt portrait.
(Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 1992)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Caldecott Honor Books -> 1993
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Illustrators category -> 1993
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Caldecott
Honor Books -> 1993
4. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> Coretta
Scott King Honor Books -> Illustrators category -> 1993
5. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Other Contributors:
Byard, Carole M., 1941-: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0152996249 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0152014829 : Paperback - Juvenile
0606121145 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
061302351X : Prebind
0780768647 : Prebind
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 116221
Bud, not Buddy
Christopher Paul Curtis
Author: Curtis, Christopher Paul
Ten-year-old Bud, a motherless boy living in Flint, Michigan, during the Great
Depression, escapes a bad foster home and sets out in search of the man he believes
to be his father--the renowned bandleader, H.E. Calloway of Grand Rapids.
New York: Delacorte Press, c1999, 245 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-6. Bud, 10, is on the run from the orphanage and from yet another mean foster family. His mother died when he was 6, and he wants to find his father. Set in Michigan during the Great Depression, this is an Oliver Twist kind of foundling story, but it's told with affectionate comedy, like the first part of Curtis' The Watsons Go to Birmingham (1995). On his journey, Bud finds danger and violence (most of it treated as farce), but more often, he finds kindness--in the food line, in the library, in the Hooverville squatter camp, on the road--until he discovers who he is and where he belongs. Told in the boy's naive, desperate voice, with lots of examples of his survival tactics ("Rules and Things for Having a Funner Life and Making a Better Liar out of Yourself"), this will make a great read-aloud. Curtis says in an afterword that some of the characters are based on real people, including his own grandfathers, so it's not surprising that the rich blend of tall tale, slapstick, sorrow, and sweetness has the wry, teasing warmth of family folklore. ((Reviewed September 1, 1999)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-7-When 10-year-old Bud Caldwell runs away from his new foster home, he realizes he has nowhere to go but to search for the father he has never known: a legendary jazz musician advertised on some old posters his deceased mother had kept. A friendly stranger picks him up on the road in the middle of the night and deposits him in Grand Rapids, MI, with Herman E. Calloway and his jazz band, but the man Bud was convinced was his father turns out to be old, cold, and cantankerous. Luckily, the band members are more welcoming; they take him in, put him to work, and begin to teach him to play an instrument. In a Victorian ending, Bud uses the rocks he has treasured from his childhood to prove his surprising relationship with Mr. Calloway. The lively humor contrasts with the grim details of the Depression-era setting and the particular difficulties faced by African Americans at that time. Bud is a plucky, engaging protagonist. Other characters are exaggerations: the good ones (the librarian and Pullman car porter who help him on his journey and the band members who embrace him) are totally open and supportive, while the villainous foster family finds particularly imaginative ways to torture their charge. However, readers will be so caught up in the adventure that they won't mind. Curtis has given a fresh, new look to a traditional orphan-finds-a-home story that would be a crackerjack read-aloud.-Kathleen Isaacs, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
Publishers Weekly Review: As in his Newbery Honor-winning debut, The Watsons Go to Birmingham--1963, Curtis draws on a remarkable and disarming mix of comedy and pathos, this time to describe the travails and adventures of a 10-year-old African-American orphan in Depression-era Michigan. Bud is fed up with the cruel treatment he has received at various foster homes, and after being locked up for the night in a shed with a swarm of angry hornets, he decides to run away. His goal: to reach the man he--on the flimsiest of evidence--believes to be his father, jazz musician Herman E. Calloway. Relying on his own ingenuity and good luck, Bud makes it to Grand Rapids, where his "father" owns a club. Calloway, who is much older and grouchier than Bud imagined, is none too thrilled to meet a boy claiming to be his long-lost son. It is the other members of his band--Steady Eddie, Mr. Jimmy, Doug the Thug, Doo-Doo Bug Cross, Dirty Deed Breed and motherly Miss Thomas--who make Bud feel like he has finally arrived home. While the grim conditions of the times and the harshness of Bud's circumstances are authentically depicted, Curtis shines on them an aura of hope and optimism. And even when he sets up a daunting scenario, he makes readers laugh--for example, mopping floors for the rejecting Calloway, Bud pretends the mop is "that underwater boat in the book Momma read to me, Twenty Thousand Leaks Under the Sea." Bud's journey, punctuated by Dickensian twists in plot and enlivened by a host of memorable personalities, will keep readers engrossed from first page to last. Ages 9-12. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal Review: Gr 4-7-Motherless Bud shares his amusingly astute rules
of life as he hits the road to find the jazz musician he believes is his father.
A medley of characters brings Depression-era Michigan to life. (Sept.) Copyright
1999 Cahners Business Information.
Features about this author or title:
1. BookTalk - Bud, Not Buddy
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 2000
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Award -> Authors category
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
International Reading Association Children's Book Award -> Older Readers
(winners prior to 2002)
4. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
New York Times Notable Books -> Children's Books -> 1999
5. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Newbery Medal
6. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Oprah's Kids' Reading List -> 9-to-12 Years
7. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Parents' Choice Award -> Story Books category -> 1999 -> Gold Awards
8. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Prairie Pasque Children's Book Award (South Dakota)
9. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
School Library Journal Best Books -> 1999
10. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
William Allen White Children's Book Award (Kansas) -> Sixth-Eighth Grade
Winners
11. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Young Reader's Choice Award (Pacific Northwest) -> Junior
12. Awards (Best Fiction) - Easy -> Best Fiction -> Literary -> School
Library Journal Best Books -> 1999
13. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Award -> Authors category
14. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
International Reading Association Children's Book Award -> Older Readers
(winners prior to 2002)
15. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
New York Times Notable Books -> Children's Books -> 1999
16. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Parents' Choice Award -> Story Books category -> 1999 -> Gold Awards
17. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
William Allen White Children's Book Award (Kansas) -> Sixth-Eighth Grade
Winners
18. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
YALSA Best Books for Young Adults -> 2000
19. Book Discussion Guide - The Watsons Go to Birmingham -- 1963
20. Explore Fiction - Young Adult -> Explore Fiction -> Contemporary ->
Music
21. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
22. Teaching with Fiction - Fathers in Fiction
Author Web Sites:
1. Fan Site for Christopher Paul Curtis : Features author, book, and award information,
plus pictures.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0385323069 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0440413281 : Paperback - Mass Market
0553526758 : Cassette - Audio
0553494104 : Paperback - Mass Market
080728209X : Cassette - Audio
0786225742 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0807204781 : CD - Audio
0613367839 : Glued Binding
0606229558 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0756909996 : Glued Binding
0807205028 : CD - Audio
0739331795 : CD - Audio
1404618848 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 088174
Dream bearer, The
Walter Dean Myers
Author: Myers, Walter Dean, 1937-
During a summer in Harlem, David relies on his mother and a close friend and
on an old man he meets in the park to help him come to terms with his father's
outbursts and unstable behavior.
New York, N.Y.: HarperCollins/Amistad, c2003, 180 p.
School Library Journal Review: Gr 5-8–While shooting hoops in his Harlem neighborhood with his friend Loren, 12-year-old David Curry befriends an ancient, shamanlike gentleman named Moses Littlejohn. Claiming to be a 300-year-old dream bearer–one who harnesses and preserves human dreams–Mr. Moses slowly imparts his dreams with exciting storytelling finesse to the boys, eventually helping David cope with his abusive father and older brother's descent into gangs and drug dealing. The story admirably addresses the many facets of anger and forgiveness within the African-American community, making it potentially compelling as a politically driven children's novel. However, unlike Myers's Monster (HarperCollins, 1999) and other previous works, the seams between political agenda and storytelling become more visible, and the author's ability to intertwine plot and message loses its subtlety as lengthy emotional outbursts break the otherwise intriguing action into bits and pieces. As a result, this stop/start style will most likely distract and frustrate younger readers from grasping Myers's overall picture. Still, the book says much about the importance of forgiveness and understanding in the world today, and for that reason, librarians will want to have a copy on their shelves even though its demand won't reach the heights of Myers's classics.–Hillias J. Martin, New York Public Library (Reviewed June 1, 2003) (School Library Journal, vol 49, issue 6, p146)
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ A mysterious stranger is hanging around
David Curry's Harlem playground. Moses Littlejohn is an African-American man
with white hair, a stubbly beard, baggy clothes, and a faraway look in his eyes
that makes him look like the picture of the Ancient Mariner in David's school
textbook. Moses says he's 303 years old and has been carrying dreams for hundreds
of years, now looking for someone to pass them onto. David is not so sure about
this, but he does feel there is something about this old man and his dreams
that helps him make sense of his own life with a violent father who seems crazy,
an older brother flirting with street life, and a mother trying to hold her
family together. This quiet, subtle story works on a number of layers with several
themes—dreams, visions, home, community, and manhood. Moses's dreams offer
no easy solutions to David's problems, but they become part of him, add to his
knowledge, strength, and understanding, and nudge him toward a renewed relationship
with his father and an appreciation of the danger and the magic of Harlem. (Fiction.
10+)
(Kirkus Reviews, May 15, 2003)
Features about this author or title:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
2. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
Author Web Sites:
1. About Walter Dean Myers : Features author-supplied biographical information
and an interview.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
006029521X : Hardcover - Juvenile
0060295228
0064472892 : Paperback - Juvenile
0060542772 : Cassette - Audio
078625923X : Hardcover - Juvenile
0606326359 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0756932424 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20040620
• TID: 124746
New York: HarperCollins, c2004, 167 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Booklist Review: Gr. 4-7. Children familiar with Get On Out of Here, Philip
Hall (1981) and other books about Beth Lambert and her warm African American
family and friends in Pocahontas, Arkansas, will want this latest story. As
usual, her sassy first-person narrative reports on the wild farce and earth-shattering
misunderstandings among her friends and neighbors, as well as on her slowly
budding romance with gorgeous Philip Hall. The cast is huge, and all the references
to past events will confuse those new to the series. But fans will recognize
the folksy blend of sweetness and meanness, and they will enjoy the quarrels,
lies, insults, and cover-ups that climax in an intense arm-wrestling competition
between two people whom Beth loves: her granny and Philip Hall. Guess who gets
the prize? Jenkins' occasional black-and-white sketches capture the fun.
-- Hazel Rochman (BookList, 05-01-2004, p1559)
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-7–Fans of the earlier titles in the series will enjoy this lighthearted look at Beth Lambert's further trials and tribulations in small-town Arkansas. She must smooth things out when she and her friend Philip Hall have a falling out and deal with the Pretty Penny club members, who are angry at their new president and want her back as their leader. Diplomatic Beth, somewhat tempered by experience, encourages them to work things out. She has more important fish to fry, like solving the mystery of who stole poor Baby Beth, her brother Luther's prize-winning singing pig. While "every able-bodied man in Pocahontas" is searching for Gorilla Man, the monster of the mountain, the savvy sleuth teams up with Philip Hall for some fancy detective work. These ludicrous dramas culminate in a misguided arm-wrestling contest between Walnut Ridge and Pocahontas, in which poor Philip must wrestle Beth's grandmother for the grand prize, and the old lady surprises everyone with her unmatched strength. Readers new to the series may find references to past adventures confusing or off-putting, but those familiar with the characters may enjoy Beth's latest escapades.–Barbara Auerbach, New York City Public Schools (Reviewed March 1, 2004) (School Library Journal, vol 50, issue 3, p212)
Kirkus Reviews Pre-teenagers Beth Lambert and Philip Hall were first introduced
to readers in the 1970s. Now there is a nostalgic small-town feel as the two
deal with the ins and outs of their friendship. Beth's friends in the Walnut
Ridge Irritated Oysters club reluctantly bid her goodbye as she returns from
her grandparents' home to her good ole hometown of Pocahontas, Arkansas. A little
jealousy and curiosity come between the two and before Beth knows it, Philip
is preparing to arm-wrestle a non-existent foe from Walnut Ridge. When the town's
mayor issues a challenge to the mayor of Walnut Ridge to send the foe or any
arm-wrestler who is better, Mama Regina (Beth's grandmother) arrives in town,
and after much drama, the townspeople reluctantly match her up with the town's
champion: Philip Hall. The climax is predictable and the drama contrived. Only
a few readers will find the setting or events credible—even if viewed
in a historical context. (Fiction. 8-10)
(Kirkus Reviews, January 15, 2004)
Other related features:
1. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
2. Teaching with Fiction - Fiction from the 50 States: Arkansas, Louisiana,
and Mississippi
Other Contributors:
Jenkins, Leonard: illustrator
Other titles associated with this book:
I have already forgotten your name, Philip Hall!
I have already forgotten your name, Philip Hall!
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0060518359 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0060518367
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20040620
• TID: 124967
Red rose box, The
by Brenda Woods
Author: Woods, Brenda (Brenda A.)
In 1953, Leah Hopper dreams of leaving the poverty and segregation of her home
in Sulphur, Louisiana, and when Aunt Olivia sends train tickets to Los Angeles
as part of her tenth birthday present, Leah gets a first taste of freedom.
New York: Putnam, 2002, 136 p.
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-6–Leah Hopper and her younger sister, Ruth, live in segregated rural Louisiana in the early 1950s. For her 10th birthday, the older girl receives a traveling case–a "red rose box"–from her mother's wealthy sister. Among other treasures, it contains train tickets for a family visit in Los Angeles. A long-lasting rift between Aunt Olivia and the children's mother is finally mended during the reunion. In L.A. there is no sign of the racial prejudice that the Hoppers are so accustomed to as a black family in the South, and the girls reluctantly return home. Later, during a trip to New York City with Aunt Olivia and Uncle Bill, they feel the same way, and then a hurricane strikes their hometown, killing their parents. With this devastating loss, the sisters realize that riches and comforts cannot substitute for the kind of family life they had. This is a bittersweet story with good descriptions of settings; a skillful use of figurative language; and well-realized, believable characters. Ruth is the embodiment of a sassy eight-year-old and the adults are genuine, loving, and supportive. The one false note is the portrayal of race relations as near perfect outside the South. This story of grief and loss ends on a hopeful note and will appeal to readers.–Bruce Anne Shook, Mendenhall Middle School, Greensboro, NC (Reviewed June 1, 2002) (School Library Journal, vol 48, issue 6, p149)
Publishers Weekly Review: Woods's moving first novel opens in sleepy Sulphur,
La., in June 1953, when Leah receives a 10th birthday present from her estranged
aunt in Los Angeles: a traveling case covered with red roses. The gift holds
treasures the likes of which Leah has never seen: costume jewelry, a pink silk
bed jacket ("like what rich white women wears b'fore bed at night,"
her grandmother tells Leah and her sister), pink satin slippers, nail polish,
lipstick. A letter of apology from Leah's aunt to Leah's mother occasions a
visit to L.A. with her mother, grandmother and younger sister, and Leah revels
in the luxuries of her aunt's privileged world, a stark contrast to the subsistent
lifestyle the child knows. Exposure to the freedom from segregation that exists
south of the Mason-Dixon line also makes a dramatic impression on the heroine.
After the girls' parents perish in a hurricane and the siblings move into the
elegant home of kind Olivia and her husband, the youngsters want for nothing.
Yet Leah's thoughts of her parents and past haunt her constantly: "It felt
like I was a million miles from Sulphur and crayfish, cotton fields and hand-me-down
clothes, a one-room schoolhouse, segregation, and Jim Crow. But I knew one thing.
I knew that I would gladly give up this new comfort and freedom to be in my
mama's arms, to feel the tenderness in my daddy's touch one more time."
Though the repetition of similar reflections occasionally slackens the pace
of Woods's narrative, she creates some memorable characters, especially Leah,
and probes historical events in a personal context that may open many readers'
eyes. Ages 10-up. (May)
— Staff (Reviewed May 20, 2002) (Publishers Weekly, vol 249, issue 20,
p66)
Kirkus Reviews Leah Hopper lives in tiny Sulphur, Louisiana, at a time when
Jim Crow laws reign supreme. But she dreams of becoming a teacher, and although
she is nurtured by a tender, loving family, she knows that this dream might
be unattainable if she remains in the South. She gets a first glimpse of the
world beyond via a family visit to her well-to-do Aunt Olivia in glamorous Los
Angeles, where her eyes are opened to the possibilities of freedom. While accompanying
their aunt on a trip to New York, Leah and her younger sister Rose hear the
terrible news that a deadly hurricane has struck Sulphur, killing both their
parents, as well as many friends and neighbors. The sisters must begin new lives
in California while dealing with their devastating loss. Woods allows Leah to
tell her own story, using the language with which she is most comfortable. Her
dialect and syntax change, and she carefully corrects herself as she gains more
education and experience. She sees clearly and notices everything. She paints
a picture of every character down to the exact skin shade and hairstyle. Her
power of description is so strong that the reader feels the searing heat and
poverty of rural Louisiana and her amazement at the startling richness and openness
of California. She shares her grief and guilt over her belief that her parents'
death has allowed her to escape from poverty and racism. This is a work that
beautifully and accurately evokes a particularly painful and hopeful time through
an insider's eyes, and yet it is also a timeless, universal tale of a young
girl's road to maturity. An impressive debut. (Fiction. 10-14)
(Kirkus Reviews, April 15, 2002)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 2003
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 2003
3. Explore Fiction - Young Adult -> Explore Fiction -> Contemporary ->
Growing Up Brave
4. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
039923702X : Hardcover - Juvenile
0142501514 : Paperback - Juvenile
0606296581 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0613878221 : Glued Binding
0756929377 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20020720
• TID: 082002
Roll of thunder, hear my cry
Mildred D. Taylor ; frontispiece by Jerry Pinkney
Author: Taylor, Mildred D.
A Black family living in the South during the 1930s is faced with prejudice
and discrimination which their children don't understand.
New York: Dial Press, c1976, 276 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews At first Cassie Logan and her brothers, a year or so older than
they were in the much briefer, gong of the Trees, (1975) are only dimly aware
of rumors that two men have been killed and one badly burned by a white mob.
