From the Publisher
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Clayton Byrd Goes Underground |
P.S. Be Eleven |
Gone Crazy in Alabama |
Gaither Sisters Trilogy Box Set |
|
|
Add to Cart
|
Add to Cart
|
Add to Cart
|
Add to Cart
|
|
| Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars
229
|
4.8 out of 5 stars
761
|
4.8 out of 5 stars
611
|
4.8 out of 5 stars
1,133
|
| Price | $6.99$6.99 | $6.35$6.35 | $7.10$7.10 | $19.15$19.15 |
| More from Newbery Honor winner and three-time Coretta Scott King Award winner Rita Williams-Garcia | A powerful and heartfelt novel about loss, family, and love that will appeal to fans of Jason Reynolds and Kwame Alexander. | The Gaither sisters are at it again! A sequel to the Newbery Honor Book One Crazy Summer. | The Gaither sisters travel from the streets of Brooklyn to the rural South for the summer of a lifetime. | All three books in the Gaither Sisters series are now available in one beautiful, giftable box set! |


















K@y3 –
Can’t get enough of my little country gals… Delphine, Vonetta and Afua aka Fern!!!I didn’t actually read the book, my daughter did… but with constant communication I could almost feel as if I was in the setting with the little girls. Their mom, Cecile aka Nzila… their grandma, Big Ma and uncle Darnell all came to life to me. Every little black girl need to read these books!!One Crazy SummerGone Crazy in AlabamaP.S Be ElevenWe live us some Rita Williams-Garcia!! Please write a book with the girls going to live with their mom… that would be epic!!
CB –
All the feelings. All the perspectives. All the interesting facts I needed to know more of.The characters’ voices are strong and deep and the story serves as a perfect timeline to watch them grow, evolve and get to know one another.Being inside Delphine’s head especially made this growth more significant, how she was eleven going on twelve to end up being just eleven.The sisters’ dynamics felt real and good, the community strong bonds were told rightfully so, without much of a fuss.The ending got me teary eyed and I’m only too happy to be recommending this one and the others in the series to my middle grade students and anyone else really.
Iona –
I bought multiple copies of this book to use for small guided reading groups for my 4th grade classroom. I was a little worried that the way the mother treated her daughters in the book might be inappropriate for this age. I had my two highest reading groups read it at the end of the year. They loved it, many of them asked about the other two books in the series and are planning on getting them from the public library to read over the summer. Yay.
alill –
I loved the young girls in the book. Delphine was so smart, mature, and courageous. Her sisters were very different personalities and I liked them. I also enjoyed the narration by Delphine. The author did an excellent job revealing the thoughts and attitudes of the children which was utterly charming. Finally, the book also provides a historical perspective of the Black Panthers that most people don’t know. The federal free breakfast program in the nation’s schools was based on the Black Panther’s breakfast program.
C.Miller –
This book was an amazing read, for any age. The characters’ development felt so real. It leaves you wanting to know more about what happens when they return home.
claire –
Daughter loves it
Darly Abbott –
It’s a good read. Brand new book with that new book smell 😄
Faith Newkirk –
This book is phenomenally written and is great historical fiction. It’s a great read for having important dialogue
Amazon Customer –
I bought the first book in the series for my two pre-teen grand-girls, for their birthdays or Christmas with the intent to give the other two books in the series on the opposite holiday.I will be checking up with them after the first book to chart how they like the book. I look forward to reading the books myself so they can dialogue with me and also with one another.
OpheliasOwn –
Every student who makes it to middle school has heard of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., but how many know about Malcolm X or the Black Panthers? An underrepresented piece of this important history comes alive in this tale of sisterhood, motherhood, and a bigger need to be heard and treated with equality. In Rita Williams-Garcia’s beautifully written story, One Crazy Summer comes alive with the way the world existed in Oakland in 1968.Delphine, Vonetta, and Fern are packed up and ready to be shipped across the country to spend the summer with their mother Cecile who they haven’t seen in years. Once Fern was born, Cecile left them to be cared for by their father and grandmother in Brooklyn and never looked back. While Big Ma questions Papa’s judgment for sending them across the country to a woman who doesn’t want them, the girls are full of nerves and excitement. As the oldest, Delphine is expected to make sure her sisters behave and don’t embarrass Big Ma and Papa by being the “black girls everyone expects them to be”. The color of their skin means they have to be better behaved than any white girl would have to be.When they arrive in California, it is clear Cecile didn’t want them to come. She sends them by themselves to get Chinese food for dinner every night and to the Center to get free breakfast every morning. She won’t even let them into her kitchen to get a proper glass of water. And she doesn’t hold back from reminding them that she didn’t want them there in the first place. When there is a knock on the door, she shoos them into the back room and tells them to stay back there and stay quiet. But Delphine can’t help but peak and she sees men in black clothes with large afros: Black Panthers. She had seen some Panthers in Brooklyn, but they weren’t like the men she sees now, with her mother. As the days continue on and Delphine continues to take care of her sisters while her mother ignores them, she starts to learn more and more about who she is as a young black woman. The Center is full of Panther information and the summer classes revolve around learning not to trust The Man. While others are content to fight in any way they can, Delphine can’t help but remember her one priority: keeping her sister safe. And if the Man shot an unarmed black boy in his underwear just because he was a Panther, they wouldn’t think twice about three little girls who their own mother doesn’t even want.This story was so rich with amazing historical facts and personal, real family emotions that I can barely wrap my head around it all! First and foremost is the emotional family dynamic. Williams-Garcia must have younger sisters because this incredibly realistic portrayal of three sisters is so perfect it made me laugh and cringe thinking about my own childhood with my sister. Everything from the way they parrot their older sister, to their precocious goofiness, to their enthusiasm about everything Delphine doesn’t want them to do, all of it is so skillfully written you would think you were there with your own sisters!Then you have Cecile. At first I was shocked their father would just ship them out to her, but I realized by the end that he cared about her and trusted her with his kids. Cecile was such a dynamic yet subtle character that you really had to read between the lines to fully appreciate the character Williams-Garcia created. At first it appeared she was working for the Black Panthers, and then it felt like she was somehow forced into it. Then it seemed she didn’t believe everything they stood for and then she lectured her daughter about being her own woman and not adopting the housewife subservience her gender has been forced into. It was a little confusing at times, but it made Cecile more human, more real. But more importantly, this story gave life to the Women of this movement, the women caught in between a war of men. From Big Ma back home, a poor but strong southern woman, to the ladies at the Center to Cecile, this was a wonderful book to allow your young readers to see a side of the story never talked about: how it affected the women these men belonged to. I loved this angle on the story, especially since we never hear about the women of the Black Panther movement.And finally, this story is a much needed addition to the world of our cultural and racial history in this country. Everyone likes to talk about MLK, but what about the other side of the movement? They are an important part of our legacy, but it isn’t taught as openly in schools, so I am glad to see a book that is appropriate for middle readers that also opens their eyes to a part of their cultural they most likely haven’t been exposed to yet. There isn’t a deep understanding of the Panthers, but enough to pique their interest. This might be a story best taught in a class or read with a parent in order to help them fully understand the nature of the revolution. I am really glad there is a book like this out there. It is a great addition to the shelves of our libraries and our classrooms.