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The 52 Book Club's Reading Challenge 2022

2022 Build Your Library Reading Challenge

Monday, November 26, 2012
Award-Winning MG Novel Long on Personality, Short on Plot
5:36 PM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)

It's clear from the get-go that Cecile Johnson has no interest in getting to know her daughters. She doesn't play with them, cook for them, talk to them or care a whit about what they do all day. Finding their way in this strange, new world is hard enough—how are Delphine and her sisters supposed to get their mother's attention? And what is Cecile up to anyway? There's got to be a reason she's hiding from the Black Panthers. As the summer rolls on, Delphine will make discoveries that will change what she knows about her family and, more importantly, about herself.
One Crazy Summer, an award-winning middle grade novel by Rita Williams-Garcia, is difficult to describe because, although it's long on personality, it's a little short on plot. The story, which takes place in 1968, talks about racism, revolution, and civil rights, although its real focus is on family. Delphine, Fern and Vonetta are a formidable trio—they're sympathetic, funny, and lovable. Sisters in every sense of the word. Although I wasn't as swept away by this story as I wanted to be, I did love the Gaither girls. My favorite part of this book may, in fact, be the cover (of the paperback version). Illustrated by the enormously talented Frank Morrison, it bring the sisters to vivid life, perfectly capturing the spunk that makes them the best and most memorable part of One Crazy Summer.
(Readalikes: Hm, I can't really think of anything. Can you?)
Grade: B-
If this were a movie, it would be rated: PG for subject matter that may be disturbing to younger readers (racism, parental abandonment/neglect, etc.)
To the FTC, with love: I bought a copy of One Crazy Summer from the Scholastic book fair at my kids' elementary school with a portion of the millions I make from my lucrative career as a book blogger. Ha ha.
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