Then Mary, their mother, tries to organize a boycott against the Wallaces, the
local storeowners and instigators of the violence, and Logan land and lives
are put on the line. Cassie's own spirit is demonstrated straight off, on the
first day of the school year, when she refuses to accept a schoolbook labeled
"condition--very poor, race of student--nigra." Like her parents,
Cassie learns that she must pick her shots carefully to survive, and she takes
pains to learn a few blackmail-level secrets from her special tormentor, Miz
Lillian Jean, before giving the older girl a good thrashing. Tragically though,
brother Stacey's friend T.J. who isn't so careful, starts hanging around with
the Wallace boys and winds up facing a lynch mob after they talk him into helping
them rob a store. Although the Logans, whose ownership of desirable farmland
has made them a target of white persecution, live in a virtual state of siege,
and even after Papa sets fire to his own cotton to divert the attention of the
mob from T.J., the story ends unmelodramatically not far from where it began--after
a string of hard-fought victories and as many bitter defeats and with the money
for the next tax payment on the land still not in sight. Taylor trusts to her
material and doesn't try to inflate Cassie's role in these events, and though
the strong, clear-headed Logan family is no doubt an idealization, their characters
are drawn with quiet affection and their actions tempered with a keen sense
of human fallibility.
(Kirkus Reviews, October 1, 1976)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Mildred D. Taylor
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Newbery Medal
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Young Reader's Choice Award (Pacific Northwest) -> Junior
3. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> 20th Century -> The Thirties (20th Century)
4. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
5. Teaching with Fiction - Fiction from the 50 States: Arkansas, Louisiana,
and Mississippi
6. Teaching with Fiction - Get Ready, Get Set, READ! Great Read-aloud Books
New Teachers Need to Know
7. Teaching with Fiction - Looking Back at the Twentieth Century: YA Historical
Fiction for Students
Other titles associated with this book:
Hear my cry
Thunder roll, hear my cry
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
014034893X : Paperback - Juvenile
0140384510 : Paperback - Juvenile
0803726473 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0142401129 : Paperback - Juvenile
0803774737 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0807206210 : Cassette - Audio
0881030430 : Glued Binding
0140862943 : Cassette - Audio
1557344396 : Paperback - Reference
0606118071 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0307281728 : CD - Audio
0606007202 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
014131186X : Paperback - Juvenile
0821919857 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0807206229 : Cassette - Audio
0394667913 : Cassette - Audio
1581180578 : Hardcover - Large Print
1557361401 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0553244027 : Paperback - Juvenile
0613883519 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 080953

Sahara Special
Esme Raji Codell
Author: Codell, Esme Raji, 1968-
Struggling with school and her feelings since her father left, Sahara gets a
fresh start with a new and unique teacher who supports her writing talents and
the individuality of each of her classmates.
New York: Hyperion Books For Children, c2003, 175 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Booklist Review: Gr. 4-6. Codell, author of an award-winning adult nonfiction
book, Educating Esme (1999), about teaching in an inner-city Chicago school,
brings her experience to bear in this debut novel. Sahara is a quiet, self-conscious
kid, who misses her absentee father and can’t seem to fit in at school.
When her poor school performance and letters to Dad she’s hidden in her
desk come to light, she’s put in Special Needs, an experience so dreadful
that her mother pulls her out for another crack at fifth grade. As it turns
out, her new teacher is just what she needs to build confidence and set her
on a path to becoming a writer. It’s meant to be Sahara’s story,
but it’s her teacher, “Ms. Pointy,” who takes over. Pointy’s
audacious, yet caring, demeanor and her undisguised disdain of educational bureaucracy
will be a revelation to kids, who will see narrator Sahara as a sympathetic,
but pale, second stringer. Codell works in wonderful metaphors and important
life lessons, but that’s not always enough to carry the peripatetic goings
on, which come across as two parts message and one part story. An upbeat and
certainly well-intentioned novel, but flawed.
(Reviewed April 1, 2003) -- Stephanie Zvirin
School Library Journal Review: Gr 3-6?In this delightful first novel, readers
meet Sahara Jones in the school hallway, where she's been pulled out of class
for sessions with the Special Needs teacher. It seems that Sahara's official
school file is filled with her letters to her father, who had left the family,
instead of her completed assignments. Sahara is a secretive writer; she fills
her journal at home, then rips out the pages and stuffs them on the public library
shelves behind the 940s for someone to discover someday. At her mother's insistence,
the girl is taken out of the Special Needs program but is forced to repeat fifth
grade. Enter a new teacher, Madame Poitier, who encourages her class to do,
to write, to be, as never before. Sahara is sweeter than Harriet the Spy, as
needy and engaging as Ramona, and is sure to be a character whom children will
want to read about and get to know. Codell's take on fifth graders, teachers,
Special Needs students, and mothers is very funny, and underneath the humor
glows real warmth and love. A special novel that readers will not be able to
put down.?Linda Beck, Indian Valley Public Library, Telford, PA (Reviewed July
1, 2003) (School Library Journal, vol 49, issue 7, p124)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
International Reading Association Children's Book Award -> Intermediate (post-2001
winners)
2. BookTalk - Saraha Special
3. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0786807938 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0786816112
0786826274 : Library binding - Juvenile
0807217212 : Cassette - Audio
0756943302 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20031220
• TID: 121549
Some friend
Marie Bradby
Author: Bradby, Marie
In 1963, Pearl, an eleven-year-old black girl in Fairfax, Virginia, learns about
the real nature of friendship from the popular but untrustworthy Lenore, and
Artemesia, a poor girl who moves into the neighborhood for a brief time.
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2004, 245 p.
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-7–A somewhat predictable but affecting coming-of-age story about the consequences of hanging out with the "wrong crowd." Set in 1960s Maryland, against the backdrop of the civil rights movement, the story centers on an 11-year-old African-American girl who is desperate to find a friend. Exactly why Pearl is friendless isn't quite clear, because she comes across as a thoughtful and intelligent child. She is thrilled when beautiful and popular Lenore starts including her in social activities, even if Lenore manipulates her into lying and wearing too much makeup. Pearl also wants to be friends with Artemesia, who's talented and interesting and introduces her to wondrous things like art. But Artemesia also happens to be poor, and that doesn't sit well with Lenore and her crowd. They label Artemesia a "creepy girl" and worse. Pearl knows they're wrong, but isn't brave enough to stand up for her. During the climactic confrontation, Pearl watches helplessly as Artemesia is cruelly attacked by the popular girls. The following day, she discovers that Artemesia has left town for good. Pearl is left to ponder the consequences of her inaction, and mourn the loss of the one person who truly was her friend.–Ronni Krasnow, New York Public Library (Reviewed March 1, 2004) (School Library Journal, vol 50, issue 3, p203)
Kirkus Reviews Finding a friend can be hard when there are few kids in your
neighborhood, but being a friend can be even harder. Feeling ignored by her
family as the next-to-last of four children, fifth-grader Pearl Jordan is thrilled
when boy-crazy, daring Lenore pals up with her. Grounded by her strict mother
because of Lenore, Pearl befriends Artemesia, a poor girl from a migrant working
family, whose drawing talent turns out to be amazing. When Lenore and chums
make fun of Artemesia and physically attack her, Pearl doesn't defend her, only
to discover later that her true friend has moved again. Set in the early 1960s,
when American Bandstand, Chatty Cathys, 45 records, and pay toilets were in
vogue and segregation prevailed, Brady weaves the issue of integration throughout,
e.g., Pearl's family is "colored" and her father and brother march
to hear Martin Luther King. A sensitive, realistic portrayal told in first person
of a girl's tough lesson about the meaning of friendship. (Fiction. 9-12)
(Kirkus Reviews, December 15, 2003)
Other related features:
1. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0689856156 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20040620
• TID: 124889
Trouble don't last
by Shelley Pearsall
Author: Pearsall, Shelley
Samuel, an eleven-year-old Kentucky slave, and Harrison, the elderly slave who
helped raise him, attempt to escape to Canada via the Underground Railroad.
New York: Knopf: Distributed by Random House, 2002, 160 p.
School Library Journal Review: Gr 5-8–Strong characters and an inventive, suspenseful plot distinguish Pearsall's first novel, a story of the Underground Railroad in 1859. Samuel, the 11-year-old slave who narrates the story, is awakened by 70-year-old Harrison, who has decided to flee their tyrannical Kentucky master. The questions that immediately flood the boy's mind provide the tension that propels the novel: What has precipitated the old man's sudden desire for freedom? Why would he risk taking Samuel along? Harrison is mindful of the dangers and wary of trusting even the strangers who might offer help. Samuel, an impulsive boy who seems prone to trouble, is grudgingly accustomed to his life of servitude and reluctant to leave it. As days of hiding and nights of stealthy movement take them farther away from their former lives, Harrison and Samuel forge a bond that strengthens their resolve. Faith, luck, and perseverance see the man and boy safely into Canada, where a new journey–one of self-discovery and self-healing–begins. Pearsall's extensive research is deftly woven into each scene, providing insight into plantation life, 19th-century social mores, religious and cultural norms, and the political turmoil in the years preceding the Civil War. Samuel's narrative preserves the dialect, the innocence, the hope, and even the superstitions of slaves like Harrison and himself, whose path to freedom is filled with kindness and compassion as well as humiliation and scorn. This is a compelling story that will expand young readers' understanding of the Underground Railroad and the individual acts of courage it embraced.–William McLoughlin, Brookside School, Worthington, OH (Reviewed January 1, 2002) (School Library Journal, vol 48, issue 1, p138)
Publishers Weekly Review: /* Starred Review */ This action-packed, tautly plotted
first novel presents a quest for freedom on the Underground Railroad that realistically
blends kindness and cruelty. "Trouble follows me like a shadow," begins
11-year-old narrator Samuel. When Harrison, one of the elderly slaves who raised
him after the master sold off the boy's mother, decides to run away, Samuel
must go with him. "Truth is," Samuel confesses, "even the thought
of going straight to Hell didn't scare me as much as the thought of running
away." His fears prove justified. Samuel and Harrison's journey thrusts
them into uncertainty and peril, and introduces an imaginatively and poignantly
rendered cast. Characters include a black man who helps them cross the Ohio
River, all the while threatening them with a pistol and a knife if they don't
do exactly as he says (he abandons a less cooperative fugitive to certain capture)
and a creepy young white widow who converses with her husband's ghost. Throughout,
Pearsall seamlessly refers to Samuel's and Harrison's hardships under slavery,
creating a sense of lives that extend past the confines of the book. This memorable
portrayal of their haphazard, serendipitous and dangerous escape to freedom
proves gripping from beginning to end, Ages 9-12. (Jan.)
— Staff (Reviewed December 17, 2001) (Publishers Weekly, vol 248, issue
51, p91)
Kirkus Reviews At fellow slave Harrison's insistence, young Samuel is catapulted
into an escape attempt from a Kentucky plantation that has been his whole world.
Troublesome Sam has been in the care of elderly Lilly and Harrison since the
sale of his mother long ago. Life has been so circumscribed by his condition
of slavery that it is hard for him to understand the stakes or even want to
succeed. Samuel's naïvetÉ is realistic but almost irritatingly persistent
as danger mounts. Old man Harrison, whose creative ethics and gritty determination
guide them on their way, is increasingly revealed as a complex man, and Samuel
gradually gains an understanding of himself and the world around him. The vile
nature of slavery is not underplayed as the notion of owning a person clearly
creates both horrendous hubris and evil in the owner as well as tremendous pain
and suffering of the owned. One of the best underground railroad narratives
in recent years, Pearsall's portrayal of both helping and helped are more rounded
and complex than the more simplistic view often espoused. Greed, hypocrisy,
and sanctimonious paternalism are clearly perceived by the fugitives dependent
on these strangers who hold lives in their hands. This succeeds as a suspenseful
historical adventure with survival at stake and makes clear that to succeed
Harrison and Samuel, as well as others, must never give up even while combating
manhunters, bloodhounds, mental illness, disease, hunger, cold, and their own
despair. (Fiction. 11-14)
(Kirkus Reviews, November 15, 2001)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Historical Fiction
-> Scott O'Dell Historical Fiction Award
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Historical Fiction
-> Scott O'Dell Historical Fiction Award
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Booklist Editors' Choice -> Books for Youth: Older Readers Category ->
2002
4. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Adventure ->
Heroes and History
5. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
6. Teaching with Fiction - Learning the Knowledge of the Elders -- Intergenerational
Stories
Author Web Sites:
1. Shelley Pearsall's Web Site : Pearsall provides information on herself and
her books.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0375814906 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0375914900
0440418119 : Paperback - Mass Market
0613857062 : Glued Binding
0606298487 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
075691535X : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 101741
Watsons go to Birmingham, 1963, The
a novel by Christopher Paul Curtis
Author: Curtis, Christopher Paul
The ordinary interactions and everyday routines of the Watsons, an African American
family living in Flint, Michigan, are drastically changed after they go to visit
Grandma in Alabama in the summer of 1963.
New York: Delacorte Press, 1995, 210 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-8. In a voice that's both smart and naive, strong and scared, fourth-grader Kenny Watson tells about his African American family in Flint, Michigan, in 1963. We get to know his strict, loving parents and his tough older brother, who gets into so much trouble his parents decide to take him back "home" to Birmingham, Alabama, where maybe his strong grandmother will teach him some sense. Several of the family stories are a bit self-conscious (we keep being told we're going to laugh as Dad puts on a show and acts the fool), but the relationships aren't idealized. Racism and the civil rights movement are like a soft rumble in the background, especially as the Watsons drive south. Then Kenny's cute little sister is in a Birmingham church when a bomb goes off. She escapes (Curtis doesn't exploit the horror), but we're with Kenny as he dreads that she's part of the rubble. In this compelling first novel, form and content are one: in the last few chapters, the affectionate situation comedy is suddenly transformed, and we see how racist terror can invade the shelter of home. ((Reviewed August 1995)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: Gr 6 Up--Kenny's family is known in Flint, Michigan, as the Weird Watsons, for lots of good reasons. Younger sister Joetta has been led to believe she has to be overdressed in the winter because Southern folks (their mother is from Alabama) freeze solid and have to be picked up by the city garbage trucks. Kenny, the narrator, does well in school and tries to meet his hard-working parents' expectations. After a string of misdeeds, Mr. and Mrs. Watson decide that tough guy, older brother Byron must be removed from the bad influences of the city and his gang. They feel that his maternal grandmother and a different way of life in Birmingham might make him appreciate what he has. Since the story is set in 1963, the family must make careful preparations for their trip, for they cannot count on food or housing being available on the road once they cross into the South. The slow, sultry pace of life has a beneficial effect on all of the children until the fateful day when a local church is bombed, and Kenny runs to look for his sister. Written in a full-throated, hearty voice, this is a perfectly described piece of past imperfect. Curtis's ability to switch from fun and funky to pinpoint-accurate psychological imagery works unusually well. Although the horrific Birmingham Sunday throws Kenny into temporary withdrawl, this story is really about the strength of family love and endurance. Ribald humor, sly sibling digs, and a totally believable child's view of the world will make this book an instant hit.--Cindy Darling Codell, Clark Middle School, Winchester, KY
Publishers Weekly Review: A 1996 Newbery Honor and Coretta Scott King Honor
book, this comic tale, narrated by a 10-year-old boy, describes an eccentric
family's unwitting trip South to visit Grandma--during one of the stormiest
times of the Civil Rights movement. PW's boxed, starred review called it "an
exceptional first novel." Ages 10-up. (Oct.)
Features about this author or title:
1. BookTalk - The Watsons Go to Birmingham, 1963
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 1996
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
California Young Reader Medal -> Middle School
3. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 1996
4. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Golden Kite Award -> Fiction
5. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Newbery Honor Books -> 1996
6. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
California Young Reader Medal -> Middle School
7. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 1996
8. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Golden Kite Award -> Fiction
9. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
YALSA Best Books for Young Adults -> 1996
10. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Life and Living
-> Reaching Out, Growing Up
11. Explore Fiction - Young Adult -> Explore Fiction -> Humor -> Best
Humorous Paperbacks
12. Picture Book Extender - The Day Gogo Went to Vote
13. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Coming of Age Stories
14. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
15. Teaching with Fiction - Fiction from the 50 States: Florida, Alabama and
Georgia
16. Teaching with Fiction - Get Ready, Get Set, READ! Great Read-aloud Books
New Teachers Need to Know
17. Teaching with Fiction - Looking Back at the Twentieth Century: YA Historical
Fiction for Students
Author Web Sites:
1. Fan Site for Christopher Paul Curtis : Features author, book, and award information,
plus pictures.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0385321759 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0786264063 : Paperback - Large Print
0807208809 : Cassette - Audio
0807283355 : Paperback - Audio
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 088175
What is goodbye?: poems on grief
Nikki Grimes
Author: Grimes, Nikki
Alternating poems by a brother and sister convey their feelings about the death
of their older brother and the impact it had on their family.
New York: Jump at the Sun/Hyperion Books for Children, 2004, 64 p.
Yolonda's genius
Carol Fenner
Author: Fenner, Carol
After moving from Chicago to Grand River, Michigan, fifth grader Yolonda, big
and strong for her age, determines to prove that her younger brother is not
a slow learner but a true musical genius.
New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books, c1995, 211 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-6. A beautifully drawn portrait of an African American family that escapes the mean streets of Chicago by moving to a small Michigan town. Nearing the end of first grade, Yolonda's younger brother, Andrew, is still unable to read, and Yolonda's widowed mother worries about him and scoffs at Yolonda's dogged insistence that he is a musical genius. Now Yolonda must use all her physical and mental powers to devise a plan to prove to her mother and the world that Andrew is a child prodigy. Dynamic characters and fresh dialogue combine with a compelling story line to draw readers into Yolonda's world. Preteen girls especially will identify with Yolonda's yearning to be noticed by handsome Stoney Buxton and with the awkwardness she experiences at being the new kid in town. Fenner's expertise is most evident in the implausible ending that she somehow makes totally believable. ((Reviewed June 1 & 15, 1995)) -- Lauren Peterson
Publishers Weekly Review: When their widowed mother decides that Chicago is
no place to raise 11-year-old Yolonda and six-year-old Andrew, the African American
family moves to a Michigan suburb. If Yolonda's adjustment is difficult, her
schoolwork is still outstanding; her teachers' reactions prompt her to see if
she matches the dictionary definition of a genius. This little exercise yields
a startling realization-musically gifted Andrew may be having trouble in school,
but he could be a real genius. Yolonda is determined to have her brother's ability
acknowledged, and it ultimately is-by legendary blues artist B.B. King. Fenner's
(Randall's Wall) pace is sometimes too leisurely, but her heartwarming story
merits acclaim for its fresh premise and forceful characterizations. Ages 9-up.
