Monday, January 6, 2025
GIRLS SURVIVE Part 12
Wednesday, January 10, 2024
Girls Survive Series Part 11
I enjoyed this one. Cora goes through a lot to survive during the Tri-State Tornado event of 1925. The author did a great job of capturing how terrifying this must have been.
My main criticism is that the characters felt a little too modern in voice. I didn't feel like this was set in 1925. And I'm mad about the main casualty of the tornado. That didn't have to happen and I hate when authors resort to it, as I consider it weak writing.
It's theme deja vu. One of the books in the last release dealt with Bloody Sunday, which happened in Selma, Alabama in 1965 during right to vote protests.
This is set a couple years earlier in Burmingham, but it's the same right to vote topic. Not that this isn't important, but maybe space them out a bit more? The difference here is that the children are the ones doing the protesting and getting arrested, whereas in Selma, it was all ages. The majority of this book is set in the jail, which is different from the first one.
It's a good book. I just don't think the two voting ones needed to be so close.
Girls Survive Series Part 10 + Graphic Novels
Essie's book is set on Bloody Sunday, which was March 7, 1965 in Selma, Alabama.
Even though she's young, Essie is a big time protestor, who's already been jailed for the offense multiple times. This time she finds herself in the middle of the most violent protest she's ever witnessed, with the non-violent protestors being beaten, teargassed and hosed down. It's not easy to read all the damage done to Essie, but it's important. It's always been ridiculous in this country what people have had to do just to gain the most basic right to vote.
Gah, I started writing this post back in August. All the other books and graphic novels were read then, but I just couldn't bring myself to do the Katrina book. Now that the two newest books are out, I made myself pick it up and finally get through it.
Being a hurricane survivor, this one was very hard to read, but what we dealt with was nothing like what happened with Katrina. The treatment of the disaster was nothing short of despicable, and while our situation wasn't as bad, the government is still basically useless when it comes to helping people who survived natural disasters.
Claudia's family is her mother, her younger brother and sister who are twins, and her grandfather. My biggest issue with this book is the author's flimsy reason for keeping the family there. The grandfather recently had surgery, yet he's not bedridden and he does fine living in the attic post-hurricane. There is literally no reason the family couldn't have evacuated. The surgery is never even specified. Pretty weak writing. The younger sister Zoe is an obnoxious brat.
I'll likely never reread this one.
I have to admit, I was a little disappointed in the graphic novel format. They're very thin and for the price, I would have expected a least a little bit longer. The book version seems to tell a lot more story. Still, it's neat to see a historical fiction graphic novel.
Ting's story is set during the flood of the Yangtze back in 1931. I had no idea this had ever happened, so I always love to learn something new. No matter how short the story is, I still learned.
Spoiler: This actually does end well, which is probably not very realistic.
Still fun to see the ancient world included.
I liked this one, though it went by too fast. Definitely my big complaint about these. They're too damn short.
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
GIRLS SURVIVE Series: Part 8
Every time I think this series is over, I see more new books!
Maddy lives in the Dakota Territory in 1888. She's from St. Paul, so she's a city girl and everyone makes it clear that she isn't cut out for this kind of life. They're pretty abusive actually.
One day in January, the weather is very nice so it's off to school for Maddy, though her aunt forces her to take her heavy cloak. It's a good thing, too. A powerful blizzard hits and Maddy and the other students are trapped in the school.
The oldest boys head for one of their homes to get help, but too much time passes and after a window breaks, Maddy insists they need to risk getting to her home, which is very close. I love how Maddy strengthened herself and went from bullied city girl to having good suggestions and keeping everyone going. She turns her cloak into a rope that holds all the remaining students and their teacher together, and then they go out into the blizzard. It's not an easy journey and it's the stupid teacher that almost messes it up, but Maddy gets everyone to her house and earns their respect.
This one doesn't pull any punches though. Those two older boys who never came back to the school got lost and were found frozen to death. The teacher might lose some toes and I think they mentioned others that died. Wikipedia says there were 235 fatalities.
I enjoyed this one because I'd never heard of this incident before, and I liked Maddy as a character.
1935 Oklahoma. Must be the Dust Bowl.
I liked this one as much as I could. The father is horribly stubborn about leaving his family farm, but it should have been clear long before that there was no way this was going to end well. Then the family faces hatred in California and it takes them a while to get back on their feet, but they do by working together with other fellow migrants.
I liked Millie and some of the minor characters, but I really didn't care for Millie's dad at all. He comes around eventually but still meh.
Tuesday, January 11, 2022
GIRLS SURVIVE Series: Parts 5 & 6
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
GIRLS SURVIVE Series: Part 4
http://redblackandwhitebookreviews.blogspot.com/2020/01/girls-survive-series-part-3.html
These newest four Girls Survive just released. I think they were supposed to be August 1st, so once again, they came out early.
