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Overview
Abe and Willie live across the alley from each other. Willie is black and Abe is Jewish, and during the day, they don't talk. But at night they open their windows and are best friends. Willie shows Abe how to throw a real big-league slider, and Abe gives Willie his violin to try out. Then one night, Abe's grandfather catches them—will Abe and Willie have the courage to cross the alley and reveal their friendship during the day?
Like the bestselling The Other Side, E. B. Lewis's striking, atmospheric watercolors bring to life a moving story of baseball and music, and how two young people try to bridge the divide of prejudice.
Synopsis
Abe and Willie live across the alley from each other. Willie is black and Abe is Jewish, and during the day, they don't talk. But at night they open their windows and are best friends. Willie shows Abe how to throw a real big-league slider, and Abe gives Willie his violin to try out. Then one night, Abe's grandfather catches them--will Abe and Willie have the courage to cross the alley and reveal their friendship during the day?
Like the bestselling The Other Side, E. B. Lewis's striking, atmospheric watercolors bring to life a moving story of baseball and music, and how two young people try to bridge the divide of prejudice.
About the Author: Richard Michelson owns the R. Michelson Gallery in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he also lives.
E. B. Lewis recently won a Caldecott honor for Coming on Home Soon. He lives in Folsom, New Jersey.
Children's Literature
Two young boys, next-door neighbors in a time when African Americans played baseball only in the Negro Leagues, don't play together during the day. Prejudice still separates Jewish Abe from African American Willie. But during one summer the boys, who have become best friends at night, begin to play ball from their windows across the alley. They have also found that slavery of a sort is in both their family histories. Abe's Grandpa thinks baseball is a waste of time for Jewish boys, and insists that he practice his violin. But Abe gives Willie a chance at his violin, and Willie becomes "a natural." Abe is scheduled to play at a temple recital. But one night his grandfather discovers Willie playing, and takes him to play instead. Meanwhile, Willie's grandfather gives Abe a chance to practice his pitching at a sand lot game, and the stereotypes are broken. Lewis's watercolor jacket of the boys playing catch between their windows is a visual metaphor for their more complex exchanges of actions and emotions. The full-page sequences of naturalistic scenes tell the visual story effectively, describing the significant details only in order to focus on the personalities of the characters. The up-beat tale is a hopeful vision.