(May)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Carol Fenner
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 1996
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Newbery Honor Books -> 1996
3. Book Discussion Guide - The Watsons Go to Birmingham -- 1963
4. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Boys -> Boys by Grade -> First Grade
5. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Girls -> Girls by Grade -> Fifth Grade
6. Teaching with Fiction - African-American Literature: The Best of the Best
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0689800010 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0689813279 : Paperback - Juvenile
0689821727 : Paperback - Juvenile
0553478214 : Cassette - Audio
0613014960 : Glued Binding
0606121226 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0807204617 : Cassette - Audio
0780768655 : Glued Binding
0736690336 : Cassette - Audio
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 089565
Shades of black: crime and mystery stories by African-American authors
edited by Eleanor Taylor Bland
Author: Various Authors
Presents a collection of crime and mystery stories by such authors as Chris
Benson, Evelyn Coleman, Walter Mosely, Hugh Holton, and Penny Mickelbury.
New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2004, 368 p.
Ashley Bryan's ABC of African-American poetry
Author: Various Authors
Each letter of the alphabet is represented by a line from a poem by different
African American poets, describing an aspect of the black experience.
Other Contributors: Bryan, Ashley
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, c1997, 32 p.
When Washington was in vogue: a love story (a lost novel of the Harlem Renaissance)
Edward Christopher Williams ; with commentaries by Adam McKible and Emily Bernard
Author: Williams, Edward Christopher, 1871-1929
Capturing African American high society in Washington, D.C., during the Harlem
Renaissance, this long-lost epistolary novel chronicles the romance of protagonist
Davy Carr with Caroline, a flapper, as seen through Carr's letters to his friend
Bob in Harlem.
New York, NY: Amistad, 2003, 285 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: This lost epistolary novel of the Harlem Renaissance,
originally serialized in The Messenger in 1925–1926, is slight in plot
but deep in detail, an invaluable addition to period scholarship. Williams,
the country's first professionally trained black librarian, aptly portrays the
1920s African-American high society of which he was a part. After WWI, army
officer Davy Carr moves to Washington, D.C., to research a book on the African
slave trade. Lodging at the refined home of Margaret Rhodes, he meets her two
daughters: older, serious Genevieve, and irrepressible, flirtatious Caroline.
Davy immerses himself in their busy society, attending dances, teas, socials
and sporting events, and, as in any novel of manners, he makes detailed observations
of this new world's mores, writing his findings to a friend. Although he has
a fine eye for details in others' lives, Davy realizes he has been blind to
his own feelings for the mischievous and darker-skinned Caroline. Williams provides
a glimpse into a parallel universe of privilege—in which slight variations
in skin tone said everything about status, and stuffiness was de rigueur (Caroline,
Davy muses, "makes not the slightest outward show of culture in her ordinary
social relations, [but] she has... a perfectly uncanny fluency of speech, as
I have found out to my discomfiture"). As a light-skinned man who refused
to "pass," Williams had an abiding interest in intraracial tension,
and the absence of white characters further dramatizes the issue. Though the
story holds little suspense, McKible's discovery is sure to provoke scholarship
and discussion, and attract well-deserved attention. (Jan.)
— Staff (Reviewed November 10, 2003) (Publishers Weekly, vol 250, issue
45, p40)
Library Journal Review: Originally published in serial form in the African American tract, the Messenger, from 1925 to 1926, this story was rediscovered by Adam McKible (English, John Jay Coll. of Criminal Justice) and is being published as a novel for the first time. Williams (1871–1929), the first professionally trained African American librarian, writes of the days (and nights) of the Harlem Renaissance in Washington, DC, instead of Harlem. Charming and conventional protagonist Davy Carr, a World War I veteran, goes to the nation's capital to research a book on the slave trade. He finds a room very much to his liking and, through his proprietress, Mrs. Rhodes, meets her prominent, well-to-do, and intellectual friends, as well as her daughter, Caroline. These people give him a different perspective on Washington society and nightlife, which he relates in a series of letters to his friend, Bob. Davy's letters also touch on serious matters, such as how blacks accept the variations in their own skin tones. Slowly, after observing so many other details, Davy reads the signs and clues in front of him—Caroline's strong feelings for him and his own for her. Davy often speaks of the pleasures of sitting before a crackling fire in the hearth, and that would be a good place to enjoy this sincerely delightful book. Highly recommended for public and academic libraries.—Lisa Nussbaum, Dauphin Cty. Lib. Syst., Harrisburg, PA (Reviewed December 15, 2003) (Library Journal, vol 128, issue 20, p170)
Kirkus Reviews Long-lost fiction, written in the 1920s by the first professionally trained African-American librarian, about a young man's romantic adventures among the black elite of Washington, DC.
Williams (1871–1929), a minor figure in the Harlem Renaissance, was a mulatto (his mother was Irish) who serialized this story in The Messenger in 1925 and 1926. Published now as a novel, it consists entirely of letters written by WWI veteran Davy Carr describing his first impressions of Washington to his old army buddy Bob Fletcher back in Harlem. Davy is light enough to pass for white, and he moves somewhat self-consciously through the upper echelons of the District's black society (where nuances of "lightness" or "darkness" take on an almost Talmudic importance) as he researches a study of the African slave trade. At his boardinghouse, Davy becomes fascinated to the point of obsession with his landlady's daughter, Caroline Rhodes, a kind of African-American Sally Bowles who smokes cigarettes, flirts shamelessly, and knows all the latest dances. Serious and high-minded—and, frankly, something of a stuffed shirt—Davy disapproves of Caroline and tells her so. But he's drawn to her in spite of himself. The story is basic boy-meets-girl, with the ending a foregone conclusion by the second chapter and no really convincing obstacles in the way, so that the only distinguishing features to speak of are race and class. The fact that Caroline is dark-skinned while Davy is light may throw in a dramatic frisson for historians and Black Studies scholars, but for most of us this will have little engaging power or lift. Meanwhile, Williams's petty snobberies are aggravating enough without the addition of his bad imitation of Jane Austen ("The ladies, except Mrs. Wallace, are all very fair, and would not be likely to be taken for colored, and in manner and dress they all of them showed real class").
Of academic interest only.
(Kirkus Reviews, October 15, 2003)
Other Contributors:
Williams, Edward Christopher, 1871-1929
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0060555459 : Hardcover
0060555467 : Paperback
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20040820
• TID: 126430
Not without laughter
With a new introduction by Maya Angelou. Foreword by Arna Bontemps
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
Depicts a Black family's attempts to deal with life in a small Kansas town
New York: Scribner Paperback Fiction, 1995, copyright 1969, 299 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Library Journal Review: This is another in the new Scribner Paperback Fiction
line. Poet Hughes made the jump to fiction with this 1930 first novel of an
African American boy's coming of age in a small Kansas town.
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
Other Contributors:
Angelou, Maya; Bontemps, Arna, 1902-1973
Other titles associated with this book:
Without laughter
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0020209851 : Paperback
0848810554 : Hardcover
0606162593 : DEMCO Turtleback
078575783X : Glued Binding
0862417686 : Paperback
0394438736 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035332
Return of Simple, The
Edited by Akiba Sullivan Harper. Introduction by Arnold Rampersad
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
A new collection of "Simple" stories, more than half of which have
never before been gathered into book form, chronicles the life and struggles
of Jesse B. Semple and are considered by many to represent Langston Hughes's
best work
New York: Hill and Wang, 1994, 218 p.
Library Journal Review: All five books featuring Jesse B. Semple (``Simple''), the character Hughes created for his weekly Chicago Defender column, are out of print. Half the stories here are drawn from those books; the remainder have never before appeared in book form.
Kirkus Reviews A welcome reintroduction to the pioneering African-American
writer's most memorable fictional character. Already a popular poet, playwright,
novelist, and key figure in the Harlem Renaissance, Hughes (1902-67) introduced
Jesse B. Semple ("Simple") to readers in 1942 in his Chicago Defender
column, "From Here to Yonder," as a way to convince black Americans
to support the US war effort. From his familiar perch in a fictional Harlem
bar, Simple held forth on a variety of subjects in his own inimitable, folksy
way, and over the next 23 years his musings were collected in five volumes.
The Return of Simple brings together mostly uncollected columns as well as a
few favorites from previous collections. Simple's sometimes tall tales of growing
up in the South and migrating to Harlem are timeless. Race riots, low wages,
interracial marriages, adopting an African name, and birth control are some
of the subjects on which he expounds to his erudite, educated fellow barfly,
who always acts the straight man. Then there is Simple's favorite subject --
"womens," including bis wild cousin Minnie ("The Lord, I reckon,
gave her them bail-bearing hips, but the Devil must of taught her how to use
them"); Zarita, who is always "drinking him up"; and his second
wife, Joyce ("Eve in the garden could not be no better, because Eve had
no stove on which to cook"). Simple speaks with a poetic and easy logic
("It is better to be wore out from living than to be worn out from worry")
in a voice that comes straight out of the African-American folk tradition, but
Hughes's slices of urban black life belong also to the larger continuum of great
American humor, from Mark Twain to Armistead Maupin. Quite simply, an indispensable
part of our cultural heritage.
(Kirkus Reviews, June 15, 1994)
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - The Roots of Modern African American Fiction
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
Other Contributors:
Harper, Akiba Sullivan: editor
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
080908676X : Hardcover
080901582X : Paperback - Print on Demand
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 003569
Short stories
Edited by Akiba Sullivan Harper. With an introduction by Arnold Rampersad
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
Offers a collection of stories written between 1919 and 1963 that follow Hughes'
literary development and the growth of his personal and political concerns
New York: Hill and Wang, copyright 1996, 299 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews Eight of the forty-seven stories in this welcome volume of Hughes's
short fiction have never before been collected, and the rest are from long out-of-print
books. The chronological arrangement (the pieces were written between 1919 and
1963) gives us a full appreciation of Hughes's evolution as a man of letters.
Three high-school tales not previously collected demonstrate Hughes'syouthful
social conscience and his early, solid command of his craft. His early protagonists
struggle against poverty, leading lives of quiet sorrow. A series of sea stories
reflects his own experience as a sailor, all involving trips to the West Coast
of Africa, where, variously, sailors fight over a beautiful native girl, a naive
missionary girl commits suicide after a sailor compromises her virtue, and a
romantic European is entranced by his African wife. A number of pieces from
the '30s concern the black artist's ambivalent relation to his white patrons:
In "The Blues I'm Playing," a brilliant pianist defies her condescending
sponsor to marry a young doctor; and the bohemians in "Slave on the Rock"
degrade their black servants while romanticizing the black race. Throughout
the Depression, Hughes documented the struggle of blacks simply to survive.
In one story, a homeless man hallucinates about breakinginto a church and finding
Christ himself inside. Hughes's Communist sympathies also surface in a few pieces,
as in a tale of racism and red-baiting at the WPA, or the superb record of a
failed strike by black actors in "Trouble with the Angels." But many
of the stories simply chronicle the vibrancy of Harlem life, the passions of
ordinary black people, and the indignities of everyday racism. "On Friday
Morning" is the heartbreaking tale of an aspiring artist denied her art
school scholarship because of her race. Stories that, at their best, provide
a remarkable portrait of black America over several crucial decades: an important
collection that can only enhance our admiration of a great American writer.
(Kirkus Reviews, July 15, 1996)
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
Other Contributors:
Harper, Akiba Sullivan: editor; Rampersad, Arnold
Other titles associated with this book:
Langston Hughes short stories
Short stories of Langston Hughes
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0809086581 : Hardcover
0809016036 : Paperback
0613025040 : Glued Binding
0809035413 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035333
Simple's Uncle Sam
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
Jesse B. Simple's observations and experiences reflect the ironies of life in
Harlem
Hill and Wang, 1965, 180p.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews The main voice in these interludes, 43 newspaper and magazine
pieces best described as story-anecdotes, is Jesse B. Semple, or Simple, whom
Hughes has developed over the years as a "reflector" of the moods,
spirit, whimsies and hopes of the tenants of the Negro ghetto. The subjects
include the civil rights scene, national and local politics, even air raid shelters
and marriage as an institution. Simple is the Average Man Militant. His fanciful
disquisitions often lead to serious revelations--such as his dream in which
Negroes rule the South and "Mammy" Eastland come begging for a handout.
Harlem is a place, and one gets the feeling of it through several characters;
but Harlem is also an idea and Hughes makes it more comprehensible to anyone
befuddled by its complexities. As for Jesse B., he proves by his commentary
on the de facto racist institutions which most white people take for granted
as unbiased that he is as simple as a Jesuit.
(Kirkus Reviews, June 15, 1965)
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - The Roots of Modern African American Fiction
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0809086816 : Paperback
0809000873 : Paperback
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035334
Sweet and sour animal book, The
Langston Hughes ; illustrations by students from the Harlem School of the Arts
; introduction by Ben Vereen ; afterword by George P. Cunningham
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
Twenty-six short poems introduce animals for each letter of the alphabet, from
Ape to Zebra.
New York: Oxford University Press, c1994, 48 p.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews Published for the first time, this book of poems for children
covers animals for all the letters of the alphabet (except for X, which gets
a poem but no animal). Some of the poems are educational, some are just fun:
"What use/Is a goose/Except to quackle?/If a goose/Can't quackle/She's
out of whackle." Many of them offer moral lessons: "A lion in a zoo,/Shut
up in a cage,/Lives a life/Of smothered rage." Hughes (1902--67) really
speaks to today's children, and who better to illustrate his poems than the
children of the Harlem School of the Arts? Their sculptures perfectly complement
the whimsical tone of Hughes's poetry. Although it's hard to tell what kind
of artists these children will be when they grow up, right now they are marvelous.
An autobiographical introduction by entertainer Ben Vereen and a biographical
afterword about Hughes by George P. Cunningham (Africana studies/Brooklyn College)
round out the volume. Harlem Renaissance poet Hughes and young Harlem artists
together create a fun, provocative, and visually exciting abecedary.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1994)
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
Other Contributors:
Vereen, Ben; Cunningham, George Philbert, 1937-
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
019509185X : Hardcover - Juvenile
0195120302 : Paperback - Juvenile
0613062779 : Prebind
0606291644 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20041020
• TID: 129024

Tambourines to glory
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
Day, copyright 1958
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews A Harlem folk tale in modern guise- so one might characterize
this story of two sides of the coin in an independent, non-denominational religious
racket. Two women on relief -- one a lusty realist, took her sex where she could
get it, used what funds she had to "buy" her man (preferably young
and good looking), and came up with the idea of putting on an act on a street
corner using religion in free wheeling style; the other whose chief characteristic
was sheer indolence, liked to sit better than to stand, but was at heart, sincere,
well-meaning and honest. A tambourine to accompany the singing -- and collect
the sheckels; a gift of gab and high sounding phrases in the best Billy Sunday
tradition, a soulful voice and a soulful appearance, these were their stock
in trade. But when Laura took on a youngman with ideas, she progressed from
street corner to a two room Garden of Eden, then to refurbished ex theatre,
while the crowds grew and the money flowed. Laura doled it out to her Charlie;
Essie put it into good works- and to her preparations for her teen-age daughter
to come North. And a few people got religion. That it ends on a note of melodrama
bordering on tragedy somehow fails to touch the heartstrings. But the telling
in the vernacular has its poetic overtones and its sense of authenticity.
(Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 1958)
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0767923278 : Paperback
0809091348 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035335

Ways of white folks, The
Author: Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967
Fourteen stories deal with the interaction of Blacks and whites in 1930s America,
including the stories of an ailing musician, a moonlighting student, and a clever
charlatan
New York: Vintage Books, copyright 1934, 255 p.
Author Web Sites:
1. Langston Hughes : Features Hughes' bibliography.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0679728171 : Paperback
083359057X : Glued Binding
0394451163 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035336
ery tongue got to confess: Negro folktales from the Gulf states
by Zora Neale Hurston ; introd. by John Edgar Wideman ; edited with a pref.
by Carla Kaplan
Author: Hurston, Zora Neale, editor
A book of folktales about love, slavery, faith, family, race, and community,
collected in the late 1920s, represents a large part of the author's literary
legacy and details African American life in the rural South.
New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2001, 288 p.
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ This entertaining collection, which was
left unpublished in 1929 and only recently unearthed, is a fine companion to
Hurston's earlier volumes, Tell My Horse (1937) and Mules and Men (1935).
The late (1891–1960) author of the classic novels Jonah's Gourd Vine and
Their Eyes Were Watching God was also a knowledgeable folklorist, as we learn
again from John Edgar Wideman's tributory foreword and Editor Kaplan's informative
introduction. The latter discusses Hurston's energetic research into indigenous
tales and legends, supported by minimal grants, the WPA, and a wealthy white
patron. The stories themselves—ranging from single-sentence utterances
to fully detailed and developed anecdotes—are arranged in 17 specific
categories focusing on such subjects as gender relations ("Women Tales");
racial inequity and enmity ("Massa and White Folks Tales"); creation
stories, many akin to Joel Chandler Harris's Uncle Remus stories ("Talking
Animal Tales"); and several varieties of folk supernaturalism ("God
Tales," "Devil Tales"). Frequent use of racial epithets and dialect
reminiscent of minstrel shows will probably offend many contemporary readers,
but are indisputable evidence of the authenticity of Hurston's presentations:
in almost every case of stories she heard directly from ordinary people, many
of them illiterate. There is inevitable repetition, but not as much as one might
expect. And there are many pleasures: impudent alternative versions of familiar
biblical tales and good-natured mockery of religious truisms ("What in
the hell does …[an] angel need with … [Jacob's] ladder when he's
got wings"); sly references to racial imperatives (a black man falling
off a roof notices he's about to land on a white woman—"so he turnt
right roun' and fell back upon dat house"); a ribald explanation of why
women don't serve in the army, and several clever one-liners about the physical
(and marital) problems encountered by snails.
