Bibliography
Schmidt, Gary D. 2004. Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy. New York: Yearling Books. ISBN 9780553494952
Plot Summary
Turner Buckminster is a minister’s son new to the town of Phippsburg in Maine. There he meets a girl named Lizzie Bright from Malaga Island, a poor community founded by former slaves, and become friends.
Critical Analysis
From the first day Turner Buckminster had arrived to his new home with his mother and father, the new minister of Phippsburg’s First Congregational Church, he felt out of place. He did not have any friends and couldn’t even play baseball the way the people of his new home town played it, not only that, in his father’s eyes and to the townspeople he continued to be a disgrace because he is a minister’s son and minister’s son are not allowed to be imperfect, like the time he punched Willis, Deacon Hurd’s son, on the nose. Feeling lonely and a failure he wanders off to the sea to get away from it all, there he meets Lizzie Bright, a lively girl about his age. Lizzie shows Turner her home, Malaga Island, and the people who have lived there since she can remember. Set in 1912, the story focuses on Turner, and the uproar the town is in because of his close friendship with Lizzie, a colored girl. Many readers will connect with Turner and Lizzie as everyone at some time in their lives have been the new kid who doesn’t fit in while other’s will feel Lizzie’s pain and sorrow as everything she loves is stripped away including her life. The non-fictional setting of the town of Phippsburn Main and Malaga Island will fascinate and surprise historical fiction readers, as they read about how the homes of the people of Malaga Island were burnt to the ground, and the people literally forced out of the island and some put in homes for the feeble-minded.
Review Excerpt(s)
Booklist, Starred Review- “A powerful tale of friendship and coming-of-age, adding a lyrical sense of the coastal landscape.”
School Library Journal, Starred Review-“Schmidt’s writing is infused with feeling and rich in imagery. With fully developed, memorable characters…this novel will leave a powerful impression on readers.”
The Horn Book Magazine- Multiple conflicts, between all manner of the powerful and the powerless, create a drama that examines the best and worst of humanity.”
Kirkus, Starred Review-“The telling is both beautiful and emotionally honest, both funny and piercingly sad.”
Connections
*Received the Newbery Honor Book & Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature from the American Library Association.
*Racism
*Poverty
*Prejudice
Purpose
These reviews are created for a children's literature class that I am currently taking. I am thrilled about the literature choices my professor has chosen. I can't wait to embark on the enriching journey of children and young adult literature.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Catherine, Called Birdy
Bibliography
Cushman, Karen. 1994. Catherine, Called Birdy. New York: NY. Harper Trophy. ISBN 9780064405843
Plot Summary
Catherine, Called Birdy is the diary of a young teenage girl who is high spirited and determined to chase away the men her father chooses for her to marry.
Critical Analysis
Catherine is a spitfire young maiden who detest spinning yarn, writing in a journal, and does not wish to get marry any time soon. She in turn would rather be spending time outdoors with the goat boy, be a rich lady so someone else could do the work for her or spent time with the birds that she keeps in her chamber. However, Catherine’s father is quick to remind her of her place as a daughter by striking her each time she chooses to do things according to her will. All the while she continues to anger her father by driving away rich man he wants her to marry, until a year later she actually considers marriage and is making a list of her future children’s names. Set in the Medieval Ages during 1290’s readers are taken on a journey filled with Catherine’s longing for adventures beginning the 12th of September to the 23rd day of September of the following year. The diary entries that make references to the feast of the Saint being celebrated that day aid to establish the setting and beliefs of the time such as on the 16th day of February, Feast of Saint Juliana, who argued with the Devil. Young readers will identify with the fourteen year old Birdy who like many teens despise house chores, is sharp-tongued and dislikes her life or as Catherine would say, “Corpus Bones! I utterly loathe my life!”
Review Excerpt(s)
*School Library Journal, Starred Review-“Birdy reveals fascinating facts about her time period. A feminist far ahead of her time, she is both believable and lovable…Superb historical fiction.”
