Overview
In the latest book by award winning poet Mel Glenn, a riveting mystery unfolds through a series of poems. When students from big-city Tower High School spend a weekend in rural Hudson Landing with the students of the local high school, an African-American boy from the city is accused of murdering a local white girl. Young adults will eagerly read the poems to try to piece together clues and discover the killer's identity.The author weaves a compelling story as he explores racial prejudice and city/country stereotypes while creating insightful portraits of teenagers.
2000 Quick Picks for Young Adults (Recomm. Books for Reluctant Young Readers)
A series of poems reflect the thoughts of various people--town residents young and old, teachers, and some students visiting from the city--caught up in the events surrounding the murder of a beautiful high school student who had recently moved to the small lake-side community of Hudson Landing.
Editorials
Cheryl Karp Ward
Not all of the council members in the small town of Hudson Landing agree to host a group of city teens for a weekend. Some fear that the streetwise urban youth will bring drugs and crime into their fair hamlet, a Peyton Place of secrets, while some hope the weekend will promote a better understanding of diversity. But when seventeen-year-old Kristen Clarke, the beautiful, popular β and pregnant β white daughter of a successful supermarket manager, is found strangled and floating on Hudson Lake, all fingers point to visiting African American Kwame Richards. Although Kwame swears that he is innocent, it seems that being black often means being guilty until prove innocent. Only a photograph of the true killer frees him.This latest mystery in free verse poetry by Glenn provides an honest glimpse into the feelings, frustrations, and fears of adults and teens as they attempt to deal with their lives. Alcoholism, teenage sexuality, and pregnancy are ever-present issues affecting both adults and teens in Hudson Landing. The town doctor secretly arranges adoptions as a solution. Numerous prejudices are also revealed and demonstrate the ridiculousness of stereotyping. City kids think country kids marry their sisters, chase pigs, and wear no shoes. Country kids think city kids beat up their sisters, run from the βpigs,β and wear combat boots. Glenn's subtlety shows that color has no barrier when one feels disappointment or abandonment or watches dreams drift away. As with other books by Glenn, this one will appeal to readers interested in this particular format, especially our reluctant young adult audience.