A rich harvest of native storytelling.
(Kirkus Reviews, October 1, 2001)
Author Web Sites:
1. Voices from the Gap: Zora Neale Hurston : Features a biography of the author,
a selected bibliography, works about the author, and related links.
Other Contributors:
Kaplan, Carla: editor; Wideman, John Edgar
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0060188936 : Hardcover
0060934549 : Paperback
0694526452 : Cassette - Audio
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 065363
Jonah's gourd vine: a novel
With a new foreword by Rita Dove
Author: Hurston, Zora Neale
John Buddy Pearson, a young Black man who becomes a popular pastor at Zion Hope,
is unable to reconcile his good intentions and his natural instincts
New York: Harper and Row, Publishers, 1990, copyright 1934, 229 p.
Other Contributors:
Dove, Rita
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0060916516 : Paperback
0783802552 : Hardcover - Large Print
0809590174 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035506
Moses, man of the mountain
With an introduction by Blyden Jackson
Author: Hurston, Zora Neale
Moses becomes the leader of his people in order to rescue them from bondage.
University of Illinois Press, 1984, copyright 1939, 351p
Notes:
Reprint of the 1939 Lippincott ed
With an introduction by Blyden Jackson
Lexile:
830
Other related features:
1. Book Discussion Guide - Their Eyes Were Watching God
Author Web Sites:
1. Voices from the Gap: Zora Neale Hurston : Features a biography of the author,
a selected bibliography, works about the author, and related links.
Other Contributors:
Jackson, Blyden
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0060919949 : Paperback
0809590336 : Hardcover - Religious
0833570005 : Glued Binding
0252011228 : Paperback - University Press
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• World Historical Fiction: An Annotated Guide to Novels for Adults and
Young Adults, published by Oryx Press
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 035507
Novels and stories
Author: Hurston, Zora Neale
The first volume of a noted African-American writer's collection includes Their
Eyes Were Watching God, Jonah's Gourd Vine, Moses, Man of the Mountain, and
Seraph on the Suwanee.
New York: Library of America, copyright 1995, 1041 p.
Notes:
Includes 4 novels, 9 short stories, and chronology
Contents:
PARTIAL CONTENTS: Jonah's gourd vine. -Their eyes were watching God. -Moses,
man of the mountain. -Seraph on the Suwanee. -Selected stories.
Author Web Sites:
1. Voices from the Gap: Zora Neale Hurston : Features a biography of the author,
a selected bibliography, works about the author, and related links.
Other titles associated with this book:
Stories and novels
Jonah's gourd vine
Their eyes were watching God
Moses, man of the mountain
Seraph on the Suwanee
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0940450836 : Hardcover
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 003590
Skull talks back and other haunting tales, The
collected by Zora Neale Hurston ; adapted by Joyce Carol Thomas ; illustrated
by Leonard Jenkins
Author: Hurston, Zora Neale
Inspired by stories from the rural south, a collection of terrifying tales includes
a skinless witch, a talking skull, and a man more evil than the devil, as collected
by the famous African-American writer Zora Neale Hurston.
[New York]: HarperCollins, c2004, 56 p.
Contents:
Big, bad Sixteen -- Bill, the talking mule -- The skull talks back -- The witch
who could slip off her skin -- High Walker -- The haunted house.
Reviews for this Title:
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-6–Thomas retells six supernatural
folktales selected from Hurston's Every Tongue Got to Confess (HarperCollins,
2001). The subject matter is sufficiently scary to give young readers a thrill,
and Jenkins's spooky black-and-white paintings of skeletons, skulls, arrogant
men, eerie cats, and nighttime swirls of fog perfectly set the stage for shivers.
Thomas omits most of the dialect and supplies missing motivation. In "The
Witch Who Could Slip off Her Skin," the reteller adds silly explanatory
paragraphs telling why this witch would "ride" people who had done
her wrong. She eliminates the character of "Marster" from "Big
Sixteen," here called "Big, Bad Sixteen." "Bill, the Talking
Mule," a tale in which a farmer is frightened when his animals suddenly
speak to him, retains all of the surprise hilarity of the original. An adapter's
note doesn't explain the changes so much as review the content. Although mostly
faithful to Hurston's tales, the retellings read like fragments from some larger
work that begin in the middle and end abruptly, a fact that may trouble readers
who expect more shape to a story. However, this volume introduces a small part
of the huge body of literature collected in the rural South in the 1920s and
the person who helped put words to paper.–Susan Hepler, Burgundy Farm
Country Day School, Alexandria, VA (Reviewed October 1, 2004) (School Library
Journal, vol 50, issue 10, p168)
Author Web Sites:
1. Voices from the Gap: Zora Neale Hurston : Features a biography of the author,
a selected bibliography, works about the author, and related links.
Other Contributors:
Thomas, Joyce Carol; Jenkins, Leonard: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0060006315 : Hardcover - Juvenile
006000634X
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20041220
• TID: 130738
Bubber goes to heaven
Illustrations by Daniel Minter. Introduction by Jim Haskins. Afterword by Charles
L. James
Author: Bontemps, Arna, 1902-1973
Knocked unconscious by a fall from a tree, ten-year-old Bubber dreams that two
angels come down and take him up to Heaven, where he has trouble learning to
fly with his new wings and has wonderful adventures.
New York: Oxford University Press, copyright 1998, 84 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: Written in the early 1930s, this previously unpublished work may be of greater interest to devotees of Louisiana-born poet and folklorist Bontemps (Lonesome Boy; and with Langston Hughes, The Pasteboard Bandit) and other literary figures associated with the Harlem Renaissance than to the average young reader. After 10-year-old Bubber falls out of a high tree while coon hunting in the Deep South, he imagines that angels transport him to heaven. There he is taken in by Sister Esther ("Except for her wings and nightgown she would have resembled very closely the large black woman whose picture Bubber had seen on boxes of pancake flour"). She explains the pain he experiences across his shoulder blades ("Yo' wings is beginning to sprout"), makes him a flannel robe (standard heavenly garb) and gives him a lesson in flying. An illuminating note from Minter interprets Bontemps's deliberate use of black stereotypes and dialect, which ground the book in a specific period setting. Yet some of the elements are surprisingly timely (the multicultural thrust of a heavenly children's performance in which Bubber takes part) or timeless (the boy's stage fright on the same occasion). Tampering with scale and intentionally exaggerating facial features, Minter's stylized linoleum block prints offer a fitting visual interpretation. An afterword by Charles L. James presents a biographical sketch of Bontemps and discusses both the highly personal nature of this story and its application to the wider African-American experience. Ages 6-12. (Dec.)
Kirkus Reviews From Bontemps (with Langston Hughes, The Pasteboard Bandit,
1997, etc.), a previously unpublished story with the sound and sense of a 1930s
folktale. Bubber falls out of a tree while hunting with his uncle, and finds
himself in heaven. It's similar to what he knows of Earth, except that angels
keep everything scrubbed clean, every day is Sunday, there is plentiful food,
and Sister Esther helps him when his new-growing wings itch and ache. In the
children's pageant in heaven, the angel children get to portray people from
all ages and times. Bubber eventually wakes up to discover that it was all a
dream. Minter notes that the black Southern dialect, which recalled his own
Southern youth, inspired him to create wood-block and linoleum-block prints
of black angels, not as individual figures but as stylized characters; these
are powerful images that transcend stereotypes. The tale itself is a period
piece. The apparatus surrounding the story--an introduction by James Haskins
and afterword by Charles I. James--clearly explains Bontemps's life and work,
and places this story in the context of his scholarly career as an anthologist,
collaborator, teacher, and librarian; the volume may be more meaningful to an
adult researcher than to a young reader.
(Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 1998)
Author Web Sites:
1. Arna Bontemps Web Site : Features Bontemps' biography and information on
his poetry.
Other Contributors:
Minter, Daniel; Haskins, James, 1941-; James, Charles L.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0195123654 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082691
Pasteboard bandit, The
By Arna Bontemps and Langston Hughes. Illustrations by Peggy Turley. Afterword
by Cheryl A. Wall
Author: Bontemps, Arna, 1902-1973
When he and his parents move to the quiet Mexican town of Taxco, Kenny makes
friends with Juanito Perez, and the two share many adventures with Juanito's
special papiermache toy, Tito.
New York: Oxford University Press, copyright 1997, 93 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: Ages 5-8. Like Hughes' The Sweet and Sour Animal Book (1994), this gentle fantasy was first written in the mid-1930s, never found a publisher, was recently "uncovered" among Hughes' papers, and is published now for the first time (as part of the Opie Library). And like the Animal book, this will appeal more to adult collectors than to children. The story is set in a small town in Mexico and tells of the friendship between two boys, a Mexican and an American, and their little pasteboard carnival toy. The style is saccharine and cute (the word little appears several times on nearly every page), and the fantasy framework is contrived. However, the friendship across cultures is drawn without condescension; the Mexican setting is authentic and joyful, from food and scenery to language and pinatas; and Turley's gorgeously colored acrylic illustrations evoke Mexican folk art and murals. Older readers will be fascinated by the biographical and historical notes about Hughes and Bontemps and their friendship. An exhibit with the paintings and the story of the book is touring the country. ((Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1998)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: Gr 3-6--Tito, a papier-mache doll, stars in this rather dull tale set in Mexico. With Tito always at their sides, young Juanito and his American friend Kenny engage in a series of minor adventures, including being locked in an abandoned mine, mistaking holiday fire crackers for gun shots, and listening to serenaders. Written in 1935 and unpublished until now, the book has dated and mechanical dialogue. On the whole, the writing has not aged well, and an occasional switch from third person is jarring. The narrative does depict rural Mexican life and holiday celebrations adequately, but there's nothing here that can't be found in many higher-quality titles.--Denise E. Agosto, formerly at Midland County Public Library, TX
Publishers Weekly Review: A 1935 collaboration between two Harlem Renaissance poets (who had three years earlier published Popo and Fifina), this deceptively simple story was initially rejected by a publisher and, decades later, donated to Yale by Hughes. The winsome tale of the friendship that flourishes between a Mexican boy and a boy from America has a timely message for today's youngsters. Set in Taxco, Mexico, and alternating between the voices of young Juanito Perez and Tito, the beloved papier-mache figurine he eventually gives to his American friend, the narrative provides a youthful perspective on the country's cultural traditions. The authors focus on such child-pleasing topics as holidays, food and learning to communicate, as the boys teach each other key words in Spanish and English--while gently underscoring the importance of tolerance, self-esteem and sharing. Exploding with vivid colors and fanciful patterns, Turley's (Armadillo Ray) full-bleed stylized paintings have a playful, collage-like quality; her black-and-white spot art breaks up some of the more text-laden pages. It's easy to believe that Bontemps and Hughes would be delighted with this animated volume--and that readers will be, too. Ages 8-12. (Nov.)
Kirkus Reviews Sandwiched between an introduction by Bontemps's son and a biographical
and analytical afterword is a never-before-published story, innovative for its
time, written in 1935 by two icons in the history of African-American literature.
The story, which has not aged well, will find its most appreciative audience
in readers familiar with the authors' other works. As Hughes's hand-painted
pasteboard bandit, Tito (six inches high, with a "furious little rabbit
beard" and raised fist), looks on with interest, Juanito introduces Kenny,
the son of vacationing New York artists, to his small Mexican town, the surrounding
hills, and Christmas and Easter festivities. The plot is loosely constructed--Juanito
takes an entire chapter to nod off after a Christmas Eve posada--and, despite
the authors' efforts to depict an international friendship among equals there
is still some overt cultural relativism: After several local children fail to
break the piÛata, Kenny succeeds, then drowsily remarks on the way home,
"A piÛata's almost as good as a Christmas tree." In a dozen
full-color, full-page paintings, Turley uses a vibrant palette and stylized
figures reminiscent of some Mexican folk art, creating lush scenes of flowers
and toys. Consider this a long-lost literary relic, available at last, more
for study than pleasure.
(Kirkus Reviews, October 15, 1997)
Author Web Sites:
1. Arna Bontemps Web Site : Features Bontemps' biography and information on
his poetry.
Other Contributors:
Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967; Turley, Peggy; Wall, Cheryl A.
Other titles associated with this book:
Paste board bandit
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0195114760 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082692

My painted house, my friendly chicken, and me
Photographs by Margaret Courtney-Clarke. Designed by Alexander Isley Design
Author: Angelou, Maya
A South African girl describes her pet chicken, painting special designs on
her house, dressing up for school, and her mischievous brother
New York: C. Potter, copyright 1994, unpaged.
Reviews for this Title:
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ A beguiling collaboration between the renowned
poet (All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes, 1986, etc.) and a Namibian-born
photojournalist. Thandi, an eight-year-old Ndebele girl from a South African
village, is first glimpsed in European school clothes but talks mostly about
her traditional culture, in which "people do not call anything beautiful.
They will say that the best thing is good." She tells how their intricately
patterned houses are painted and describes her mother's beadwork, focusing on
the contrast between these arts and the sober modern world of town and school.
Thandi's sunny, childlike voice is gracefully honed and has delightful touches
of humor, especially about her "best friend," a chicken: "When
I tell my friend secrets, she can talk all she wants...but no one can understand
her...except another chicken, of course" (ellipses in original). In the
expertly composed color photos, Thandi and the other children glow with mischief,
laugh out loud, or "just sit back deep inside themselves"; the crafts
are also handsomely displayed. The design here (by Alexander Isley Design) is
inspired, setting off words and photos to perfection. Vibrant color blocks and
pages echo hues in the photos and contrast with white pages. Spacing and different
sizes of sans-serif type enhance the cadence and emphasis of the first-person
narrative. A fine introduction to these young South Africans.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1994)
Author Web Sites:
1. The Academy of American Poets: Maya Angelou : A profile of the author, with
links to a selection of her poems.
Other Contributors:
Courtney-Clarke, Margaret, 1949-
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0517596679 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0517888157 : Paperback - Juvenile
0375825673 : Paperback - Juvenile
0375925678 : Library binding - Juvenile
0606108858 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0613719115 : Prebind
0606283013 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082582
Just family
Author: Bolden, Tonya
Ten-year-old Beryl is fairly content with her life in East Harlem in the 1960s
until she learns that her older sister is really her half-sister and worries
that her family will begin to change.
New York: Cobblehill Books, copyright 1996, 149 p.
Kirkus Reviews Ten-year-old Beryl lives with her parents and her older sister,
Randy, in East Harlem in the 1960s. When she discovers that Randy was born before
her parents met, to her then-single mother, her world is rocked. Why hadn't
anyone told her? Would Randy go live with her biological father someday? Reacting
with injured pride, fear, and anger, Beryl lashes out at her mother and sister.
Only a trip to South Carolina for a large family reunion helps her see that
love is more important than blood. Although some of the language and imagery
offers glimpses of Beryl's life, the overall story never coalesces. In the middle
of chapters, Bolden (with Vy Higginson, Mama, I Want to Sing, 1992, etc.) creates
unexpected shifts in point of view that cause momentary confusion and weaken
interest in Beryl. Also troubling is the sense that the entire story takes place
in a sanitized historical vacuum. There is only passing mention of the civil
rights movement and no sense of the realities facing a black family traveling
in the South. The near-lynching of an uncle is presented as part of a distant
past--not a still-present threat. These problems mar a novel that has stirring
moments but remains unconvincing.
(Kirkus Reviews, December 15, 1995)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Girls -> African-American Girls
2. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Girls -> Girls by Age -> Ten-Year-Old
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0525651926 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082689

Imani in the belly
Pictures by Alex Boies
Author: Chocolate, Deborah M. Newton
Imani's faith helps her save herself and her children from the belly of the
King of Beasts.
BridgeWater Books, copyright 1994, unpaged.
Other Contributors:
Boies, Alex: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0816734666 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0816734674
0606094598 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0606191127 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0785778551 : Prebind
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082772
Foot warmer and the crow, The
Illustrated by Daniel Minter
Author: Coleman, Evelyn, 1948-
A patient slave finally wins his freedom through his own cleverness and the
advice of a crow.
New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, copyright 1994, unpaged.
Publishers Weekly Review: Hezekiah, identified not as a slave but an "enslaved
man," dreams of being "free like a bird." After his escape attempt
is thwarted by a band of snapping dogs, Hezekiah takes a tip from a wise crow
and resolves to discover the slave master's weaknesses and through them find
a way to freedom. So he offers his services as a foot warmer, spending the cold
winter nights under the "smelly covers" of Master Thompson's bed,
listening carefully as the white man spills secrets in his sleep. When spring
comes, Hezekiah knows his master's deepest fear and leaps from this knowledge
to freedom. Coleman's elegantly told tale emphasizes the importance of self-respect
while decrying the injustice of slavery. Debut illustrator Minter's bold art
has the air of suspended animation, of deep emotion frozen and distilled until
it verges on the extreme. Facial expressions are often grotesque, an odd combination
of hilarity and fear, capturing the book's sadness as well as its fundamental
optimism. Ages 6-up. (Sept.)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> Slavery in the US
2. Teaching with Fiction - 'It's Not Fair!' Picture Books About Equality, Justice
and Fairness
Author Web Sites:
1. Evelyn Coleman's Web Site : Coleman provides information about herself and
her books.
Other Contributors:
Minter, Daniel
Other titles associated with this book:
Crow and the foot warmer., The
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0027228169 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
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• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082805
White socks only
Evelyn Coleman ; illustrations by Tyrone Geter
Author: Coleman, Evelyn, 1948-
A confrontation occurs when an African-American girl drinks at a segregated
drinking fountain.