*The Horn Book, Starred Review-“Her diary of the year 1290 is a revealing, amusing, and sometimes horrifying vie of both Catherine’s thoughts and life in the Middle Ages…The vivid picture of medieval life presents a seemingly eye-witness view of a culture remote from contemporary beliefs. Fascinating and thought-provoking.”
*The Kirkus Reviews-“The period has rarely been presented for young people with such authenticity; the exotic details will intrigue readers while they relate more closely to Birdy’s yen for independence and her sensibilities toward the downtrodden. Her tenacity and ebullient naivete are extraordinary.”
Connections
*Received the Newbery Medal Honor Winner
* Compare and Contrast Catherine the main character from Catherine, Called Birdy with Beetle from The Midwife’s Apprentice another Newbery Medal Honor book by Karen Cushman
*Medieval Literature
*Women’s rights throughout the ages
Cushman, Karen. 1994. Catherine, Called Birdy. New York: NY. Harper Trophy. ISBN 9780064405843
Plot Summary
Catherine, Called Birdy is the diary of a young teenage girl who is high spirited and determined to chase away the men her father chooses for her to marry.
Critical Analysis
Catherine is a spitfire young maiden who detest spinning yarn, writing in a journal, and does not wish to get marry any time soon. She in turn would rather be spending time outdoors with the goat boy, be a rich lady so someone else could do the work for her or spent time with the birds that she keeps in her chamber. However, Catherine’s father is quick to remind her of her place as a daughter by striking her each time she chooses to do things according to her will. All the while she continues to anger her father by driving away rich man he wants her to marry, until a year later she actually considers marriage and is making a list of her future children’s names. Set in the Medieval Ages during 1290’s readers are taken on a journey filled with Catherine’s longing for adventures beginning the 12th of September to the 23rd day of September of the following year. The diary entries that make references to the feast of the Saint being celebrated that day aid to establish the setting and beliefs of the time such as on the 16th day of February, Feast of Saint Juliana, who argued with the Devil. Young readers will identify with the fourteen year old Birdy who like many teens despise house chores, is sharp-tongued and dislikes her life or as Catherine would say, “Corpus Bones! I utterly loathe my life!”
Review Excerpt(s)
*School Library Journal, Starred Review-“Birdy reveals fascinating facts about her time period. A feminist far ahead of her time, she is both believable and lovable…Superb historical fiction.”
*The Horn Book, Starred Review-“Her diary of the year 1290 is a revealing, amusing, and sometimes horrifying vie of both Catherine’s thoughts and life in the Middle Ages…The vivid picture of medieval life presents a seemingly eye-witness view of a culture remote from contemporary beliefs. Fascinating and thought-provoking.”
*The Kirkus Reviews-“The period has rarely been presented for young people with such authenticity; the exotic details will intrigue readers while they relate more closely to Birdy’s yen for independence and her sensibilities toward the downtrodden. Her tenacity and ebullient naivete are extraordinary.”
Connections
*Received the Newbery Medal Honor Winner
* Compare and Contrast Catherine the main character from Catherine, Called Birdy with Beetle from The Midwife’s Apprentice another Newbery Medal Honor book by Karen Cushman
*Medieval Literature
*Women’s rights throughout the ages
Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson
Bibliography
Anderson, Laurie Halse. 2008. Chains. New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers. ISBN 9781416905868
Plot Summary
After being sold to a very cruel couple from New York, a young slave girl named Isabel spies for the Rebels during the Revolutionary war.
Critical Analysis
Isabel knew that the day would come when she would be free. When Miss Mary Finch, Isabel and Ruth’s kind owner who taught them how to read, died; she expected to be released. Before their faith could be decided, the lawyer, who has Mrs. Finch’s will, is gone and Mrs. Finch’s nephew, the ungrateful Mr. Robert decides to sell both girls. The girls are then sold to Mr. and Mrs. Lockton. As the girls make their voyage from Rhode Island to New York City Isabel crosses paths with a boy named Curzon who informs her that her new owner Mr. Lockton is a dirty Loyalist who believes in slavery. Curzon asks Isabel to spy on her masters and inform him about plans and conspiracies against General Washington. Isabel chooses not to have anything to do with politics and refuses to help, but Isabel changes her mind after she realizes what Curzon had said earlier was a hard truth, that her master will say anything in front of her because slaves don’t count. After Isabel’s sister is sold and shipped to the West Indies, she becomes even more determined to help so that maybe the Rebels will help find Ruth and help them gain their freedom. Set in 1776 during the American Revolution, each chapter begins with a newspaper article, advertisement, handbill, or letter from the time period. For example, the following ad is a newspaper advertisement from the Royal Gazette in New York: Run-away from the subscriber, living at No. 110, Water-street, near the new slip. A Negro girl named POLL, about 13 years of age, very black, marked with the Small Pox, and had on when she went away a red cloth petticoat, and a light blue short gown, homemade. Whoever will take up and secure the said girl so that the owner may get her shall be handsomely rewarded. These components provide a sense of the time and place as we see these historical events through Isabel’s eyes. Readers may not understand the harsh realities that thirteen year old Isabel had endured from beaten nearly to death because she tried to run away to being branded in her face with the letter I for being insolent, but will sympathize with her for being courageous in fighting for something many take for granted, freedom.
Review Excerpt(s)
Publishers Weekly, Starred Review- “Startlingly provocative…nuanced and evenhanded…a fast-moving, emotionally involving plot.”
Booklist, Starred Review-“Anderson explores elemental themes of power, freedom, and the sources of human strength in this searing, fascinating story.”
Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review- “Readers will care deeply about Isabel…”
Connections
*Received the Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction
*National Book Award Finalist
*Slavery
*Revolutionary War
*Children and Slavery
Anderson, Laurie Halse. 2008. Chains. New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers. ISBN 9781416905868
Plot Summary
After being sold to a very cruel couple from New York, a young slave girl named Isabel spies for the Rebels during the Revolutionary war.
Critical Analysis
Isabel knew that the day would come when she would be free. When Miss Mary Finch, Isabel and Ruth’s kind owner who taught them how to read, died; she expected to be released. Before their faith could be decided, the lawyer, who has Mrs. Finch’s will, is gone and Mrs. Finch’s nephew, the ungrateful Mr. Robert decides to sell both girls. The girls are then sold to Mr. and Mrs. Lockton. As the girls make their voyage from Rhode Island to New York City Isabel crosses paths with a boy named Curzon who informs her that her new owner Mr. Lockton is a dirty Loyalist who believes in slavery. Curzon asks Isabel to spy on her masters and inform him about plans and conspiracies against General Washington. Isabel chooses not to have anything to do with politics and refuses to help, but Isabel changes her mind after she realizes what Curzon had said earlier was a hard truth, that her master will say anything in front of her because slaves don’t count. After Isabel’s sister is sold and shipped to the West Indies, she becomes even more determined to help so that maybe the Rebels will help find Ruth and help them gain their freedom. Set in 1776 during the American Revolution, each chapter begins with a newspaper article, advertisement, handbill, or letter from the time period. For example, the following ad is a newspaper advertisement from the Royal Gazette in New York: Run-away from the subscriber, living at No. 110, Water-street, near the new slip. A Negro girl named POLL, about 13 years of age, very black, marked with the Small Pox, and had on when she went away a red cloth petticoat, and a light blue short gown, homemade. Whoever will take up and secure the said girl so that the owner may get her shall be handsomely rewarded. These components provide a sense of the time and place as we see these historical events through Isabel’s eyes. Readers may not understand the harsh realities that thirteen year old Isabel had endured from beaten nearly to death because she tried to run away to being branded in her face with the letter I for being insolent, but will sympathize with her for being courageous in fighting for something many take for granted, freedom.
