
Bird in a Box
فرمت کتاب
audiobook
تاریخ انتشار
2011
Lexile Score
670
Reading Level
3
شابک
9780307917171
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

This story of three preteens in Elmira, New York, HAD to be an audiobook. Bahni Turpin as Hibernia, S'Von Ringo as Willie, and J.B. Adkins as Otis bring to life the period of the Great Depression and Joe Louis's quest for the heavyweight championship. Hibernia's saucy belief in herself, Willie's bravado in spite of the horrific accident that killed his dream, and Otis's determination to be true to his dead parents are testaments to the resilience of the human spirit. Background jazz and reenactments of Louis's bouts give the story plenty of atmosphere. The author's note and information on the real people who populate the story make this an excellent snapshot of American life in the 1930s. N.E.M. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine

June 13, 2011
This rich historical novel offers an unsentimental and sometimes humorous glimpse into the Great Depression. Pinkney (Sit-In) alternates between the first-person perspectives of three resilient and tenacious protagonistsâ12-year-old ministerâs daughter Hibernia, aka Bernie, who dreams of becoming a jazz singer like her absent mother; 13-year-old abused and abandoned Willie, who must relinquish his dreams of boxing after his father burns his hands; and orphaned 12-year-old Otis, who comforts himself with the riddles his parents loved. Both Willie and Otis live in the Mercy Orphanage, where kind, spunky manager Lila Weiss is both a child advocate and motherly figure. Famed African American boxer Joe Louis, whose matches Bernie, Willie, and Otis listen to on the radio, serves as both a powerful symbol and unifying thread in the story (âWhen Joe Louis fights, itâs more than just throwing punches,â Otisâs mother tells him. âThat boyâs fighting for the pride of Negroesâ). Pinkney enlivens potentially remote historical circumstances through her sympathetic characters who, despite the constraints of their era, struggle for dignity and human connection on their own terms. Ages 8â12.
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