From School Library Journal
Grade 4-6–When Pa learns that Master plans to sell five slaves, including his children, he and Mama flee into the night with Sally and Abraham. Following Joshuas star, named by Sally for the slave who alerted them to Masters plan, the family trades cotton picking for alligators, and runs from slave hunters and heartbreak before arriving in Seminole land. Woods precedes each chapter with poignant rhyming verse, presumably the songs that Sally has dreamed up to help her keep her mind. Based on historical accounts, this novel provides readers with an alternative view of the realities of slavery–an escape to the South rather than North. Woods deftly teases out both the light and the dark moments of the experience, as seen in Sallys realization that she will never be entirely free from fear whether she is known by the last name Henderson or Little Song. This accessible tale will prove a rich resource for study and discussion.
–Jill Heritage Maza, Conn Elementary, Raleigh, NC Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Gr. 4-7. From the age of four, Sally has worked as a slave in the cotton fields on a Georgia plantation. She is 11 in 1801 when her parents hear that she and her older brother are to be sold. The family runs away and finds shelter with the Seminole Indians in Florida. Mama dies on the journey. Along with their grief is the terrifying threat from the vicious slave hunters, but the runaways ultimately find kindness and community. True to the child's voice, the terse, first-person narrative, with a simple lyrical poem at the start of each chapter, brings close the backbreaking labor and cruelty of plantation life, then the flight to freedom, the sadness, and the hope. The action is fast, the journey fraught with danger; the details bring it home. Remembering her own childhood, Sally finds it difficult to believe that the Seminole children are free to play all day ("Ain't them little ones got no work to do?"). Some characters are idealized, but the searing historical fiction shows that there can be no sunny ending; while slavery exists in America, the family will never truly be free. Woods is the author of the Coretta Scott King Honor Book
The Red Rose Box (2002).
Hazel RochmanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.