Review Excerpt(s)
Publishers Weekly, Starred Review- “Startlingly provocative…nuanced and evenhanded…a fast-moving, emotionally involving plot.”
Booklist, Starred Review-“Anderson explores elemental themes of power, freedom, and the sources of human strength in this searing, fascinating story.”
Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review- “Readers will care deeply about Isabel…”
Connections
*Received the Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction
*National Book Award Finalist
*Slavery
*Revolutionary War
*Children and Slavery
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Our Eleanor by Candace Fleming
Bibliography
Fleming, Candace. 2005. Our Eleanor. New York: New York. Atheneum Books for Young Readers. ISBN 9780689865442
Summary
Our Eleanor is a biography of the life of first lady Eleanor Roosevelt’s life from infancy to her death in 1962. This biography contains very private details from Eleanor’s low self-esteem as a child because of her looks to the details of her not so perfect marriage to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Critical Analysis
All throughout the book the author includes documentable dialogue that came from Eleanor, her children and her friends. At the end of the book source notes, picture credits, and other resources about Eleanor are included. The book begins with a table of contents that includes titles, page numbers and a quote by Eleanor that introduces parallels with what the chapter is about. It continues with a time line of Eleanor’s life and a Roosevelt Family Tree. Then it continues from her birth, youth, marriage, and finally her death in 1962. The book is organized as a scrapbook with each vignette including borders, portraits, letters, newspaper clippings, sketches, or photographs. Headings with bold fonts are included as well as subheadings with a different font style are also used. Captions under well cropped photographs or other images are included to aid the reader. The book jacket is inviting with a colorful portrait of Mrs. Roosevelt. Her warm smile and her soft blue eyes give the photograph an inviting motherly appearance that draws the reader in. The black and white photographs, newspaper clippings, and letters support the text throughout and are placed appropriately with each vignette and are either gay, or serious. Middle school children or older could easily open this book and begin reading from any point in the book. The ivory pages give the book an older feel while giving the background a crisp look. The various font sizes and varieties help move the text along as the journey through Eleanor’s life continues. The writing is clear and to the point and shows the author’s interest in Mrs. Roosevelt’s life without being biased. The author encourages curiosity throughout the book by the way she chooses to title certain vignettes. One of the titles in the book is “The Other First Lady” and then we see a large photograph of Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt sitting in a carriage with another woman sitting between the two of them, and then there’s another vignette titled “Father’s Weakness” that peaks the reader’s curiosity.
Review Excerpt(s)
*Society of School Librarians International Book Awards, 2006.
*Jefferson Cup Award, 2006. Honor Book Grades 6-12
* Kirkus Reviews-“Had Eleanor Roosevelt kept a scrapbook-an incredibly well-organized and thorough scrapbook-this is how it might feel to look through it. Arranged chronologically, the volume works like a jigsaw puzzle. Open it up, pick individual pieces at random and when placed all together, a full picture of the subject emerges...”
*Booklist- “As in Fleming's Ben Franklin's Almanac: Being a True Account of the Good Gentleman's Life (2003), which was a 2004 Booklist Top 10 Biography, this takes a pastiche approach to humanizing a legendary life. Through anecdotes and archival photos drawn from an assortment of sources, Fleming invites readers into a camaraderie with the timid, neglected little girl who grew up to become the woman many nicknamed "co-president," and whose flouting of accepted gender roles earned her admiration and ridicule in equal measure…”
*Library Media Connection- “This scrapbook biography employs oral history transcripts, books, and photographs. Eleanor's vital role in American history is chronicled in this biography that captures her vulnerability and her humanity. With chapters in loose chronological order, chapter titles indicate phases of Eleanor's life...”
Connections
*Use as a cross curricular resource in Social Studies and English Language Arts to study biographies.
