Perma-Bound Edition ©2005 | -- |
Paperback ©2005 | -- |
Best friends. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Prejudices. Fiction.
African Americans. Fiction.
Race relations. Fiction.
Self-confidence. Fiction.
Could a chicken become a warrior and fight oppression? Small for his age, Gabriel, 10, is scared of the bullies in his all-white trailer park in small-town Georgia in 1976. His tough best friend, Frita, the only black kid in his class, helps him to overcome his fear, and he's able to stand with her when the Klan threatens. As in Going's Printz Honor Book Fat Kid Rules the World (2003), which was written for an older audience, the characters here are funny and brave and drawn with candor and immediacy. At first Frita is a bit too perfect, too strong and wise, and Going's message sometimes overwhelms the story, as when Frita makes Gabe list his fears, which he overcomes one by one. But there is lots of farce and fun, too--until the quietly building tension peaks with the terror of racist confrontation and the courage of people, adults and kids, who stand up together.
Horn Book (Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2005)Gabriel King is afraid of spiders, bullies, and, most of all, advancing to the fifth grade. When his best friend, African-American Frita, decides that their summer project will be liberating Gabe from his fears, Gabe's personal journey collides with the racial tension that lies under the surface of their 1970s Georgia town. Gabe's wry commentary on his progress is comically self-aware.
Kirkus ReviewsIt's the summer of 1976 in a small town in Georgia. Gabriel King has just finished fourth grade and is scared about fifth. In fact, he's scared of many things: spiders, alligators, falling into the toilet, killer robots, corpses, swinging off the rope swing, his neighbor Mr. Evans and bullies at school. His best friend Frita is out to liberate Gabriel from his fears. She has him make a list of them and work through them one at a time. However, Frita, who is African-American, has fears of her own and the story becomes a study of standing up to fears and to bullies, from the schoolyard to the Ku Klux Klan. Strong voice, lively dialogue, humor and important themes make this a winner. Readers will enjoy following the sometimes-tempestuous friendship of Gabriel and Frita, and they'll be completely absorbed in watching the friends and their community come together to stand up against the evil within. (appendix) (Fiction. 10+)
School Library JournalGr 4-7-In a small town in Georgia in 1976, Gabe King, who is white, and his friend Frita Wilson, who is African American, take on a special project. Gabe is determined not to go to fifth grade in the fall, in the "big kids" wing of the school where he will be one of the smallest students and at the mercy of bullies Duke Evans and Frankie Carmen. Frita, however, has determined to use the summer to liberate her friend from his fears and make sure he moves up with her. Gabe's narrative voice is open, direct, sometimes comic, and maybe a little hysterical: he has many fears, including Frita's teenage, body-building brother, Terrance. However, he agrees to Frita's plan, which includes liberating herself from her much shorter list. Going deftly balances the ugly face of racism with the more powerful forces of understanding, friendship, and family, which run broadly through the novel. Both Gabe and Frita come from loving homes that fully support the vision of brotherhood and equality of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and soon-to-be President Carter, and are committed to making that vision a reality.-Coop Renner, Hillside Elementary, El Paso, TX Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
ALA Booklist (Sun May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2005)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book (Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2005)
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal
Under the Picnic Table
My best friend, Frita Wilson, once told me that some people were born chicken.
"Ain't nothing gonna make them brave," she'd said. "But others, they just need a little liberatin', that's all." Least that's how Frita told it.
If you'd asked me before the summer of 1976, I would have told you I was one of the chicken ones. If you could count on anything, it was that I, Gabriel Allen King, didn't do anything scary. I didn't climb out too far on the branches of the pecan trees or ride my bike on the same dirt road the truckers used. I didn't pick up ugly-looking bugs that might have pinchers or walk too close to the cotton fields if anyone even hinted that the cows might be loose. Most of all, I didn't intend on going to the fifth grade, ever.But things don't always work out the way you plan, and what I didn't count on was Frita. I didn't expect she'd decide I was one of the ones needed liberatin', or that the best way to do it would be to overcome all our fears. I didn't expect a lot of things, and I guess if I'm going to tell you about them, I best start at the beginning.
It was the morning of our fourth-grade Moving-Up Day, and me and Frita were under the picnic table beside the elementary school. That's where we used to hide out during recess so nobody could find us. Only today wasn't a school day. It was a graduation day.We could hear all the noise coming from the school yard just around the corner. Hollowell Elementary ain't that big, but the yard was packed with a stage, rows of folding chairs, extra-tall bleachers we used for special occasions, and lots of folks who were crowding in. But all that commotion was a distant buzz because me and Frita were lying on our backs in the shade, listing all the things that made the day great."Number one," Frita said, "today is a momentous occasion."Frita liked to use big words like that. Most of the time I could figure them out by how she was talking, but other times I just pretended to know. I said, "Mmm-hmm. Mooo-men-tus.""We're fourth-grade graduates," Frita said. "That's pretty great.""Yup," I agreed, "because now we've got no more school for the whole summer."Frita pretended to write no school on the bottom of the picnic table. Then she took a big bite of a chocolate sprinkly cookie she'd gotten from the party table. The cookie crumbled all over her chin, but you could hardly notice. Frita's got dark chocolate skin, so the cookie crumbs blended right in."Starting today," Frita said with her mouth full, "we'll be upperclassmen. No more East Wing with the babies. We'll be West Wing fifth-graders."
Frita pretended to write west wing on the bottom of the picnic table, but I made an imaginary line through it.
"Now, why'd you go and cross that off?" Frita asked, pretending to write it back on again. Then she gave me that look she saved for when she was trying to be all innocent. Frita knew dang well that moving to the West Wing wasn't on my list of great things.
"You're going to love it," she told me. "You'll see. We'll have our own playing field and we won't have to eat in the cafeteria with the kindergarteners. We'll have outside gym every day--"
"Yeah," I said. "Outside gym with the sixth-graders. Cafeteria time with the sixth-graders and recess with the sixth-graders."Sixth-graders meant Duke Evans and Frankie Carmen. I'd had a whole year free from torment since they'd moved to the West Wing ahead of us, but one year was definitely not enough.
"All the teachers in the West Wing are super mean," I added, settling myself into being stubborn. "Everybody says it, so you know it's true. And I'll be the shortest kid there."
"I won't let anyone get you," Frita told me, real solemn. "Besides, fifth grade is a whole summer away. Maybe you'll grow taller by then."I figured there was as much chance of me growing an entire foot over the summer as there was of snow in Georgia in June.
"Maybe," I said.
Frita grinned. "It'll be great," she said. "You'll see." Then she sat up. "Hey, I thought up numbers three and four for our list of great things. