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Freedom Train by Evelyn Coleman β€” book cover

Freedom Train

by Evelyn Coleman, David Riley
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Synopsis

Twelve-year-old Clyde Thomason's older brother is a guard on the Freedom Train, which is carrying the Bill of Rights and other documents throughout the country in 1948, but Clyde is also learning about rights and freedom as he is saved from a beating by an African American boy, and later returns the favor when men in their Atlanta suburb decide to show the "Nigras" their place.

Publishers Weekly

Set in Atlanta in 1947, Coleman's (Born in Sin) novel looks at charged emotions in the segregated South. Twelve-year-old Clyde lives in the "mill village," where his mother works long hours to support their family. Clyde looks forward to letters from his older brother Joseph, a WWII marine who is a guard on the Freedom Train, which is carrying the Constitution, Declaration of Independence and other significant documents on a nationwide tour. William, an African-American boy who's adept with a slingshot, rescues Clyde from a pummeling by the class bully; initially conflicted about befriending William, Clyde realizes that he doesn't want to be someone "who don't want to speak up when something ain't right." Coleman convincingly depicts Clyde's gradual awakening to the racism that surrounds him, as well as the prejudice his impoverished family faces ("People kept staring at us like we was the monkeys at a show," Clyde thinks when his father treats them to tea at a fancy department store restaurant). Despite the book's somewhat sluggish pace, historically minded readers should enjoy this snapshot of America's past. Ages 8-12. (Jan.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

About the Author, Evelyn Coleman

Evelyn Coleman's books include To Be a Drum; White Socks

Only; The Riches of Oseola McCarty, a Smithsonian Notable Book and

a Carter G. Woodson Honor Book; Born in Sin; and Shadows on Society

Hill: An Addy Mystery from the American Girl Mysteries® collection.

Ms. Coleman lives in Atlanta, Georgia, where she received the Atlanta mayor's

fellowship for achievement in children's literature.

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Book Details

Published
January 1, 2008
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780689847165

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