Morton Grove, MS: A. Whitman, 1996, unpaged.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: Ages 5-8. This begins with a grandmother telling a tale of her childhood in the segregated South: "You know, when I was a little girl, like yourself, I sneaked into town once. Yep, all by myself." All dressed up and hiding eggs in her pockets, the little girl walks down the road past the feared and revered Chicken Man, who supposedly has powers, including the ability to turn his enemies into chickens. In town, the girl breaks an egg on the sidewalk to see if it will really fry. Seeing a drinking fountain with a sign that says "Whites Only" and a step stool for children, she takes off her black shoes and steps up in her clean white socks. After a white man throws her to the ground, other black people step up to the fountain and drink. Then the Chicken Man joins them, he drinks from the fountain, points at the white man (a chicken later turns up at the fountain), and tells the child to go home. Impressionistic oil paintings sensitively illustrate the place, the time, the heat, and the child's emotions. Although the last part of the story is somewhat confusing, the book works as an effective portrayal of a child's innocence and her awakening to racism. ((Reviewed Feb. 15, 1996)) -- Carolyn Phelan
School Library Journal Review: Gr 2-4--In this story, a grandmother relates an incident from her childhood to her granddaughter. On a scorching hot Mississippi day, a little girl walks into town by herself to learn whether it really is possible to fry an egg on the sidewalk. Mission accomplished, she is on her way home when she stops for a drink of water. Interpreting the "whites only" sign on the water fountain to refer to socks, the African American child takes off her patent-leather shoes and has just begun to drink when an angry white man grabs her and pushes her to the ground. He threatens to "whup" her, but the black townspeople come to the girl's aid by taking off their shoes and drinking from the same fountain. The angry bigot then receives punishment at the hands of a local conjure man. Atmospheric paintings, smudged and moody, will draw readers into this gripping tale. However, the story has some unsettling elements. The protagonist is old enough to go into town alone, yet she is oblivious to the meaning of the "whites only" sign. Her certainty that the sign refers to white socks is also curious; knowing that is what it means implies some prior knowledge, but she clearly does not have the facts straight.--Anna DeWind, Milwaukee Public Library
Publishers Weekly Review: Subtle and stirring, this tale-within-a-tale begins
with an affectionate exchange between an African American girl and her grandmother,
then telescopes to encompass an electrifying moment fraught with personal and
political significance. Grandma tells of sneaking off to town one sizzling summer
day when she was a child, "planning on doing no good." Approaching
a water fountain, the thirsty girl mistakes its "Whites Only" sign
to mean that she should take off her shoes so that only her white socks will
touch the step stool. A "big white man" grabs her and removes his
belt to whip her-prompting African American bystanders to remove their shoes,
too, and defiantly drink from the fountain. At home, the narrator's mother proclaims
she can now go to town by herself, " 'cause you're old enough to do some
good"; in town, "the `Whites Only' sign was gone from that water fountain
forever." Though Coleman (The Footwarmer and the Black Crow) complicates
the story with some unnecessary subplots, the impact is strong. Geter's (Dawn
and the Round-to-it) full- and double-page paintings can be hazy, but they conduct
the story's considerable emotional charge. Ages 5-9. (Mar.)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Girls -> African-American Girls
2. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Life and Living
-> Problems and Questions -> Racism
3. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> 20th Century -> The 20th Century
4. Teaching with Fiction - R-E-S-P-E-C-T... It's What All Children Need to See
5. Teaching with Fiction - Teaching Writing Through Picture Books: Narrative
Genre
Author Web Sites:
1. Evelyn Coleman's Web Site : Coleman provides information about herself and
her books.
Other titles associated with this book:
Whites only
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0807589551 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
080758956X : Paperback - Juvenile
0613229606 : Prebind
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 082806

Jaguarundi
Illustrated by Floyd Cooper
Author: Hamilton, Virginia, 1936-2002
Although the other animals also feel threatened by the encroachment of humans,
only Rundi and Coati journey north in search of a safer place to live.
New York: Blue Sky Press, copyright 1995, unpaged.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 2-5, younger for reading aloud. This compelling picture book is an animal fantasy rooted in physical reality. A jaguarundi (wildcat) tries to persuade the endangered animals of the rain forest to run north across the river to freedom, but one by one the other animals give their reasons for staying where they are. "Adapt," says the bat. "I'll never flee nor change my ways," gloats a powerful predator. Only the raccoonlike coati joins the jaguarundi on the perilous journey north. This isn't a formula story: the two emigrants find no paradise. The Promised Land has also been fenced and stripped by settlers. But the travelers adapt, and they survive in their new place. Hamilton says in a note that "the story parallels humans who escape their homelands in search of better, safer lives." The facts about the real animals are as powerful as the metaphor, and Cooper's glowing paintings capture the elusive beauty of each wild creature in its habitat. We feel the strength and the fragility as we try to know more. The book ends with small paintings and brief factual paragraphs about each of the 17 species mentioned in the story: where they live, how they behave, how endangered they are. ((Reviewed December 15, 1994)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: K-Gr 4-An original fantasy that "introduces young readers to a variety of real rain forest animals." As the ecosystem is gradually being tamed by humans who clear the land to build homes, ranches, and farms, Rundi Jaguarundi decides to move north where the great Rio Bravo flows and the forest canopy is still said to exist. He invites Coatimundia and other animals to accompany him. Big Brown Bat decides to stay, advising the others to learn to adapt, because there will always be danger, always be change. Jaguar announces he will not give up his hunting ground-it's him or them. Only Coatimundi decides to go with his friend. When they reach the Rio Bravo, it, too, has been claimed by man, so they continue on separately. Eventually Rundi settles down to raise a family. A picture glossary lists and defines the common animals found in Central and South America. Cooper's paintings convey the misty heat of the tropical habitat. The animals are realistically depicted, but the story and pictures do take liberties with the animal groupings-prey and predator stand together. The strength of this book is in its smooth presentation of cogent reasons for preserving the rain forest and its dwellers. A valuable curriculum item, which will fill many needs.-Karen K. Radtke, Milwaukee Public Library
Publishers Weekly Review: When Rundi Jaguarundi and Coati Coatimundi, creatures of a threatened rain forest, decide to journey north in search of a more congenial habitat, some animals caution them to stay-"Adapt is what we must do," warns the Big Brown Bat. But no matter how far Rundi and Coati travel, they find more hunters, houses and fences, and Rundi wonders if "north must be farther on." In a preface Hamilton (The People Could Fly) suggests that "the story parallels humans who escape their homelands in search of better, safer lives" and that it includes "a classic symbolism of fleeing North." Despite the weighty themes and despite Cooper's (Brown Honey and Broomwheat Tea) sometimes strikingly handsome artwork and arresting cover, this book is not up to Hamilton's usual standards. The 17 animals included are described in terms of encyclopedia-style tidbits, and their stilted conversations can sound like tracts (Coati and Rundi "go off to a shady spot among the spiny bromeliads"; says Rundi: "The forest canopy is going. I'm afraid we wild animals will go with it."). An endnote profiles each of the cited animals, with special attention given to the plights of the endangered. Ages 5-12. (Oct.)
Kirkus Reviews Rundi Jaguarundi's neighborhood (the rain forest) is getting
overpopulated, so he teams up with Coati Coatimundi and calls a general meeting
of the local fauna. All agree that there is a clear and present danger, but
most opt for adaptation rather than flight. Only the lone twosome -- Rundi and
Coati -- head for a new frontier. They travel north to the Rio Bravo, to where
the forest canopy is crowned, to the promised land. But the classic theme of
pursuing happiness and rejecting compromise founders when the two inexplicably
set their stakes, after a long, tough haul, near humans. They decide that they
will now fit into that habitat and live (that strange emphasis is in the original).
Hamilton's (Plain City, 1993, etc.) story leaves readers dumbfounded and not
a little bit disappointed; Cooper's atmospheric animal illustrations convey
a moodiness but offer little else. Strangely, despite its Greener-than-thou
tone, this book is complacent: Animals can adapt, but not as easily or quickly
as implied here.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1994)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Virginia Hamilton
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Animal Stories ->
Rare and Endangered Animals
2. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Places -> Places
in Nature -> Rain Forests
Author Web Sites:
1. Virginia Hamilton's Web Site : Features author and book information plus
fun stuff.
Other Contributors:
Cooper, Floyd, 1959-
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590473662 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0590473670 : Paperback - Mass Market
0606115153 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0613033469 : Prebind
0606312110 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
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• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083136
Plain City
Author: Hamilton, Virginia, 1936-2002
Twelve-year-old Buhlaire, a "mixed" child who feels out of place in
her community, struggles to unearth her past and her family history as she gradually
discovers more and more about her long-missing father.
New York: Blue Sky Press, c1993, 194 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: /*STARRED REVIEW*/ Gr. 5-7. Hamilton's style gets plainer, but her words lose none of their music or their depth. She makes one girl's search for identity both a realistic story and a universal myth of awakening. At 12, Buhlaire Sims is a proud, smart outsider. None of the kids in her small midwestern town will have much to do with her: maybe it's prejudice about her mixed skin color, maybe it's her home. Her loving mother works as a nightclub singer and dancer, and Buhlaire is cared for by her extended family. She has always been told her father is dead, but then he turns up in town, and her whole view of herself and her world is transformed. He's a stranger, homeless, mentally unstable, and needy, and his skin is pale, almost white. Raging at her family, which has kept the truth from her, she gives him money and is tempted to run away with him. One of those who stop her is a boy in her class who has seemed to be her sneering enemy but turns out to be her friend. Much of the story takes place outdoors, and the changes in the winter landscape--from frozen stillness to transforming flood--mirror Buhlaire's inner experience. Everything is smoky colored, light and shadow, not only in physical appearances but also in our feelings, the mistakes we all make, our frailty, and our love. In a transcendent scene, Buhlaire sings in harmony with her mother the popular song about the light that shines on all of us "when the night is cloudy." ((Reviewed Sept. 15, 1993)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: Gr 6-8-Discovering that her mother and relatives lied about her father dying in Vietnam, angry Buhlaire-Marie Sims, 12, is determined to find and communicate with her dad. When he rescues her during a January blizzard, he leads his daughter to a highway underpass, his space among the homeless of Plain City. Buhlaire learns that her father is a troubled man, estranged from his family because of his mental instability and racially mixed parentage. Although he treats her kindly, she begins to perceive the confusion and unpredictability of his life. Buhlaire has experienced her own ostracization because of her mother's nightclub career, her home among the stilted river bottom "water houses," and her light skin. Although she is loved and cared for, her adolescent sensibilities are aroused when she realizes that her family has shielded her from her own identity. Through candid thoughts, realistic dialogue, and a symbolic blend of setting and self-discovery, Hamilton has created a testimonial on the powerful bonds of blood and "back time," or heritage. Buhlaire emerges from her emotional turmoil and quest with an appreciation for the attentions and personal struggles of a classmate; with renewed affection for her family; and, with a compassionate understanding of hard choices that are part of life.-Gerry Larson, Chewning Junior High School, Durham, NC
Publishers Weekly Review: The revelation that her father is close to home and not "missing in Nam" hits Buhlaire-Marie Sims like a bomb. All at once, her life is turned upside down. The people she trusted--Mama, Aunt Digna and Uncle Sam--seem to be liars; meanwhile, Buhlaire's worst enemy, Grady Terrell, is starting to act friendly. For the first time ever, Buhlaire becomes self-conscious about her "carrot-honey" skin, her "Rasta" hair and her mother, the famous Bluezy Sims, singer and exotic dancer. With exceptional grace and honesty, Hamilton ( M. C. Higgins, the Great ; Many Thousand Gone ) sketches a vibrant portrait of a gifted 12-year-old of mixed race in search of her identity. Accented with rivertown dialect, the lyrical narrative will draw readers into the small community of Plain City, down to the bank of stilt houses where Buhlaire resides, to the dimly lit night club where she makes her singing debut, and all the way to the homeless shelter where bittersweet truths come to light. Richly textured with a cast of unforgettable characters, this extraordinary novel offers a rare glimpse of unconditional love, family loyalty and compassion. Ages 8-12. (Oct.)
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ At 12, Bulaire has reason to ponder her
identity; a bright, prickly loner, she wonders if her looks--changeable blue-green
eyes, "golden Rasta twists," pale skin that summer tans "to near-chocolate
lightly washed in burnt orange"--are why she's at odds with her darker
friends and relatives. Now, in winter, she's angry--with Grady, who teases in
class but seems friendly when he follows her on long walks; and--after she hears
that her father isn't dead, as she's been told, but in town--with her mother
Bluezy, often away singing gigs, and with the aunts and uncle who care for her.
On a bitter cold day, Bulaire, dazzled by snow, is rescued by her dad and taken
to his cave under the Interstate, Grady following. Though "Junior"
is evidently unbalanced, he does seem to care about her; and though he begs
for a "stake," he also returns some of her "back time"--family
photos and mementoes that had mysteriously vanished. Bulaire almost decides
to go with him, as he unrealistically suggests, and does give him money, as
(they now tell her) his half-sisters and ex-wife have often done. In some ways,
Plain City is the obverse of Cousins: this father, homeless and a con man, is
probably unreclaimable, though he, too, helps his daughter at a critical moment.
The other adults are believably flawed, but bracingly strong and reliable. In
the end (as a January thaw--"not heat, just not freezing"--melts the
ice), the truth sets Bulaire free to see her elders as they are and begin to
make peace--with them and with herself and her mixed heritage. Subtle, wise,
complex-- superb. (Fiction. 9-13)
(Kirkus Reviews, September 1, 1993)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Virginia Hamilton
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
ALA Notable Children's Books -> 1994
2. Book Discussion Guide - White Lilacs
3. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Girls -> African-American Girls
4. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Life and Living
-> Problems and Questions -> Racism
Author Web Sites:
1. Virginia Hamilton's Web Site : Features author and book information plus
fun stuff.
Other titles associated with this book:
City plain
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590473646 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0590473654 : Paperback - Mass Market
0606080201 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
059005371X : Paperback - Mass Market
078576593X : Glued Binding
0613070712 : Glued Binding
0780746783 : Glued Binding
9995404338 : Paperback - Mass Market
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
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• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083137
Second cousins
Author: Hamilton, Virginia, 1936-2002
The friendship of twelve-year-old cousins Cammy and Elodie is threatened when
the family reunion includes two other cousins near their age and Elodie is tempted
to drop Cammy for a new companion.
New York: Blue Sky Press, copyright 1998, 168 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 5-8. In this sequel to Hamilton's astonishing novel Cousins (1990), it's a year later, and 12-year-old Cammy and her family are still in anguish over the drowning of her cousin Patty Ann. The story is not as focused this time, partly because there is such a huge cast of characters to keep straight as the extended family gathers for a summertime reunion in Cammy's small Ohio town. At the center of the story is a family secret that has been kept from Cammy all her life: just who exactly is the girl Fractal from Queens, New York, who teaches Cammy how to use a computer and travel through cyberspace? Why is Fractal in Cammy's father's house? Cammy discovers that her loving parents did wrong, are wrong, and are far from the perfect image she has always had of them. At the same time, she sees that the river that drowned her cousin is also a source of renewal and union and connection. The metaphors are sometimes overworked, but the secret will hold readers--the drama between the mean and the nice in everyone. ((Reviewed August 1998)) -- Hazel Rochman
Kirkus Reviews Affirming the value of existing family ties as she perceptively
explores the formation of new ones, Hamilton elaborates on themes from Cousins
(1990) with a populous sequel. As the Wright clan gathers for a rare family
reunion, 12-year-old Cammy meets Jahnina, an oddly mercurial relative from New
York City dubbed "Fractal" because she's seldom without her laptop
computer. Unable to keep relationships straight, Cammy decides to think of all
the young new arrivals as second cousins--until Jahnina calls Cammy's own father
"Daddy" and turns the world upside down. Hamilton masterfully choreographs
the dance of acquaintanceship, from tentative first exchanges, through tests
and boundary-making, to discoveries of common ground; Cammy ultimately gets
more help recovering from her shock from Jahnina than from either of her parents.
In a grand, climactic reunion ceremony, presided over by Gram Tut Wright, all
finally gather at the river where a cousin had drowned a year ago to lay flowers
in the water, and to formally tell their names and places in the family line.
Along with the strong story line, readers will be absorbed both by the author's
language (alternately slangy and poetic), and by the complex emotional and conversational
textures.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 1, 1998)
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Virginia Hamilton
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Family -> Family
Adjustments
Author Web Sites:
1. Virginia Hamilton's Web Site : Features author and book information plus
fun stuff.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590473689 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0590473697 : Paperback - Mass Market
0613290542 : Glued Binding
0606186026 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0780798899 : Glued Binding
Credits:
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• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083139
I thought my soul would rise and fly: the diary of Patsy, a freed girl
Author: Hansen, Joyce, 1942-
Twelve-year-old Patsy keps a diary of the ripe but confusing time following
the end of the Civil War and the granting of freedom to former slaves,
New York: Scholastic, copyright 1997, 202 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-8. The diary-form novel can be an effective, soul-illuminating portrait of the life and times of its protagonist. Less successful efforts can be static or monotonous. This Dear America series title is mostly successful, mainly because of the wrenching story of a young women of the 1800s, a freed slave.
Newly freed, Patsy is still living on the plantation, not knowing what to do with her life, though she does know that she wants to go to school. As a joke, the young mistress and master taught Patsy to read, awakening in her an unquenchable thirst for knowledge.
If there is one complaint, it is that the portrait of slave life has been toned
down somewhat so that at times it seems more inconvenient than inhumane. The
book does a fairly good job of portraying a determined young woman trying to
overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles. The historical notes and photographs
are immensely interesting and further enhance this historical novel. ((Reviewed
December 15, 1997)) -- Denia Hester
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Joyce Hansen
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 1998
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Literary ->
Coretta Scott King Honor Books -> Authors category -> 1998
Other titles associated with this book:
Diary of Patsy. a freed girl
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590849131 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0439555051 : Library binding - Juvenile
Credits:
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• Baker & Taylor
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• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083149
Ola shakes it up
Illustrated by Warren Chang
Author: Hyppolite, Joanne, 1969-
Nine-year-old Ola and her family are the first black people to move into Walcott
Corners, a stuffy, suburban Massachusetts community that Ola wishes were a little
bit more like the lively old Roxbury neighborhood she sorely misses.
