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LENA AND THE BURNING OF GREENWOOD

A TULSA RACE MASSACRE SURVIVAL STORY

From the Girls Survive series

An unflinching account of the Tulsa Race Massacre seen through the eyes of a young Black girl.

On Memorial Day 1921, 12-year-old Lena watches a gathering of clouds that portends a storm unlike any ever seen in Greenwood.

In this moving story told from Lena’s perspective, readers learn about the African American community of Greenwood, Oklahoma, or Black Wall Street as it came to be known. Lena lives in Greenwood with her mother, father, and 16-year-old sister, Cora. Her father often reminds her that “we have everything we need in Greenwood.” They have shops aplenty, libraries, schools, parks, and, most importantly, a sense of community. One day, Lena’s family hears whispers about Dick Rowland, a local Black man who was accused of assaulting a White woman. As racial tensions heighten, the residents of Greenwood fear White retribution for the alleged assault. The book moves quickly through the hours leading up to the massacre of over 300 Black people at the hands of White mobs and ends with Lena’s family and her community trying to piece together what little remains of their lives. This well-plotted fictionalized account of the Tulsa Race Massacre geared at young readers is emotionally challenging but necessary. Smith’s narrative deftly captures a child’s emotional and psychological experience of the tragedy as well as the tenderness shared among Lena and her family members. Jenai’s black-and-white digital illustrations, which appear every few pages, depict only Black characters and help readers imagine the historical setting. The thoughtful, informative backmatter will help adults lead discussions with children.

An unflinching account of the Tulsa Race Massacre seen through the eyes of a young Black girl. (author's note, discussion questions, glossary) (Historical fiction. 9-12)

Pub Date: Jan. 1, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-66632-944-5

Page Count: 112

Publisher: Stone Arch Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 26, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2022

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NOTHING ELSE BUT MIRACLES

An absorbing tale about urban life on the World War II homefront.

It’s 1944, and Dory, 12, and her brothers, Fish, 17, and Pike, 7, are living alone; their father has joined the Navy, and their mother is dead from tuberculosis.

The Byrnes live on New York City’s Lower East Side. Their neighbors assist with food, but when a new landlord finds out their dad is away, he makes trouble for the siblings. Dory, an independent risk taker, learns of a long-disused dumbwaiter inside Mr. Caputo’s restaurant in the Fulton Fish Market, where he regularly treats the kids to seafood stew. She uses the dumbwaiter to explore the otherwise inaccessible floors of an old hotel and brings her brothers there to live so they can avoid being sent to an orphanage. The story is both grounded in reality and embellished with entertaining exploits, keeping readers excited about Dory’s experiences as she holds her family together and they await their papa. Occasionally, the text shifts from third to second person and shares with readers knowledge that is hidden from Dory, such as a mystery about a hidden diamond. The novel develops the setting through the kids’ visits to places like the Empire State Building and Coney Island. Dory is an endearing character who confides her thoughts to Libby, her nickname for the Statue of Liberty. In the author’s note, the secrets behind the real hotel that inspired this story are revealed. Characters read white.

An absorbing tale about urban life on the World War II homefront. (Historical fiction. 9-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 5, 2023

ISBN: 9780823451630

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Margaret Ferguson/Holiday House

Review Posted Online: July 13, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2023

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WILL AT THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, 1863

BOYS OF WARTIME, #2

From the Boys of Wartime series , Vol. 2

“What would the Rebels want with a place like Gettysburg, Pennsylvania?” wonders 12-year-old Will Edmonds. He’s living in Gettysburg with his mother and three sisters, his father’s working at an Army hospital and his older brother is a soldier in a Southern prison. Will dreams of glory in battle, but instead the battle is coming to him. As Confederate forces begin arriving in Gettysburg, a town of only 2,400 residents, Will befriends a Southern boy named Abel Hoke, and in that friendship war is made personal: The enemy now has a face he knows. For her second installment in the Boys of Wartime series (Daniel at the Siege of Boston, 1776, 2010), Calkhoven draws on the many firsthand accounts of the bloodiest battle of the Civil War and weaves a solid tale of war through the eyes of Will. Dialogue too often reads like history lessons, but readers will come away understanding not only the facts of the battle but the underlying debates over states’ rights and slavery. A fine introduction to a battle that turned the tide of the war. (historical note, children’s roles in the Civil War, list of characters, timeline, glossary, further reading) (Historical fiction. 9-12)

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-525-42145-0

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: Dec. 29, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2011

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