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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reminiscent of Watsons Go to Birmingham, December 7, 2002
By 
Julia S Longnecker (Riverdale, GA United States) - See all my reviews
The characters are so real and the story so well-written that I felt like I was walking right along with them. It's a wonderful book for children to get the feel of what it was like during the Civil Rights movement. I'm a middle school teacher, and I highly recommend this book for grades 4-8.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fiction And Fun, March 29, 2004
By 
Fola Richardson (Atlanta, Georgia) - See all my reviews
Do you know what many white people were doing to Blacks during segregation? Well, this book "Walking to the Bus-Rider Blues" by Harriet Gillem Robinet will answer your questions. It's fiction, but it is based on historical records which tell how African Americans were treated during segregation. During the time of the main character Alfa's life, boycotting buses in Montgomery, Alabama was a hard struggle for African Americans. Many of them had to walk for miles in hot weather, listening to whites telling them to stop causing trouble.
In the book, Alfa is a strong black young man who tries to clear his name after being accused of stealing a lot of money. He also has to deal with racism and taking care of his elderly grandmother and his older sister.
The writer's style is very descriptive. You can imagine in your mind what everything looks like just by her words. One thing I really liked about this book is that it tells you about history. At the same time, there is an exciting fiction story to read.
"Walking to the Bus-Rider Blues" will be a great book for people who likes books that have enormous suspense in it and also people who love history. Why not give this book a try?
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Powerful and moving, May 1, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Walking To The Bus Rider Blues (Hardcover)
Montgomery, Alabama, 1956. The historic, courageous, terrifying bus boycott had started when Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white person. Just what this meant to most people becomes very clear in this edgy, uncomfortable book. Alfa, aged 12, and his sister, age 15, live in dire poverty with their great-grandmother Merryfield. Alfa's mother left them there years before, and has never communicated with them since. Their great-grandmother is very elderly, some say maybe even ninety years old, and beginning to be forgetful. She makes about $40 a month; Alfa makes another $20 a month working hard in a grocery store. Rent is $50 a month, but part of the rent money is regularly disappearing. Alfa determines to solve the mystery, but stay within the system that keeps African-Americans perpetually in fear and victims of anyone who wants to get them in trouble.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Students can't put it down, April 9, 2009
By 
I have used this as a novel unit the past 3 years with my fifth grade students. They love it and come to school in the morning admitting that they read ahead because they couldn't put it down. This historical fiction book (at least for the under-20 crowd) is also a mystery -- actually there are two mysteries to solve. The dialect and dialogue are very well crafted and the characters are well developed. The solutions to the mysteries aren't obvious so it's suspenseful right up to the end. It's now out of print so get it while you can!
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4.0 out of 5 stars A little told story, October 25, 2005
The book tells the story of the Montgomery bus boycott through the eyes of a young teen. The author did a wonderful job of putting the reader into that time and place. The pride, strength and resolve of a community that is determined to change their world is evident on every page.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Walking to the Bus-Rider Blues Review By: Mr. X, April 3, 2005
A Kid's Review
How would you like to be segregated?  What if you had to work to support your family even as a 12 year-old kid? Well, this are all problems the main character, Alfa, has to face in this story. I think everyone should read this book to learn how African Americans were treated during the Civil Rights movement. This book kept me hooked until the very end, and it was also one of the few books at ever touched me emotionally. I definitely encourage everyone to read it!
This book was definitely worth reading because of all of the pleasing features it had. This book was well written in a way people can understand and feel the mood of the author as Alfa confronts the "System" of black segregation during the bus boycott in Alabama. For example, when his family is blamed for stealing, the author enrages Alfa into taking a stand and "talking the talk and walking the walk" as Martin Luther King Jr.'s preaches taught him. This is an eye-opening book because it made me realize how harsh the lives of African Americans were back then; it was like a lesson. What I loved about the book was that the author was able to mix mystery with historical-fiction in the story.
This book was clearly one of the best books I have read thanks to all of it's great qualities.
Walking to the Bus-Rider Blues had action, mystery, history, and, most important of all, emotion from the author. It's building suspense kept me biting my nails as I read the book. It was fun learning about the life-styles of African Americans, but depressing to see them suffer through the hard times. This book helped me understand the African-American culture in a better way. Everyone should read this book to feel the same way about the book as I do. Just go ahead and have a fun time reading it!
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5.0 out of 5 stars this book kept me on the edge of my seat!, March 10, 2004
A Kid's Review
Walking to the Bus-Rider-Blues

Alfa is a small town boy living in Alabama. He lives his life day in and day out worrying about the rent money. His family make ends meet pretty well by combining their money to make the rent. One day Alfa was beat-up while walking home from work. The white boys steal his half of the rent money! Luckily Mama Meryingfield can cover his half this time. But what if it happens again? Alfa is a very good worker he makes sure all the vegetables are stacked right and makes sure the milk is fresh. He talks to his boss about the white boys. How he is going to get beat up on every pay-day. Alfas boss tells him that he needs to learn about the boys, scare them a little that will make them go away. So as Alfa is on his delivery run the white neighbor hood is yelling all kinds of racial slurs at him. He just keeps singing his bus-rider-blues. Me, personally I think the book was great. It kept me on the edge of my seat the whole way threw the beatings and the payback and the mystery.

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Walking to the Bus-Rider Blues, December 9, 2000
This review is from: Walking To The Bus Rider Blues (Hardcover)
A mystery and historical fiction inspired by the Montgomery, Alabama Bus Boycott (Rosa Parks, 1956), tells a story about how the black citizenry were affected by the bus boycott. Alfa, a 12 year old black boy living with his grandmother and sister, Zinnia, helps support them with his after school job. They are accused of stealing money from one of their cleaning jobs for "whites", and in addition, someone is stealing their rent money. The boy and his sister use the scientific method and mystery solving skills (gained from reading mystery novels) to solve the crime. The reader sees Dr. Martin Luther King's and Christian precepts for non-violence put into action by Alfa, as he successfully confronts his white tormentors. Conveys the values and flavor of the times. Includes bibliographic references.
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Walking To The Bus Rider Blues
Walking To The Bus Rider Blues by Harriette Robinet (Hardcover - May 1, 2000)
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