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Children's Fiction, People & Places
Guardian by Julius Lester β€” book cover

Guardian

by Julius Lester
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Synopsis

Silence burns. . . .

Nothing I do eases the pain, not even putting everything on paper. I knew the truth that night, just as my father did. I kept quiet.

Award-winning author Julius Lester delivers a haunting and poignant novel about the death of an innocent man and the pain of the boy who could have saved him.

Publishers Weekly

A sense of foreboding permeates the first half of this powerful novel, which opens with an allusion to a lynching: in the Deep South, says an unidentified narrator, the oldest trees "do not speak because they are ashamed." Lester (Pharaoh's Daughter) begins the action proper in the summer of 1946, homing in on Ansel Anderson, being trained to take over his father's business at the age of 14-old enough, his father, Bert, thinks, "to understand what it meant to be white" and for shop assistant Willie, whom Ansel treats like a brother, "to understand what it meant to be a nigger." After Willie's father is falsely accused of raping and murdering the preacher's daughter-by the man demonstrably guilty-the townsmen clamor for a hanging. Ansel demands that Bert back up Willie's testimony; Bert silences him and makes him help get the rope from the family store, then watch the lynching. Focusing on the repercussions of white guilt, the author's understated, haunting prose is as compelling as it is dark; if the characterizations tend toward the extreme, the story nonetheless leaves a deep impression. Ages 14-up. (Nov.)

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About the Author, Julius Lester

Julius Lester is the author of the Newbery Honor Book To Be a Slave, the Caldecott Honor Book John Henry, the National Book Award finalist The Long Journey Home: Stories from Black History, and the Coretta Scott King Award winner Day of Tears. He is also a National Book Critics Circle nominee and a recipient of the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award. His most recent picture book, Let's Talk About Race, was named to the New York Public Library's "One Hundred Titles for Reading and Sharing." In addition to his critically acclaimed writing career, Mr. Lester has distinguished himself as a civil rights activist, musician, photographer, radio talk-show host, and professor. For thirty-two years he taught at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He lives in western Massachusetts.

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Book Details

Published
October 1, 2008
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Format
Library Binding
ISBN
9780061558917

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