Amazon's shipping has been terrible. They've switched to UPS Mail Innovations for certain packages and they take eons to arrive. I get it, pandemic, yeah, but I'm a Prime member and that's not cheap, so I miss the method of shipment I'm used to my money paying for.
Long story short, I only have two of the four books so far. The other two are poking along verrrrrrrry slowly. So for the first time, my review is going out of chronological order.
We begin with Rebecca, whose story was based on the women who helped the Revolutionary War by being heroic messengers. This one was simple, but it was also enjoyable. I liked it a lot.
Maribel's book takes place during the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. Maribel is a Hispanic girl with ADD. Back in those days, things like that weren't diagnosed, so it's not discussed in the book in plain language, but the signs are there, and the author addresses it at the end.
Maribel and her family are evacuated from their home and live with friends for three weeks, mostly not believing there's any danger from the volcano. Tired of her family being upset, Maribel decides to sneak back to her home and retrieve some possessions she thinks will help. Naturally, the volcano erupts while she's there and she has to fight her way to safety.
I really liked this one, because this is something I didn't know much about. It went by quickly, as this series tends to do, but it was well-written.
If you've never heard of the Great Molasses Flood, it's about exactly what it sounds like. In Boston in 1919, a giant tank of molasses exploded and the ensuing wave killed 21 people and injured many others. It sounds silly, but it was real and would have been pretty terrifying.
Wednesday, January 15, 2020
GIRLS SURVIVE Series Part 3
These are still coming out in fours and still coming out earlier than expected. They weren't due until February 1st, yet they all came today. (ETA: I started writing this post back in January and got sidetracked from it for an embarrassingly long time.)
As always, I'm going in chronological order with these, so we're starting in May 1838. This book takes place over the course of ten months of terrible things. Reading anything involving the Native American genocide is always painful for me. I'm not Native American a bit, but it was absolutely horrific what was done to the US's indigenous peoples. One of the worst things to ever take place in this country and it's not talked about enough.
Mary and her family are living in Georgia. Her family is quite large. One cabin has her parents, her older sister Margaret, her younger sister Becky, and herself. A second cabin is for her maternal grandparents and a third has her oldest sister Nelly and Nelly's husband Raven. And their unborn baby.
So the family is doing normal daily life things when suddenly Grandma has a heart attack. She ends up dying overnight and everyone is preparing for the funeral when the house is approached by a bunch of white men. Things escalate quickly from here. Everyone is forced outside. The women gather as many possessions as they can, but also watch as their livestock and other possessions are claimed by the white men. Mary's father has gone elsewhere to build Grandma's coffin, so he's not present for almost the entire book. Grandpa goes along for a bit, then runs back into his home to be with his wife, who won't be buried properly now. And he ends up getting shot. Two people who won't be buried properly.
The family is herded to one of the internment camps by a fort. They're here through June, then off to another camp in Tennessee. They're there until almost November, then finally start heading west. Well, most of them do. Nelly goes into labor right before they're supposed to leave, so she, Raven and her mother stay behind while Margaret takes Mary and Becky on to Chattanooga. Thankfully, they reunite eleven days later.
Then the book time jumps to March, where they're in Missouri, then Arkansas. Nelly loses her baby to illness. Thankfully, the book ends on a slightly happier note as Mary's father is finally found.
Agh, this book should have been a least three times as long as it was. I thought it was quite well-written, but went way too quickly and none of the characters were very well-developed, because you just saw them reacting to tragedy after tragedy with occasional scenes of strength and determination. That's the trouble with cramming an important story into 103 pages. It didn't need that many to convey its sadness though. It was good, but as I said, definitely hard to read.
One thing this series does quite well is choose its authors. This was written by a Cherokee woman and you can tell.
Next up, the Oregon Trail where the main character is black. I honestly don't remember ever reading another historical fiction book with that set up. The author is the one who wrote Ann, Noelle and Charlotte's books.
And I basically described the whole book in the previous paragraph without even having read it yet. (I write these reviews in sections after finishing each book, not all at once after reading all four.) It's the same as other Oregon Trail stories only not nearly as detailed, due to the page constraints, and with bonus racism,
It's pretty good though for what it is, which is too short. Length is the main thing that would improve this series a lot. They're good books with good authors, but they feel rushed and leaving you wanting more.
Sarah and her family live in Iowa where they're free. Her father decides he wants to head west, alongside a neighbor and his son. So Sarah, her older brother James, and their parents all go on the Oregon Trail, leaving the paternal grandparents behind. From there on out, it's your basic Oregon Trail story with a couple added moments here and there. Of course, there are some people in their travel group who are racist dicks. There's a cool scene where Sarah's father sticks up for the Native Americans, as does an older white woman. And another where Sarah's father puts himself in front of the biggest racist asshole's gun to protect some innocent Native Americans who actually just want to help them across a river. Basically, Sarah's dad is a badass. He was my favorite. Sarah herself is fun, too. Her mom's on the feminist side, so she's been raised on "women can do anything men can do," and when her friend is lost, she takes it upon herself to join the search and she's the one who actually finds her.