Fleming, Candace. 2005. Our Eleanor. New York: New York. Atheneum Books for Young Readers. ISBN 9780689865442
Summary
Our Eleanor is a biography of the life of first lady Eleanor Roosevelt’s life from infancy to her death in 1962. This biography contains very private details from Eleanor’s low self-esteem as a child because of her looks to the details of her not so perfect marriage to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Critical Analysis
All throughout the book the author includes documentable dialogue that came from Eleanor, her children and her friends. At the end of the book source notes, picture credits, and other resources about Eleanor are included. The book begins with a table of contents that includes titles, page numbers and a quote by Eleanor that introduces parallels with what the chapter is about. It continues with a time line of Eleanor’s life and a Roosevelt Family Tree. Then it continues from her birth, youth, marriage, and finally her death in 1962. The book is organized as a scrapbook with each vignette including borders, portraits, letters, newspaper clippings, sketches, or photographs. Headings with bold fonts are included as well as subheadings with a different font style are also used. Captions under well cropped photographs or other images are included to aid the reader. The book jacket is inviting with a colorful portrait of Mrs. Roosevelt. Her warm smile and her soft blue eyes give the photograph an inviting motherly appearance that draws the reader in. The black and white photographs, newspaper clippings, and letters support the text throughout and are placed appropriately with each vignette and are either gay, or serious. Middle school children or older could easily open this book and begin reading from any point in the book. The ivory pages give the book an older feel while giving the background a crisp look. The various font sizes and varieties help move the text along as the journey through Eleanor’s life continues. The writing is clear and to the point and shows the author’s interest in Mrs. Roosevelt’s life without being biased. The author encourages curiosity throughout the book by the way she chooses to title certain vignettes. One of the titles in the book is “The Other First Lady” and then we see a large photograph of Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt sitting in a carriage with another woman sitting between the two of them, and then there’s another vignette titled “Father’s Weakness” that peaks the reader’s curiosity.
Review Excerpt(s)
*Society of School Librarians International Book Awards, 2006.
*Jefferson Cup Award, 2006. Honor Book Grades 6-12
* Kirkus Reviews-“Had Eleanor Roosevelt kept a scrapbook-an incredibly well-organized and thorough scrapbook-this is how it might feel to look through it. Arranged chronologically, the volume works like a jigsaw puzzle. Open it up, pick individual pieces at random and when placed all together, a full picture of the subject emerges...”
*Booklist- “As in Fleming's Ben Franklin's Almanac: Being a True Account of the Good Gentleman's Life (2003), which was a 2004 Booklist Top 10 Biography, this takes a pastiche approach to humanizing a legendary life. Through anecdotes and archival photos drawn from an assortment of sources, Fleming invites readers into a camaraderie with the timid, neglected little girl who grew up to become the woman many nicknamed "co-president," and whose flouting of accepted gender roles earned her admiration and ridicule in equal measure…”
*Library Media Connection- “This scrapbook biography employs oral history transcripts, books, and photographs. Eleanor's vital role in American history is chronicled in this biography that captures her vulnerability and her humanity. With chapters in loose chronological order, chapter titles indicate phases of Eleanor's life...”
Connections
*Use as a cross curricular resource in Social Studies and English Language Arts to study biographies.
Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX: The Law That Changed the Future of Girls in America by Karen Blumenthal
Bibliography
Blumenthal, Karen. 2005. Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX: The Law That Changed the Future of Girls in America. New York: New York. Atheneum Books for Young Readers. ISBN 0689859570
Summary
In Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX: The Law That Changed the Future of Girls in America Blumenthal includes the injustices of many female athletes to how women in politics helped introduce, pass and enforce Title IX.
Critical Analysis
What would you say if someone told you your daughter could not play sports because she doesn’t need to build character? When she graduates from college with a law degree she can only teach but not practice law because she is a woman. Karen Blumenthal’s Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX, answers these and many other questions in an informative survey style book. The photographs, cartoons, newspaper and magazine clippings keep the heavily factual book interesting. Each chapter either focuses on female athletes or influential woman throughout the women’s rights movement and includes interesting female player profiles such as Mia Hamm and Billie Jean King. Although the split sentences during the course of the text create a bit of confusion at times the overall information found throughout is priceless.