New York: Delacorte Press, 1998, 166 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-8. None of Ola's plans to stop her family from moving work. The ingenious, lively, stubborn nine-year-old has no desire to leave Roxbury in Boston for the small town of Walcott, where her family will be the only African American one in the community. When Ola rebels against the many rules of the new "cookie-cutter neighborhood," she gradually learns that she's not the only rebel around. Ola and her family are well-realized characters, and the book's breezy tone makes the reading fun while still allowing the author to touch on serious issues. As the length of the story suggests a middle-grade audience, and Ola seems older than nine, it's fortunate that the jacket illustration is not babyish. Children interested in books with this theme may also want to read Phyllis Reynolds Naylor's Being Danny's Dog (1995). ((Reviewed February 15, 1998)) -- Susan Dove Lempke
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-6--The sign on the front door of her new house reads, "Welcome to Your Cooperative Home"; however, Ola is determined to be as uncooperative as possible. Her family has moved to an all-white suburban neighborhood because of her father's job, and she and her brother and sister must adjust to being the only black students in their school. Despite the fact that her old house was crowded and in a crime-ridden neighborhood haunted by homeless people, it was familiar and she loved it. After several weeks in her new community, it finally dawns on the girl that her family is not going to move back to the city. That's when she devises "Operation Shake `Em Up," a plan that literally transforms her new neighborhood into a place she can call home. Ola's colorful character is sure to draw both sympathy and laughter through the clarity of her feelings and the hilarity of her shenanigans. Readers also get occasional glimpses of the family members' personal battles as they face racism and prejudice. A story that speaks directly to a contemporary audience.--Tammy J. Marley, Charles County Public Library, La Plata, MD
Publishers Weekly Review: Hyppolite (Seth and Samona) offers reassuring yet markedly simplistic solutions to racism and forced assimilation with this upbeat story about an African American girl's adjustment to an all-white community. Ola's parents think their children will have better opportunities if the family moves from Roxbury to a "cooperative community" in the historic, more affluent town of Walcott, but the nine-year-old has serious reservations. Her new home, which is almost identical to every other house on the block, is too large and quiet, and there are endless neighborhood rules about curfews, lawn care and even laundry (clotheslines are banned). At school, Ola, her older sister and her older brother are met with preconceptions and prejudice. After Ola's attempts to fit in fail, she decides that instead of changing herself, she must change what she does not like about Walcott. With the help of the mayor's daughter, she prevents a second "cookie-cutter" development like her own from being built in the town, and simultaneously wages a campaign to curb restrictions in her own neighborhood. Meanwhile, her sister and brother win a few of their own individual battles. At one gigantic block party, all the thorny conflicts in Ola's life are neatly pruned: she reunites with old friends, finds several new ones, helps her neighbors and makes her parents proud. Unfortunately, what promises to be a novel that grapples with complex issues wraps up too easily. Ages 9-up. (Feb.)
Kirkus Reviews Hyppolite (Seth and Samona, 1995, not reviewed) gives an old
story--moving to a new town--an unusual twist and a very appealing protagonist.
Ola doesn't like the idea of moving from their old house in Roxbury to a planned
community in Massachusetts: There are rules (no clotheslines, no bikes left
outside), but more important, hers is the first black family in town. At first,
Ola's older siblings Aeisha and Khatib fall in with her plans to sabotage the
move, but the facts persuade them otherwise: They live in a large, lovely new
house, Aeisha is delighted both by the new school's honors program and the boy
across the street, and Khatib covertly discovers the joys of dance. Ola has
to "shake it up" on her own, and her irrepressible energy eventually
enchants a neighbor or two, as well as a few classmates who initially reacted
to her Roxbury roots with fear. Ola's family--with its emphasis on collective
decisions, its taking in of a Haitian refugee, and its warm, sensible parents--is
a joy to observe. Ola is very funny, and if she occasionally employs a vocabulary
beyond the average nine-year-old's, her stubbornness and wildly elaborate plans
ring true. A warmhearted look at a potentially explosive emotional situation,
handled with grace and humor.
(Kirkus Reviews, December 1, 1997)
Other Contributors:
Chang, Warren: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0385322356 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0440412048 : Paperback - Mass Market
0375895094 : Paperback - Print on Demand
0613161696 : Glued Binding
060616443X : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083254
Maniac monkeys on Magnolia Street
Illustrated by John Ward
Author: Johnson, Angela, 1961-
Ten-year-old Charlie adjusts to her move to a new neighborhood when she befriends
Billy, with whom she hunts maniac monkeys, braves Mr. Pinkbelly's attack cat,
and digs for fossils and treasure.
New York: Knopf, copyright 1999, 97 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 3-5 . When Charlene (aka Charlie) first moves to Magnolia Street, she is apprehensive. There seem to be no kids around, and her brother claims they have all been stolen by the maniac monkeys that inhabit the willow trees on the street. But Charlie, full of spunk, immediately finds a kindred spirit on the block named Billy. Together they discover the secrets and treasures of the neighborhood. Over the course of the summer, they meet Miss Marcia, the artist who works in plaster and always has baked goodies to share, and Mr. Pinkton, who longs for the sea and keeps a house full of aquariums. They share a special garden at the art museum, and on a pretend archaeology dig, they uncover a box of treasures left by children who once lived on the street, with instructions telling them to share the contents. In a series of connected stories, Johnson brings Magnolia Street to life through the ever-curious Charlie, who is always open to the small wonders around her. Newly independent readers will enjoy Charlie's escapades as she makes herself at home on her new street. ((Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1999)) -- Helen Rosenberg
School Library Journal Review: Gr 2-4--Charlie narrates seven stories that take place during her family's first summer on Magnolia Street. Charlie is mischievous and creative and she finds her match in Billy, who quickly becomes her best friend. They are two of a kind and thus spend quite a bit of time grounded on their separate porches. But they do manage a few adventures. In the title story, they play a practical joke on Charlie's older brother. This introduction to the main characters and the people in the neighborhood is the best of the bunch with a strong plot and a great platform for the two friends to bond and show off their cleverness. The stories that follow have less action but Charlie's antics will keep readers' interest. The realistic dialogue will make this comfortable reading for kids, though the few grammatical informalities ("Me and Billy") are unnecessary. Black-and-white sketches appear throughout this entertaining, if not gripping, beginning chapter book.--Susan Oliver, Tampa-Hillsborough Public Library System, FL
Publishers Weekly Review: Johnson (Toning the Sweep) once again evokes a strong sense of place with this breezy, slice-of-life chapter book. Loosely structuring the volume as a series of vignettes, the author recounts a child's exploration of her new neighborhood. Any homesickness Charlie (Charlene) feels for Monroe Street and her old friends there quickly disappears when Billy, a boy on roller skates, stops by her house to share a plate of cookies. ("[He] would be my best friend in the whole world. But I don't know that yet, though.") Charlie and Billy, soon an inseparable duo, hunt down "maniac monkeys" (seen only by Charlie's 12-year-old brother), view Mr. Pinkton's remarkable collection of fish, marvel at the lifelike sculptures sitting in Miss Marcia's yard and discover buried treasure in a vacant lot. Youngsters will find Magnolia Street to be a comforting refuge where summer afternoons are savored at a leisurely pace and neighbors always have time for a friendly chat. Demonstrating how the imagination can transform day-to-day observations into something magical, this satisfying novel may spur readers to take a closer look at their own familiar surroundings. Illustrations not seen by PW. Ages 8-10. (Dec.)
Kirkus Reviews This chapter book finds Charlene, or Charlie, getting accustomed
to a move to Magnolia Street. She misses her friends and her old neighborhood,
but despite the dire warnings of her brother Sid, who alludes to "maniac
monkeys" that live in trees and have carried off all the kids, Charlie
soon hooks up with Billy. The two have a string of low-key, childlike adventures.
They camp out in the mysterious trees, attempting to capture the monkeys; instead,
they frighten their parents with their absence and wake up covered with glued-on
fake fur, courtesy of Sid. Writing for a younger audience than that for any
of her previous novels, Johnson (The Other Side, p. 1460, etc.) works in a more
prosaic style; it lacks her usual lyricism, but is breezy and light, affectionately
conveying Charlie's penchant for landing in trouble. Her sunny outlook and the
recurring emphasis on friendship may win fans.
(Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 1998)
Author Web Sites:
1. About Angela Johnson : A short biography of the author and description of
her books.
Other Contributors:
Ward, John, 1963-
Other titles associated with this book:
Magnolia Street's maniac monkeys
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
067989053X : Hardcover - Juvenile
0375802088 : Paperback - Juvenile
0679990534 : Library binding - Juvenile
0606198296 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0613328140 : Prebind
0756905125 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083283
Songs of faith
Author: Johnson, Angela, 1961-
Living in a small town in Ohio in 1975 and desperately missing her divorced
father, thirteen-year-old Doreen comes to terms with disturbing changes in her
family life.
New York: Orchard Books, copyright 1998, 103 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: /*Starred Review*/ Gr. 5-8. It is 1975 in Harvey, Ohio, a town that Doreen's mother says is becoming full of newly divorced women and their kids. Mama Dot claims that kids don't get divorced, but Doreen knows better: "She's just talking when she says that. . . . We're as divorced as she is." With a tart tongue and heart-wrenching lyricism, Doreen narrates this story, watching as her adored younger brother expresses, in a variety of ways, how distraught he is by their father's move to Chicago. As in Toning the Sweep (1993), Johnson shows the misunderstandings and powerful love in families and offers a fascinating group of characters to illustrate her theme: the permanence of love in a world that is always changing. The time frame is solidly realized, with a number of cultural references. Johnson also includes several characters who have been profoundly affected by the Vietnam War: Jeff, a former soldier, who travels around the country looking up old friends and lending them a hand when he can, and Jolette, whose father, a veteran, left after a series of senseless rages. Johnson skillfully shows her characters in different phases of separation. Jolette's family slowly heals; Doreen's is still struggling to figure things out. Another tender, eloquent book from a gifted writer. ((Reviewed February 15, 1998)) -- Susan Dove Lempke
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-8--A deftly detailed novel set in 1976. Johnson uses the particulars of the months after Doreen and Robert's father moves to Chicago and Doreen's best friend moves away to illuminate the universal experience of coping with loss. At the same time, a new girl, Jolette, moves into the neighborhood with her stepmother and too-quiet younger brothers. The sad setting, a neighborhood just outside the projects in a decaying Ohio town where the mills are closed and the trash-filled river smells, mirrors the depression of the characters: troubled children, recently divorced women, and men emotionally scarred from their service in Vietnam. The children fight their losses. Doreen, 13, decorates celebratory Bicentennial signs with yellow smiling faces and fuchsia full moons; Robert and Jolette make deals with themselves--he stops talking, she attempts to jump rope one million times. Their mothers cope. Mama Dot has gone back to Ohio State University; Miss Mary joins the church and finds a job in the church restaurant. Through explicit weather imagery, the author makes her message clear; difficult and disturbing as the time is, it is a storm that will pass. Once again Johnson has set attractive and realistic African-American characters in situations in which race is not the focus. This short, sensitive book will appeal most to reflective readers.--Kathleen Isaacs, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC
Publishers Weekly Review: In Johnson's (Humming Whispers) absorbing character study, the country prepares the bicentennial celebration of Independence Day while 13-year-old Doreen and her younger brother Robert start a new chapter in their lives without their father. The finalization of their parents' divorce sharpens Doreen's sense that nearly everyone else is moving forward while she "stays put" in Harvey, Ohio, a place "far out of everything and everybody." With the closing of the steel mill, the town's population is shifting ("Mama Dot says Harvey's becoming a place full of just-divorced women and their kids"). Through Doreen's narrative, which is infused with remarkable insight and exceptional tenderness, Johnson crystallizes the pain of being left behind. Although her sparse narrative gives only a sketchy depiction of the heroine's father, readers will feel the impact of his absence on his children and wife. The relationships between the protagonist and the other characters here generally are not as fully fleshed out as in Johnson's previous novels. However, Doreen's straightforward opinions ("We're as divorced as she [her mother] is") and poignant observations ("I will look at Robert and know I'll never figure out people's hearts") ring true. A quiet, heart-wrenching read. Ages 9-13. (Apr.)
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ A young African-American gift struggles
to reconcile her parents' divorce and the subsequent fragmentation of her family
in this eloquent and life-affirming novel from Johnson (Humming Whispers, 1995,
etc.). The town of Harvey, Ohio, in the summer of 1975 isn't much of a playground
for the narrator, 13-year-old Doreen, her younger brother, Robert, and their
mother, Mama Dot: Plant closings and a stagnant economy have left it a desperate,
depressed version of its former, thriving self. Yet Mama Dot attends Ohio University
as a full-time student with plans to become a museum curator, and the kids have
plenty of friends to play with, although the memory of their father, who recently
moved to Chicago, is a source of constant sadness. The America that Johnson
recreates is far removed from the Bicentennial euphoria the characters anticipate,
one that reels from the Vietnam War as a destroyer of fathers and husbands,
offering no comfort nor the reward of a decent job upon their return. Johnson
is honest enough to offer no easy answers: While Doreen's father returns to
the family, it is only for a visit; when he offers to take Robert, who has stopped
talking, Doreen realizes that she must make yet another sacrifice. But the message
is uplifting--even though her family cannot be together, and she is still in
pain, Doreen is left at the conclusion still full of love and, more importantly,
hope.
(Kirkus Reviews, December 1, 1997)
Other related features:
1. Teaching with Fiction - Fiction from the 50 States: Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky
Author Web Sites:
1. About Angela Johnson : A short biography of the author and description of
her books.
Other titles associated with this book:
Faith songs
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0531300234 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0679894888 : Paperback - Juvenile
0531330230 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0440229448 : Paperback - Mass Market
0613224051 : Prebind
0606173749 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0756910900 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083284
Seminole diary: remembrances of a slave
Author: Johnson, Dolores, 1949-
Story about fugitive slaves and their relations with Seminole Indians.
New York: Macmillan, copyright 1994, unpaged.
Uncle Remus: the complete tales, with a new introduction
As told by Julius Lester. Illustrated by Jerry Pinkney
Author: Lester, Julius
"Tales from Uncle Remus" "More Tales from Uncle Remus",
"Further Tales from Uncle Remus" and "Last Tales from Uncle Remus"
have been brought together for this colorfully illustrated compilation for readers
of all ages.
P. Fogelman, copyright 1999, 686 p.
Other Contributors:
Pinkney, Jerry: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0803724519 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083423

Running girl: the diary of Ebonee Rose
Author: Mathis, Sharon Bell
In her diary Ebonee Rose records her passion for running, her desire to be like
the great African American women athletes who have come before her, and her
preparations for the All-City Meet.
San Diego, CA: Browndeer Press/Harcourt Brace, copyright 1997, 60 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 3-5. It's just 20 days until the All-City Track Meet, and 11-year-old Ebonee Rose, captain of the Main Track Gazelles, is on pins and needles. To her diary she confides her mounting excitement, her hurt when Coach Teena yells at her, her dismay when she twists an ankle with less than two weeks to go, and her encounters with her favorite quarterback, Jay Jay ("He is soooo cute!"), and prickly but fast new teammate Queenie. When her feelings are too strong or complex to express in prose, she breaks into terse, exuberant poetry. Ebonee Rose has two passions: running and the black women who have run to glory in the Olympics. She's a walking encyclopedia, reeling off their accomplishments, and when the day finally comes, she feels as if all those women were running with her. Although she doesn't win every event she's in, her team takes the relay, takes first place overall, and later that night throws a surprise party at her house. The book's unusual, oblong shape allows large margins, many of which are filled with photos of and inspirational quotes from Ebonee Rose's heroes. Readers will respond strongly to her fresh, lively voice and may find her enthusiasm for track and field equally infectious. ((Reviewed Sept. 1, 1997)) -- John Peters
School Library Journal Review: Gr 3-6--The heart of Running Girl is diary-format
fiction, fiction as clear as poetry; but its soul is straight fact. The narrator
is 11-year-old Ebonee Rose. In her kente-cloth-covered diary ("Cool, cool!"),
she records her preparations for the All-City Track Meet and her respect for
female runners who have broken color barriers, gender-based stereotypes, and
speed records. The text bounds along light and free, in the manner of runners
themselves. E. R.'s authentic voice is conversational and smart. Themes of competition,
determination, and friendship from the girl's life weave in and out of the historical
facts, documentary photos, poetry, and quotations she notes for inspiration.
Whether it's a quote from Gail Devers ("When the walls are closing in,
when someone doesn't know where to turn, tell people I was there, I kept going.")
or an Olympic fact (Louise Stokes was replaced in the 1936 Games by a white
runner she'd previously beaten), it's interesting to readers because it's important
to E. R. The same is true for the action photographs shot by sports photojournalists.
Mathis suggests a sports/arts connection by introducing lines from Gwendolyn
Brooks ("What good is sun/If I can't run?"), the revelation that Florence
Griffith Joyner writes poetry (and so does E. R.), and other comparisons. An
author's note lists contact organizations (including Special Olympics International)
for readers considering track club involvement.--Liza Bliss, Worcester Public
Library, MA
Features about this author or title:
1. Author Biographies for Young Adults - Sharon Bell Mathis
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - Let the Games Begin: Stories about the Olympics
Other titles associated with this book:
Diary of Ebonee Rose., The
Ebonee Rose's diary
Ebony Rose's diary
Girl running
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0152006745 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083519

Tailypo: a newfangled tall tale
Illustrated by Sterling Brown
Author: Medearis, Angela Shelf, 1956-, adapter
On a farm in the Texas Hill Country, a young boy confronts a strange critter
that tries to steal his family's last meal.