My biggest issue with the book, aside from the length, is that it feels like the author had a checklist she was going down. And there's a reason for that. She pretty much says the same thing in the afterword. She says she wanted to show the trip from the perspective of a black girl. Check. She wanted to show it was difficult. Check. And she wanted to show it was tragic for Native Americans. Er...half a check? She gives more useful information about that in the afterword than she does in the text itself, where there's only that one conversation plus the gun incident. I'd also add that she wanted to show Sarah doing something men couldn't accomplish. Check.
Really, it's a fun read. I just get nitpicky when I write these reviews.
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
GIRLS SURVIVE Series Part 2
The Girls Survive series just released another four books. These actually came out a couple weeks before they were originally supposed to, so that was a pleasant surprise.
I'm going in chronological order again, so we're starting with the book set during the Civil War. This was written by the same author that did Ann and Noelle's books from the first batch of four.
Our main character is a 12-year-old free black girl named Charlotte who works for Elizabeth Van Lew, who was a real person. Miss Van Lew freed all her father's slaves upon his death and even tracked down their families and freed them, too. Fictional Charlotte is one of those she found and freed. Charlotte came to live with Miss Van Lew and work for her, along with Charlotte's older cousin Mary, who is also based on a real person.
The story is set in Richmond in 1864 and quickly jumps into the action with Charlotte learning Miss Van Lew and a lot of her friends are spies. Or "patriots," as Miss Van Lew insists. The story, like all of these books, is very fast-paced because the books are so short, so Charlotte starts off her own spy career the very next day after she discovers that little secret. Her adventures culminate in her risking everything to see her cousin Mary for a few moments, which thankfully turns out advantageous when it could easily have gotten everyone involved killed. The book ends on an open, but hopeful note.
I like this one the best of this author's three. I liked all the characters and it was cool to learn that so many of them were based on real historical figures.
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It's 1900. Twelve-year-old Carrie's a bit of a flighty character. She seems on the shallow side, being really into clothing and hairstyles and she's obsessed with her best friend's older sister to the point of almost insulting said best friend. She was supposed to go to her best friend's house for a sleepover on the day of the hurricane, but Carrie's shallowness is eclipsed only by her mother's social-climbing, so Carrie's stuck at home babysitting her younger brother.
And then it's all boom, hurricane action. The water's rising. Let's go upstairs! The roof is caving in. Let's throw a chunk of it out the window and use it as a raft! Carrie does some pretty epic heroics. I'm not sure I really buy her being able to lift a chunk of roof big enough to float her and her brother on out a broken window. It's not like the water level was that high and she just directed it out the window while it was floating, which seems more believable. Then she does a daring rescue and she, her brother and the boy she saved wait out the hurricane on their roof raft, because Carrie managed to wedge it up against a couple trees.
When the storm is over, they make their way through the devastation and Carrie finds her mother, who says her father is also okay. He's helping with the rescue efforts. Carrie also runs into her teacher, who breaks the news that both Carrie's best friend and her beloved older sister are dead. Their entire family is dead. And Carrie freaks out because not only has she just learned she lost people, but she also knows she was almost dead, too, if she'd gone to the sleepover as planned.
The book ends on a hopeful note, as Carrie refuses to leave Galveston and says they should stay and rebuild because this is their home. William, the boy she rescued, lost most of his family, except his father and their dog, but he's staying as well.
Now to paraphrase Ann M. Martin for a second, what I didn't tell you was that Carrie was white and William was black. Remember the first four books that had prejudice shoved into each one? Some historical stories are meant for that. The Civil War. Pearl Harbor. Internment camps. Anything involving how Native Americans were treated. The Titanic one wasn't. This one isn't really either. The author explains that she liked the real life accounts she read of people helping each other regardless of their race during the Galveston hurricane, because Galveston was segregated. That's all well and good, but work it into the story naturally. There are a couple very heavy-handed mentions of Galveston being segregated and Carrie just treats it as the way it is rather than having any sort of emotion about it. It feels mechanical. Forced. Shallow. I like the character of William, but that whole angle could have been handled much better.
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So Lucia, or Lucy as she prefers, is a 14-year-old Italian immigrant. She wants to go to college and be an astronomer, but her father says no. He was injured at his job, so their only income right now is from Lucy and her brother's jobs, plus laundry their mother takes in, and boarders that share the only bed in the house.