Review Excerpt(s)
Jane Addams Children’s Book Award, 2006
Booklist-“ As in Six Days in October (2002), a compelling overview of the 1929 stock market crash and a financial primer, Wall Street Journal editor Blumenthal uses specific facts and fascinating personal stories to give readers a wide view of history. Here, the author looks at American women's evolving rights by focusing on the history and future of Title IX, which bans sex discrimination in U.S. education...”
Kirkus-“ The history of the small but wildly influential amendment known as Title IX receives a thoughtful, enlightening and inspiring treatment from the Sibert Honor-winning Blumenthal...”
Library Media Collection-“ Before the time that Donna de Varona won the gold in the Olympics and made the cover of Sports Illustrated, or Billy Jean King played Bobby Riggs, the battle for equality in the treatment of the sexes had been fought on several fronts. The warriors for the cause and the skirmishes leading up to the victory of Title IX are the subjects of this book...”
Connections
*Women Athletes
*Sex discrimation in sports
*Women’s rights throughout the centuries.
Blumenthal, Karen. 2005. Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX: The Law That Changed the Future of Girls in America. New York: New York. Atheneum Books for Young Readers. ISBN 0689859570
Summary
In Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX: The Law That Changed the Future of Girls in America Blumenthal includes the injustices of many female athletes to how women in politics helped introduce, pass and enforce Title IX.
Critical Analysis
What would you say if someone told you your daughter could not play sports because she doesn’t need to build character? When she graduates from college with a law degree she can only teach but not practice law because she is a woman. Karen Blumenthal’s Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX, answers these and many other questions in an informative survey style book. The photographs, cartoons, newspaper and magazine clippings keep the heavily factual book interesting. Each chapter either focuses on female athletes or influential woman throughout the women’s rights movement and includes interesting female player profiles such as Mia Hamm and Billie Jean King. Although the split sentences during the course of the text create a bit of confusion at times the overall information found throughout is priceless.
Review Excerpt(s)
Jane Addams Children’s Book Award, 2006
Booklist-“ As in Six Days in October (2002), a compelling overview of the 1929 stock market crash and a financial primer, Wall Street Journal editor Blumenthal uses specific facts and fascinating personal stories to give readers a wide view of history. Here, the author looks at American women's evolving rights by focusing on the history and future of Title IX, which bans sex discrimination in U.S. education...”
Kirkus-“ The history of the small but wildly influential amendment known as Title IX receives a thoughtful, enlightening and inspiring treatment from the Sibert Honor-winning Blumenthal...”
Library Media Collection-“ Before the time that Donna de Varona won the gold in the Olympics and made the cover of Sports Illustrated, or Billy Jean King played Bobby Riggs, the battle for equality in the treatment of the sexes had been fought on several fronts. The warriors for the cause and the skirmishes leading up to the victory of Title IX are the subjects of this book...”
Connections
*Women Athletes
*Sex discrimation in sports
*Women’s rights throughout the centuries.
Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice by Phillip Hoose
Bibliography
Hoose, Phillip. 2009. Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice. New York: New York. Melanie Kroupa Books. ISBN 9780312661052
Summary
This is the story of Claudette Colvin a 15 year old African American girl who in 1955, when segregation laws were still in effect in Montgomery Alabama, refused to give up her seat on a bus for a white passenger and was arrested.
Critical Analysis
Did you know Rosa Parks was not the first African-American to make history by refusing to give up her seat on a city bus in segregated Montgomery Alabama? Phillip Hoose’s biography of Claudette Colvin shows readers anyone can stand up for their rights at any age just like Claudette Colvin did at the young age of 15. Teenage readers will identify with Claudette’s struggles as a single mom during her young adult years, to her decision participate in tumultuous court case that endangered her life. The book will appeal to readers visually with the many photographs that depict the ignorant way thinking such as the sign that read “NO Dogs, Negros, Mexicans,” back when segregation was in place to the faces of innocent lives lost and the courageous boycott leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King Junior. Tidbits of interesting facts, such as how Jim Crow Laws got their name, are sprinkled throughout out the 10 chapter narrative filled with interviews from many individuals that lived in Montgomery Alabama during the tumultuous times of segregation to desegregation.