New York: Holiday House, copyright 1996, unpaged.
Notes:
On a farm in the Texas Hill Country, a litle boy confronts a strange critter
that tries to steal his family's next meal
Author Web Sites:
1. Angela Shelf Medearis' Web Site : Medearis provides information about herself
and her books.
Other Contributors:
Brown, Sterling, 1963-: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0823412490 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083572
Journal of Joshua Loper, The: a Black cowboy
Author: Myers, Walter Dean, 1937-
In 1871 Joshua Loper, a sixteen-year-old black cowboy, records in his journal
his experiences while making his first cattle drive under an unsympathetic trail
boss.
New York: Scholastic, copyright 1999, 158 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-6. For this entry in My Name Is America, a companion series to the popular Dear America books, Myers sends a young African American cowboy north on the Chisholm Trail in 1871. It's a dream come true for Joshua when he's hired to help drive 2,200 "beeves" from a Texas ranch to Abilene, Kansas; by the time the journey's over, he not only has faced up to rustlers, stampedes, and Indians but also has met buffalo soldiers and Wild Bill Hickock, all while earning the grudging respect of his hard-bitten, prejudiced trail boss. Although written in dated daily episodes, Joshua's narrative is too smooth for a credible diary; he does have a voice of his own, though, and imparts a clear, reasonably specific picture of a cowboy's work and how hard, dirty, and exhausting it was: "May 25. I sat down to write two days in a row, and just fell asleep." Two historical notes (one fictional) and a generous suite of contemporary pictures add verisimilitude--or, along with the absence of Myers' name on the cover, misdirection for unwary readers--to this informative, expert peek behind the cowboy mythos. ((Reviewed February 15, 1999)) -- John Peters
School Library Journal Review: Gr 5-8-With characteristic research, sensitivity, and insight, Myers offers a lively, youthful portrait of the life and times of this black cowboy. Sixteen-year-old Joshua recounts his adventures on a cattle drive headed up the Chisholm Trail from southern Texas to Abilene, KS, in 1871. One of only 11 cowboys driving a herd of 2200 cattle, the teen quickly learns that every man must pull his own weight and accept the direction and criticism of the hard-nosed trail boss. Age, race, and background are insignificant. The hazards of the journey-exhaustion, rustlers, drought, Indians, river crossings, and stampedes-test the courage, strength, stamina, and skill of everyone involved. The young man finds comfort in his friendship with fellow drover Timmy, in his three horses, in his singing, and in his skill as a sharpshooter. At trail's end, he discovers that gambling and drinking can consume one's earnings and fighting can end in jail or the cemetery. With appealing clarity and simplicity, the story reveals Joshua's transition from boy to man. In the epilogue, the author fleshes out the remaining years of Loper's life as a husband, father, and businessman, and comments on the later years of his trail acquaintances. An informative note and black-and-white photographs summarize the dramatic rise and fall of the era and emphasize the unique opportunity for equality and fame enjoyed by the African-American cowboy.-Gerry Larson, Durham Magnet Center, Durham, NC
Kirkus Reviews The teenage son of a former slave joins a cattle drive from
Texas to Abilene, Kansas, in an entry in the My Name is America series. Joshua
is a competent, level-headed boy who works hard, loves his mother, and keeps
God in his heart. Despite the bigotry of the trail boss, the Captain, Joshua
is determined to prove himself on his first drive. Through encounters with rustlers
and others, stampedes, crew frictions, and the multitude of difficulties and
challenges inherent in the job, Joshua holds his own, proves his worth, and
earns some respect from the Captain. Myers tells a compelling story in which
the source of the drama is the drive itself, and all the hardship of life on
the trail. Scene after scene is vividly told, including a downright gory, fatal
trampling of one of the cowpunchers during a stampede. Readers gain a real feeling
for the period and setting, and a strong sense of what a cattle drive entailed.
The hallmarks of Myers's work—thorough research and solid writing—are
evident here. (b&w photos, maps) (Fiction. 8-14)
(Kirkus Reviews, February 1, 1999)
Features about this author or title:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
Author Web Sites:
1. About Walter Dean Myers : Features author-supplied biographical information
and an interview.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590026917 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083652
Smiffy Blue: ace crime detective: the case of the missing ruby and other stories
Illustrated by David J. A. Sims
Author: Myers, Walter Dean, 1937-
Famous crime fighter Smiffy Blue blunders his way to solving the mystery of
a missing formula and three other cases.
New York: Scholastic, copyright 1996, 74 p.
Features about this author or title:
1. Annotated Book List - A Place Within Myself: Walter Dean Myers and the Fiction
of Harlem Youth
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> 20th Century -> The 20th Century
Author Web Sites:
1. About Walter Dean Myers : Features author-supplied biographical information
and an interview.
Other Contributors:
Sims, David J. A.
Other titles associated with this book:
Smithy Blue, ace crime detective: the case of the missing ruby and other stories
Case of the missing ruby and other stories., The
Missing ruby case and other stories., The
Ace crime detective Smiffy Blue: the case of the missing ruby and other stories
Blue Smiffy: ace crime detective: the case of the missing ruby and other stories
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590676652 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Added to NoveList: 2001
Adventures of Midnight Son, The
Author: Patrick, Denise Lewis
After his parents help him escape from slavery on a cotton plantation, fourteen-year-old
Midnight finds freedom in Mexico and becomes a cowhand on a cattle drive to
Kansas.
New York: H. Holt, copyright 1997, 152 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 5-8. Born into slavery, Midnight witnesses his sister being sold and his mother's grief after Midnight's baby brother's cruel death. The Civil War provides the distraction Midnight's parents have been looking for: they steal a horse for him and send him to freedom. Although he is frightened of the bounty hunters and sad over leaving his family, Midnight still relishes his freedom, especially once he gets to Mexico, where he meets ranch foreman Juan Diego and learns to become a cowboy. Midnight is a compelling character as he wrestles with his feelings of anger and loss, and the story is rich in sensory details and historical facts on the challenging and eventful life of a young wrangler on a cattle drive. ((Reviewed December 15, 1997)) -- Susan Dove Lempke
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-8--Despite a few flaws, notably a climactic scene featuring both a stampede and a tornado, this title is an example of convincing and compelling historical fiction. Midnight is the 13-year-old son of Texas slaves, suddenly free when his father engineers his escape during the confusion surrounding Texas's entry into the Civil War. The boy makes it to Mexico, where slavery is illegal, and where he is welcomed at a remote hacienda. There he learns the basics of the cowboy trade. When Slim, an older black man, leaves to join a cattle drive from Texas to Kansas, Midnight joins him. On the journey, he proves himself as a wrangler and trustworthy employee and also learns that not all men judge one another by their skin color. Patrick creates an interesting and unusual novel, told in a mostly winning colloquial voice. In addition to being a first-rate story, the book features well-rounded characters--black, white, and brown--and should also be useful for studies of African-American history, the Civil War, and Texas and frontier history. Leaner and a bit easier to read than the fine historical novels by G. Clifton Wisler and John Loveday's Goodbye, Buffalo Sky (McElderry, 1997), Midnight Son is also an excellent choice for the reluctantly literary.--Coop Renner, Coldwell Elementary-Intermediate School, El Paso, TX
Kirkus Reviews Patrick (The Car Washing Street, 1993, etc.) delivers an unusual
cowboy adventure tale, told through the eyes of a runaway slave, Midnight Son,
13. Leaving Texas behind on a stolen horse, Midnight makes for the Mexican border
by the light of the moon. In an early, outstanding scene, Midnight is caught
and crated up by the plantation owner's son, with only the surreptitious, timely
nods of a fellow slave to aid in his daring re-escape. Midnight begins his first
hours of freedom just over the border, where he experiences friendships with
Mexican vaqueros and a startling handshake with a white man. Juan Diego's attempt
to dissuade him from the harsh life of a cowboy meets the response, "I'm
looking for the chance to tell my own feet where to go." When he joins
Slim on a cattle drive to Kansas, Midnight risks the threat of bounty hunters
and faces his own swelling anger and bad memories as he goes head to head with
a menacing cougar. In a voice strong and true, Patrick's narrator easily carries
the story, winning readers' hearts in an unusual combination of rip-roaring
action scenes interspersed with internal monologues of self-discovery. This
is a serious character study, work of historical fiction, and action-adventure
rolled into one.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1997)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> Slavery in the US
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
080504714X : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083717
Bonjour, Lonnie
Author: Ringgold, Faith
An African-American Jewish boy traces his ancestory with the help of the Love
Bird of Paris.
New York: Hyperion Books for Children, copyright 1996, unpaged.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: Ages 6-9. Lonnie, introduced in Ringgold's Dinner at Aunt Connie's House (1993), asks the mysterious Love Bird to help him find his parents. Love Bird takes Lonnie to Paris, where he meets his deceased black grandfather and white grandmother. They tell him all about their youth (and Ringgold works in a substantial amount of postslavery African American history), and then they are joined by Lonnie's parents. They continue the story from World War II on--his father was killed in battle, and his Jewish mother gave him to someone for safekeeping before the Nazis found her. At the end, Love Bird delivers Lonnie to his new home with Aunt Connie. Ringgold concludes with a bibliography on the Harlem Renaissance and African American migration to Paris. This highly unconventional story, with many French phrases, deals with some harsh realities but is imbued with a loving feeling and embellished by Ringgold's dramatically primitive-style paintings. ((Reviewed Oct. 1, 1996)) -- Susan Dove Lempke
School Library Journal Review: Gr 2-4--This unusual story involves Lonnie, the red-haired, green-eyed boy introduced in Ringgold's Dinner at Aunt Connie's House (Hyperion, 1993). He pursues an elusive "Love Bird" around Paris until it leads him to a dreamlike place where he learns his family's history and how he came to be orphaned. Lonnie meets his African-American grandfather, who expatriated to Paris in the 1920s; his French grandmother; his soldier father, who was killed in World War II; and his Jewish mother, who died in the Holocaust. Lonnie is told that he was smuggled to the U.S. by an African-American student. Though he wants to stay with his family, they convince him to return to the "real world," and the magical Love Bird transports him to his adoptive parents. The Love Bird is a somewhat awkward device but it helps bridge the fantasy and realism in the story. The artwork, similar in style to that of Ringgold's earlier books, also incorporates elements of fantasy and realism. The artist shows strong positive images of whites and blacks together and makes children aware that both Jews and African Americans have endured prejudice. However, because many issues and historical references are touched upon but not fully explained, youngsters may be left with many unanswered questions. While not totally successful as a story, this unique book focuses on aspects of history that are not commonly covered for this audience.--Louise L. Sherman, Anna C. Scott School, Leonia, NJ
Publishers Weekly Review: In this fantastical, sweeping picture book, Ringgold reintroduces a character from Dinner at Aunt Connie's in order to chronicle some pivotal moments in African American history. Shown here in an earlier phase, Lonnie is living in a Paris orphanage. He is visited one night by a magical Love Bird who inspires him to "look everywhere" for his loved ones. On his surreal search, Lonnie combs the streets and sights of Paris, even speaking to the Mona Lisa inside the Louvre. The journey changes course when Lonnie encounters the spirits of his deceased grandparents and parents. They explain both Lonnie's mixed racial heritage and, more broadly, black Americans' contributions to the arts (e.g., the Harlem Renaissance) and to the Allies' victories in the two World Wars. With an emphasis on acceptance and love, Ringgold's text illustrates that families can come in all kinds of configurations. In her dense acrylic paintings, Ringgold refrains from literalism, effectively depicting such difficult subject matter as violence and even death with slightly abstract perspectives. This meaty volume invites repeated examination and will hold special appeal for African Americans and children in adoptive and/or mixed-race families. As a bonus, French phrases and their English translations are sprinkled throughout, and a short glossary of historical figures and movements appears at the end. Ages 5-9. (Sept.)
Kirkus Reviews Lush, deeply imagined paintings can't quite carry the didactic
storyline in this tale from the creator of My Dream of Martin Luther King (1995).
Lonnie, an orphaned African-American boy with the red hair and green eyes of
his mixed heritage, is transported back to Paris during the first world war
by l'Oiseau d'Amour--the Love Bird. This magical creature shows him how his
grandfather of the 369th infantry, the "Harlem Hell Fighters," met
his red-haired French grandmother; and how their son, Lonnie's father, died
in WW II. Claudine, his green-eyed, Jewish mother, was lost to the Nazis and
Lonnie was smuggled away. The spirits of his ancestors--with connections to
the Harlem Renaissance, the black Parisian community, and the French Resistance,
among others--fade away, leaving Lonnie no longer orphaned but with loving stepparents
(first met in Ringgold's Dinner at Aunt Connie's House, 1993). Ringgold's acrylic
paintings will tug at anyone who has seen--or wants to see--Paris; their intense
colors, stylized figures, and beautiful use of pattern draw viewers in again
and again. The complicated, though well-intentioned, story, with its layers
of history and magical realism, may elude younger readers and leave older ones
confused.
(Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 1996)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Places -> Europe
-> Paris, France
Author Web Sites:
1. Faith Ringgold's Web Site : Ringgold shares information about herself, her
books, and works in progress..
Other titles associated with this book:
Lonnie, Bonjour
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0786820624 : Library binding - Juvenile
0786800763 : Hardcover - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083804
Forty acres and maybe a mule
Author: Robinet, Harriette Gillem
Born with a withered leg and hand, Pascal, who is about twelve years old, joins
other former slaves in a search for a farm and the freedom which it promises.
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, copyright 1998, 132 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-7. Two years after the Emancipation Proclamation, Pascal's older brother Gideon returns to the plantation where the slaves still work, not realizing they have been freed. Pascal, Gideon, and another child, Nelly, set out to claim the 40 acres Gideon hears have been promised to freed slaves. Throughout the story the tension between the joy of freedom and the dangers of the enraged white southerners tugs at the characters as they farm their new land, attend school, and hear terrible stories. Robinet skillfully balances her in-depth historical knowledge with the feelings of her characters, creating a story that moves along rapidly and comes to a bittersweet conclusion. A fine historical novel that explores the immediate postwar period for African Americans and their white friends and neighbors. ((Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1999)) -- Susan Dove Lempke
School Library Journal Review: Gr 4-6-Once again, Robinet has humanized a little-known piece of American history. In the spring of 1865, the Freedmen's Bureau approved a plan to give 40 acres of abandoned land to former slave families. Forty thousand freed people took advantage of that offer, only to lose their farms when it was withdrawn in September. The author focuses on Pascal, 12, a slave on a plantation in South Carolina. His older brother Gideon, who ran away during the war, returns to collect him and they head for Georgia, determined to become landowners. Teaming up with Pascal's friend Nelly and the elderly Mr. Freedman and his granddaughter, they form a family, claim land, and begin to farm. The Bibbs, white neighbors from Tennessee, are helpful in protecting them from the night riders who are determined to destroy black-owned farms. Despite their hard work, Pascal and the others are evicted at the end of the summer. Luckily, Gideon had found a treasure buried under a tree, and they set out to buy land on the Georgia Sea Islands. Pascal is a likable boy whose withered hand and leg limit his body but not his mind and whose dreadful jokes entertain everyone. The dialect may deter some readers at first, but sympathy for the characters will keep children going until they reach the satisfying ending.-Kathleen Isaacs, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC
Publishers Weekly Review: In this novel set in April through September of 1865,
Robinet's (The Twins, the Pirates, and the Battle of New Orleans) resilient
characters lend immediacy to the early events of Reconstruction. Orphaned 12-year-old
Pascal is a slave at the Big House on a South Carolina plantation when his runaway
brother Gideon, a Union soldier, returns, proclaiming that Lincoln has freed
the slaves and General Sherman has promised 40 acres and maybe a mule for both
blacks and whites. Pascal, his friend Nelly and Gideon set off in search of
a Freedmen's Bureau (where land is deeded) and finally find one in Georgia.
Along the way they encounter other former slaves, two of whom they "adopt"
as family; poor white farmers (among them the Bibbs family who become neighbors,
and with whom they begin a moving friendship); night riders and Republican operatives
eager to recruit new voters. Robinet compellingly demonstrates how the courage
and determination of Pascal and Gideon's small band transform their 40 acres
into a model farm. But there's no sugarcoating here: just as their perfect cotton
crop matures, President Johnson reverses his land acts to declare that only
white families can own the 40-acre plots of free land. Even this devastating
development doesn't attenuate Pascal's sense of accomplishment ("Maybe
nobody gave freedom, and nobody could take it away like they could take away
a family farm. Maybe freedom was something you claimed yourself"). A stirring
story of self-determination. Ages 8-12. (Nov.)
Other related features:
1. Awards (Best Fiction) - Children's -> Best Fiction -> Historical Fiction
-> Scott O'Dell Historical Fiction Award
2. Awards (Best Fiction) - Young Adult -> Best Fiction -> Historical Fiction
-> Scott O'Dell Historical Fiction Award
3. Book Discussion Guide - The Watsons Go to Birmingham -- 1963
Author Web Sites:
1. Harriette Gillem Robinet's Web Site : Robinet provides information about
herself and her books.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
068982078X : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083811
Twins, the pirates, and the battle of New Orleans, The
Author: Robinet, Harriette Gillem
Twin fugitive slaves become involved with Jean Laffite, Andrew Jackson, and
the Battle of New Orleans.
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, copyright 1997, 138 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-6. After their rescue
from slavery by their father, Jacques, twins Andrew and Pierre are left alone
in a swamp southeast of New Orleans while Jacques tries to liberate his wife
and daughter. When he fails to return, the boys must fend for themselves, coping
with alligators, pirates, limestone caves, bounty hunters, and myriad assorted
soldiers on hand for the Battle of New Orleans. The twins manage to survive
and, with the help of their father's pirate treasure, purchase the release of
their mother and sister. This is an ambitious novel--full of high adventure,
natural detail, and historical particulars that will surprise many young readers
(for instance, General Andrew Jackson enlisted the help of Jean Lafitte and
his Pirate Brotherhood at the Battle of New Orleans). Filled with believable
characters spun from thorough research, Robinet's portrayal of Louisiana in
1814, as seen through the eyes of African American children, makes this a welcome
addition to the historical fiction shelves. Her Washington City Is Burning (1996)
offers another perspective on this time period. ((Reviewed November 15, 1997))
-- Kay Weisman
Author Web Sites:
1. Harriette Gillem Robinet's Web Site : Robinet provides information about
herself and her books.