Lucy works at Triangle, along with her friend Rosie, who's a Russian Jew. Rosie and Lucy's brother Tony have mutual crushes but can't hope to be together due to their religious backgrounds. That's the snippet of prejudice tossed into this book. Also working at Triangle are Lucy's cousin Cara, Cara's fiance Frank, an Italian boy named Michael that has a crush on Lucy, and a girl from Michael's hometown named Marcella that likes Michael and naturally then hates Lucy.
All these characters are established over the course of the first four chapters, as well as unions and poor conditions at the factories.
Then we get right into the fire and it's all action until the end. It's all panic. Michael finds Lucy, but ends up having to save Marcella. Lucy tries to find Rosie multiple times and does catch a glimpse of her once, but can't get to her. Lucy finally ends up on the building's roof and is one of the few that were on the ninth floor that managed to escape. Lucy actually worked on the eighth floor, but went to nine to look for Rosie.
Lucy finds Marcella in the aftermath. Marcella tells her Michael didn't make it and neither did Rosie, who was on the fire escape that collapsed. Cara's fiance Frank didn't make it either.
This one was mostly well-written and I thought it captured a lot of the tension well, after establishing the characters and their world.
Only one moment I thought was a poor choice. Lucy's cousin Cara is sick and can't go to work, so she gives Lucy a note for Frank. Lucy's caught up in some drama with Michael over lunch and forgets to take the note to Frank. At the end, Cara is comforted by the fact that Lucy gave Frank her note and he knew how she felt at the end. Eeyeah, except he didn't get it, because Lucy was being a forgetful idiot. Not that Lucy tells her. She lies her ass off. This whole situation was unnecessary and puts Lucy in a bad light for absolutely no reason.
Other than that though, this one was good.
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I'm going to be brief because this was indeed a struggle to read. It was good, but difficult. You know the ending, while seemingly hopeful, is ultimately going to be sad, though you'll never know for sure.
I love that these books are always in groups of four. The next set, due out in February, will be about a Cherokee girl on the Trail of Tears, a black girl on the Oregon Trail, one living through the 1918 flu epidemic, and a Chinese-American girl during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
Sunday, March 31, 2019
GIRLS SURVIVE Series
The Girls Survive series debuted on February 1st with four books. They're short books, each with only 112 pages and black and white illustrations.
Being a lover of children's historical fiction, I had to check these out, although I only recently got them.
Overall, I enjoyed them, but definitely some more than others.
Ann Fights for Freedom is the obvious Underground Railroad book. It's not as well done as Addy's first book from the American Girl line and nowhere near as good a look at slavery as Clotee's from the Dear America line, but it has decent characters and a fast-paced storyline that gives a good, if quite brief, look at the situation. I find the Underground Railroad bit a tad misleading though, because a main part of the plot is that they're NOT officially on the Underground Railroad.
Emmi's book was quite good and my second favorite of the line. Emmi is a German immigrant in Chicago who came over from Europe with her toymaker father. The story quickly moves into the events of the fire and it's very fast-paced.
Emmi's book did make me wonder something: whether or not the authors were instructed to include some sort of prejudice in each volume. Obviously, the slavery book and Pearl Harbor book featuring a Japanese character are going to have this, but the Chicago fire and the Titanic? Not necessarily and yet, there it was. Emmi has to run around the city with a pair of Irish twins that have bullied her for being German. The disaster quickly brings them together and they end up having a happy ending. I didn't mind including this aspect of Chicago life in the story, but it also made me want to read more. It seemed unrealistic to have the twins and Emmi come together so easily and forget all their past animosity. I suppose in times of great duress it does happen, but with a story this short, it felt rushed.
The language at the beginning of the book is a bit odd. The writer in me wanted to edit quite a few things, but I quickly became caught up in the story and looked past it.
Written by the same author as Ann's book, Noelle's lead character is half-Haitian, half-French. So here we go again with the prejudice side story. This time though, the story suffered for it. The instances of racism just felt tacked onto the already dramatic story of the Titanic disaster and the main character's point of view as a biracial girl in the early 1900s wasn't fleshed out like it should have been. This was a topic meant for a much longer book where it could have been explored in greater detail and given proper attention.
And of course, it's the Titanic. It's the only one without a happy ending. My least-liked of the four.
From least-liked on to favorite! Alice is the daughter of an American-born man of Japanese heritage and a Japanese immigrant woman. This is one of the only historical kids' fiction books I've read about Pearl Harbor that actually has the main character as Japanese.
I loved all the characters in this and the story really came alive. Despite it taking place over the most spread out amount of time, it felt like the most complete story. Although I still want to know what happened to everyone during the rest of their lives! This one didn't feel long enough, not because the writing wasn't done well, but because I got so attached to the characters, I wanted to read a full-length novel about them.
This series continues in August with two more books. One is a black girl spying during the Civil War and the other is the Triangle Shirtwaist fire.