Review Excerpt(s)
*Booklist Starred Review-“ Starred Review* Nine months before Rosa Parks’ history-making protest on a city bus, Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old Montgomery, Alabama, high-school student, was arrested and jailed for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger. Hoose draws from numerous personal interviews with Colvin in this exceptional title that is part historical account, part memoir....”
* Cooperative Children’s Book Center Choices-“Phillip Hoose’s narrative, which was drawn in large part from interviews with Colvin and others as well as additional research, paints a fresh, insightful picture of those life-changing times in Montgomery, looking at them through the experiences of a teenager who faced challenges for being both young and Black.”
*Kirkus- “Claudette Colvin's story will be new to most readers. A teenager in the 1950s, Colvin was the first African-American to refuse to give up her seat on the bus in Montgomery, Ala. Although she later participated with four other women in the court case that effectively ended segregated bus service, it is Rosa Parks's action that became the celebrated event of the bus boycott. Hoose's frank examination of Colvin's life includes sizable passages in her own words, allowing readers to learn about the events of the time from a unique and personal perspective….”
Connections
*National Book Award Winner
*Excellence in Young Adult Nonfiction Finalist
*The Robert F. Sibert Honor Book
*Civil Rights
*Segreation
*Inspirational biographies
Hoose, Phillip. 2009. Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice. New York: New York. Melanie Kroupa Books. ISBN 9780312661052
Summary
This is the story of Claudette Colvin a 15 year old African American girl who in 1955, when segregation laws were still in effect in Montgomery Alabama, refused to give up her seat on a bus for a white passenger and was arrested.
Critical Analysis
Did you know Rosa Parks was not the first African-American to make history by refusing to give up her seat on a city bus in segregated Montgomery Alabama? Phillip Hoose’s biography of Claudette Colvin shows readers anyone can stand up for their rights at any age just like Claudette Colvin did at the young age of 15. Teenage readers will identify with Claudette’s struggles as a single mom during her young adult years, to her decision participate in tumultuous court case that endangered her life. The book will appeal to readers visually with the many photographs that depict the ignorant way thinking such as the sign that read “NO Dogs, Negros, Mexicans,” back when segregation was in place to the faces of innocent lives lost and the courageous boycott leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King Junior. Tidbits of interesting facts, such as how Jim Crow Laws got their name, are sprinkled throughout out the 10 chapter narrative filled with interviews from many individuals that lived in Montgomery Alabama during the tumultuous times of segregation to desegregation.
Review Excerpt(s)
*Booklist Starred Review-“ Starred Review* Nine months before Rosa Parks’ history-making protest on a city bus, Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old Montgomery, Alabama, high-school student, was arrested and jailed for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger. Hoose draws from numerous personal interviews with Colvin in this exceptional title that is part historical account, part memoir....”
* Cooperative Children’s Book Center Choices-“Phillip Hoose’s narrative, which was drawn in large part from interviews with Colvin and others as well as additional research, paints a fresh, insightful picture of those life-changing times in Montgomery, looking at them through the experiences of a teenager who faced challenges for being both young and Black.”
*Kirkus- “Claudette Colvin's story will be new to most readers. A teenager in the 1950s, Colvin was the first African-American to refuse to give up her seat on the bus in Montgomery, Ala. Although she later participated with four other women in the court case that effectively ended segregated bus service, it is Rosa Parks's action that became the celebrated event of the bus boycott. Hoose's frank examination of Colvin's life includes sizable passages in her own words, allowing readers to learn about the events of the time from a unique and personal perspective….”
Connections
*National Book Award Winner
*Excellence in Young Adult Nonfiction Finalist
*The Robert F. Sibert Honor Book
*Civil Rights
*Segreation
*Inspirational biographies
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