Other titles associated with this book:
Pirates, the twins, and the Battle of New Orleans., The
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0689812086 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083812
'Twas the night b'fore Christmas: an African-American version
Retold and illustrated by Melodye Rosales
Author: Rosales, Melodye, adapter
Presents a turn-of-the-century rural Afro-American family's encounter with St.
Nick as he delivers his presents before flying off into the night.
New York: Scholastic, Inc.; Cartwheel Books, 1996, unpaged.
Notes:
Based on the original poem A visit from St. Nicholas by Clement C. Moore
On page opposite title page: "The Weatherby's Christmas Eve, 1904."
Other Contributors:
Moore, Clement Clarke, 1779-1863
Other titles associated with this book:
Night before Christmas
It was the night b'fore Christmas
'Twas the night before Christmas
Weatherby's Christmas Eve, 1904., The
Christmas Eve of the Weatherbys, 1904
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0590739441 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083836
Moriah's pond
Author: Smothers, Ethel Footman
While she and her older sisters are staying with their great-grandmother, Annie
Rye learns about prejudice first hand when a local White girl causes Annie's
sister to be unjustly punished.
New York: A. A. Knopf, copyright 1995, 111 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: Continuing the chronicle of Annie Rye, Maybaby and Brat begun in Down in the Piney Woods, Smothers's ebullient new novel centers on the adventures the girls share when they spend a summer in rural 1950s Georgia with their great-grandmother Moriah. Told in Annie Rye's distinctive, sassy voice, the narrative is chatty, unaffected and altogether convincing in its use of Southern black dialect ("Miss Maylene just about old as Moriah, so she liable to go into some kind of calniption if she knowed what shape she in"). Annie Rye supplies animated accounts of the routine at Moriah's house: swimming in the pond on a steamy afternoon, listening to her older relatives "talk `bout them olden days" and participating in an old-fashioned wash day. The novel's drama, meanwhile, derives from interconnected plot lines involving Annie Rye's troubled relations with lonely Betty Jean (granddaughter of Moriah's white employer and landlord) and Brat's struggles with a dangerous infection. An author's note explains that much of the book is autobiographical; readers who enjoy matching fact with fiction will appreciate the photos of the three real-life heroines that appear on the back of the jacket. Ages 8-13. (Jan.)
Kirkus Reviews The author of Down in the Piny Woods (1992) returns to the pre--civil--rights
era of her youth and a rural family based on her own, marvelously capturing
the rhythms and cadence of spoken language in the narrative of ten-year-old
Annie Rye. As in the previous work, the theme is racial hostility. Great-grandmother
Moriah works for Ralph Daniels, a white landowner; his lonely daughter Betty
Jean often makes friendly overtures toward Annie Rye and her older sisters,
Brat and Maybaby. Annie Rye views Betty Jean with suspicion, and her antipathy
intensifies after Daniels order Moriah to whip Brat -- for drinking from his
daughter's soda bottle. In the end, advice from older, wiser heads prompts an
awkward but sincere reconciliation. The plot may wander, the supporting cast
is not well visualized, but Annie Rye's vivid, captivating voice will draw readers
as a griot draws listeners.
(Kirkus Reviews, January 1, 1995)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Girls -> African-American Girls
2. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Family -> Brothers
and Sisters -> Sisters
3. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Life and Living
-> Problems and Questions -> Racism
4. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Life and Living
-> Ways of Life -> Country Life
5. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Places -> North
America -> United States -> Southern States
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0679845046 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0679945040
0802852491 : Paperback - Juvenile
060629516X : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
061367247X : Prebind
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 083983

Creativity
Illustrations by E.B. Lewis
Author: Steptoe, John, 1950-1989
Charles helps Hector, a student who has just moved from Puerto Rico, adjust
to his new life.
New York: Clarion Books, copyright 1997, 32 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, For the Young: Ages 4-8. With realistic, light-filled watercolor illustrations of school and neighborhood, Lewis gives a contemporary urban setting to an unpublished story by the late author-illustrator Steptoe. Like Steptoe's great picture book Stevie (1969), this story is about getting to know and like an outsider. The story is more didactic here, but Lewis' relaxed, thoughtful pictures of individual people will draw children into a scenario they will want to talk about. Charles is surprised that Hector, the new boy in class from Puerto Rico, speaks Spanish. How can that be when Hector is as dark-skinned as Charles, and Charles speaks English? His teacher and his parents explain to him about the history of Puerto Rico, and he comes to see how he and Hector are connected and how everyone in the classroom "is the result of different people mixing up together." What's more, languages change and mix, and people can be "creative" when they speak and do things their own way. There is a slight story (Charles helps Hector when the boys at school tease Hector about his clothes), but what kids will want to talk about are the language and connection issues, which are as hot today as when Steptoe wrote this. ((Reviewed February 15, 1997)) -- Hazel Rochman
Kirkus Reviews A posthumously published story by Steptoe (Mufaro's Beautiful
Daughters, 1987, etc.) demonstrates his usual themes of positive self-image
and acceptance of cultural heritage, this time presenting young African-American
Charles's reaction when "this new dude walks in" to Mr. Cohen's classroom.
"Hector's whole name was one of them long numbers," and he speaks
to the teacher in Spanish. Hector is from Puerto Rico, but he is the same color
as Charles and his hair is also black (though straight). Charles doesn't get
it, but he's happy to help Hector and his sisters learn the ropes in their new
school. Mr. Cohen fills Charles in--how Hector's ancestry was enriched by that
of other groups in Puerto Rico. Charles has already decided that Hector is a
"nice dude," and he tells his parents that he could teach Hector English.
Daddy says that Charles's riffing on the English language is creativity. It
pleases Charles to learn that doing things his own way has a good name, and
he puts the concept to good use when Hector needs some help with his clothes.
Lewis's full-spread watercolors under a readable text happily complement this
warm story of friendship.
(Kirkus Reviews, January 15, 1997)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Boys and Girls ->
Boys -> African-American Boys
Other Contributors:
Lewis, Earl B.
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0395687063 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0618316779 : Paperback - Juvenile
0613610121 : Prebind
0606276521 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• MetaMetrics, Inc.
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 084019
Don't split the pole: tales of down-home folk wisdom
Illustrated by Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu
Author: Tate, Eleanora E.
Seven stories inspired by and illustrating the folk wisdom of such sayings as:
You Can't Teach an Old Dog New Tricks, A Hard Head Makes a Soft Behind, and
Big Things Come in Small Packages. ackages. -
New York: Delacorte Press, copyright 1997, 138 p.
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 4-6. Each of the seven tales in this collection, put together by an African American storyteller, is based on a saying, for example, "You can't teach an old dog new tricks." Tate uses an informal, easygoing style to tell the stories, with humans and animals as her folksy characters. In the title story, "Don't Split the Pole," two skateboarding brothers encounter ghosts and danger when they separate to go around a pole. A young turtle learns a life lesson from Gran Snappy in "Slow and Steady Wins the Race." The anthropomorphic animals will grate on some readers, but the human characters are lively and realistic. Children will enjoy the light, funny tales. ((Reviewed November 1, 1997)) -- Susan Dove Lempke
Publishers Weekly Review: Inspired by proverbs, seven "unconventional
and exuberant" contemporary stories "leap off the page and lodge straight
in the funny bone," according to PW's starred review. Ages 12-up. (Feb.)
Author Web Sites:
1. Eleanora E. Tate : Features biographical information on Tate.
Other Contributors:
VanWright, Cornelius; Hu, Ying-Hwa
Other titles associated with this book:
Tales of down-home folk wisdom
Down-home folk wisdom
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0385323026 : Hardcover - Juvenile
0440413222 : Paperback - Mass Market
0606158154 : DEMCO Turtleback - Juvenile
0613123166 : Glued Binding
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 084043
Running for our lives
Glennette Tilley Turner ; drawings by Samuel Byrd
Author: Turner, Glennette Tilley
A family of fugitive slaves becomes separated while traveling to freedom aboard
the Underground Railroad.
New York: Holiday House, copyright 1994, 198 p
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 5-7. This historical novel follows a young boy, Luther, and his family, who escape from slavery in Missouri in the 1850s and travel on the Underground Railroad to Canada. The dialogue is flat, and the characterization is minimal; everyone sounds the same; everyone is strong, dignified, and very nice. The drama lies in the historical facts. Turner has been meticulous in researching the conditions of the dangerous journey: how and why they ran, what they left behind, and what they found when they finally reached safety. They meet famous figures of the abolitionist movement, including Frederick Douglass and John Brown, but the focus is on the experience of ordinary people. The tone is upbeat; although Luther and his sister get separated from their parents, there's never any real doubt they'll find each other by the end of the survival adventure. Yet the ending is heartbreaking: Turner makes us know that underlying the joyful reunion is the anguish of countless families torn apart by slavery, the suffering of those who were never free to work for themselves and build their lives. ((Reviewed June 1994)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: Gr 5-7-Fleeing slavery, Luther, 13; his parents; his little sister, Carrie; and a baby whose mother had been sold to another owner leave Missouri. Following the Underground Railroad north to Canada, they encounter numerous obstacles. To avoid slave catchers, the family separates, and Luther and Carrie are forced to go on alone. Along the way, they meet their aunt and her husband. The four of them settle on a farm in Canada, but the children never give up hope of finding their parents. Ultimately, there is a big reunion, and everyone lives happily in freedom. Clearly, this is a book written to teach children about the evils of slavery and the perils of the Underground Railroad. It is loaded with historical information, including cameo appearances by important figures such as Alan Pinkerton and Frederick Douglass. Unfortunately, the account never fully comes to life, and the facts are not skillfully integrated into the fictional account. Characters are two dimensional and dialogue is wooden. However, the book is easy enough for reluctant readers and could be useful in the context of a history curriculum; a substantial author''s note explains the background for the novel. Jennifer Armstrong''s Steal Away (Orchard, 1992) is more successful, but it is also more complex and for an older audience.-Bruce Anne Shook, Mendenhall Middle School, Greensboro, NC
Publishers Weekly Review: At the Freeman family reunion in Canada, 101-year-old
Luther tells his grandchildren about 1855, the year he and his enslaved family
escaped from a Missouri plantation and began an arduous journey to freedom.
After hiking through chilly, desolate woods and crossing the freezing Mississippi
River at night, Luther and his younger sister are separated from their parents
at the advice of well-meaning abolitionists, but the danger multiplies when
"notorious slave kidnapper Mose Twist" starts searching for them.
Frederick Douglass, John Brown and Alan Pinkerton feature in the story, which
Turner, in an author's note, describes as "a glimpse of the turbulent times
that preceded the Civil War." Although the book contains numerous facts
in a dramatic setting, it never quite overcomes a didactic tone and the developments
seem more strung together than organic. For an exceptionally strong treatment
of the same themes, see Mary Stolz's Cezanne Pinto (Children's Forecasts, Jan.
10). Ages 8-12. (Apr.)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> Slavery in the US
Other Contributors:
Byrd, Samuel: ill
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0823411214 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0938990063 : Paperback - Juvenile
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 084073

Finding the green stone
Paintings by Catherine Deeter
Author: Walker, Alice, 1944-
After saying unkind things to family and friends, Johnny loses both his green
stone and his interest in life, and he recovers them only when he discovers
love in his heart.
San Diego, CA: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, ccopyright 1991, unpaged.
Publishers Weekly Review: "In a small community on the Earth," every person and animal possesses a shiny green stone. If a stone's owner shows warmth, love and respect to others, his stone glows, but negative actions and feelings cause the stone to become dull and gray until restitution can be made. When Johnny loses his green stone, he must discover the strength and wisdom within himself that will bring the magic glow back to his life. Walker presents a rather forced message in this strange story. The tone is ethereal and removed--odd qualities in such a personal plot--while the writing style, especially the dialogue, is stiff and didactic. Young readers will have difficulty understanding the confusing concept that a person's inner goodness should be reflected in an iridescent rock. Deeter's warm acrylic paintings are full of life, depicting the multiethnic inhabitants of this unusual town, which itself seems enveloped by an eerie green light. The book's intent is noble but in the end simply too hard to swallow. All ages. (Oct.)
Kirkus Reviews The Pulizer Prize-winning novelist tells an allegorical tale
with a contemporary setting: Like everyone in their friendly rural neighborhood,
Katie and her brother Johnny each possess an iridescent green stone, carried
in a pocket or used for games. When Johnny loses his, he accuses Katie of stealing
it; later, he tries to steal hers, but to no avail--the stone promptly loses
its luster. Though others generously join his search, Johnny eventually realizes
that the quest is his alone; and by the time he regains his stone, it's evident
that it embodies his unique talents and integrity, and that any stone may lose
its power as a result of its owner's failings, from name-calling to more serious
transgressions. The focus is on several messages (including that the children's
mother is a doctor, and their father is sorry that he's forced to make a living
by driving a pulpwood truck), but, still, this holds attention--especially with
Deeter's colorful, large-size paintings, glowing with wholesome good health;
one especially appealing spread reveals that this is a multiracial but mostly
black community. Heavy-handed, but enjoyable.
(Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1991)
Author Web Sites:
1. About Alice Walker : Features Walker's biography and a selected bibliography.
Other Contributors:
Deeter, Catherine
Other titles associated with this book:
Green stone., The
Find the green stone
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
015227538X : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
0152015027 : Paperback
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 084105
Freedom's gifts: a Juneteenth story
by Valerie Wesley ; illustrated by Sharon Wilson
Author: Wesley, Valerie Wilson
When a girl from New York visits her cousin in Texas, she learns the origin
of Juneteenth, a holiday marking the day Texan slaves realized they were free.
New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, c1997, 1 v. (unpaged)
Reviews for this Title:
Booklist Review: Books for Youth, Middle Readers: Gr. 3-6. On June_ 19, 1943, June's family is celebrating the annual Juneteenth holiday, commemorating the day in 1865 when the slaves in Texas were first told they were free. June's sullen cousin Lillie, visiting from New York City, is bored with "the dumb old slave holiday," but when their Great-great-aunt Marshall tells them about what it was like for her to be born a slave and to be set free, even Lillie is profoundly moved. The cousins become friends, and Juneteenth is their holiday, too. Yet, it is 1943, there are "Whites Only" signs in the town, and Lillie shows June that there is still freedom to be fought for. The layered narrative is sometimes confusing, set in the past and talking about the past, but if middle-graders read the historical note at the back, they will be ready for the family story. Wilson's handsome full-page pastels--like her illustrations for Sisulu's The Day Gogo Went to Vote (1996)--capture the family scenes, with realistic portraits of old and young celebrating their hard-won freedom. ((Reviewed May 1, 1997)) -- Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review: K-Gr 3--Wesley explores a unique holiday in Texas that has recently begun to be celebrated by African Americans in other parts of the U.S. as well. While Lincoln declared the slaves free in January 1863, the slaves in Texas were not freed until June 19, 1865. Set in 1943, this story tells of June, a young African-American Texan, and her cousin who is visiting from New York City. Juneteenth is June's favorite holiday, but Lillie belittles it until the girls go to the big celebratory picnic and their great-great-aunt Marshall, once a slave, helps her understand the importance of "freedom's gifts." Besides providing good basic information on the holiday, the author sketches nicely the loving relationship between Aunt Marshall and June, and the wary, hostile atmosphere between the cousins, which gradually changes. By setting the story in 1943, Wesley underlines Aunt Marshall's contention that even though their people still must use segregated facilities, "freedom's gifts" are precious and will grow with time. The impressionistic pastel illustrations are lovely, rendered in warm colors that convey the heat of the summer and the joyousness of the town's celebration. A beautiful effort, of special interest to Texans, but sure to enrich any library collection because of its subject matter and its quality.--Judith Constantinides, East Baton Rouge Parish Main Library, LA
Publishers Weekly Review: A small Texan town's Juneteenth celebration in 1943
is the setting for Wesley's (Where Do I Go from Here) resonant picture book,
which offers a penetrating perspective on the degree of liberation the holiday
commemorated in the pre--civil rights South. African American cousins June and
Lillie listen intently to their elderly great-great-aunt Marshall's articulate
first-hand account of the evil days of slavery ("We were born grown back
then--at least we felt it") and of her memories of June 19, 1865, the day
that she and all the other slaves in Texas learned, a full two and a half years
after Lincoln had issued the Emancipation Proclamation, that they were free.
"Are we free now?" asks June, who has just tried to explain to a disgruntled
Lillie, visiting from the North, why a nearby drinking fountain displays a "Whites
Only" sign. Aunt Marshall's wise, poignantly ironic words concede that
she is "as free as I'll be before I'll die. But not as free as you'll be
someday." Intentionally hazy, Wilson's (The Day Gogo Went to Vote) textured
pastel art is composed of an unusually diverse configuration of fine and broad
strokes. These create some intriguing background patterns, including a recurrent
concentric design resembling the whorls of a fingerprint. The result is sophisticated
and distinctive--a statement that is also true of Wesley's forthright treatment
of a sensitive and important subject. Ages 8-up. (Apr.)
Other related features:
1. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Family -> Extended
Families -> Cousins
2. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Periods in History
-> Slavery in the US
3. Explore Fiction - Children's -> Explore Fiction -> Places -> North
America -> United States -> Southwest
Author Web Sites:
1. Valerie Wilson Wesley's Web Site : Features author, appearance, and contact
information, plus a message board and excerpts of Tamara Hayle mysteries.
Other Contributors:
Wilson, Sharon, 1954-: ill
Other titles associated with this book:
Juneteenth story
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0689802692 : Reinforced binding - Juvenile
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 084145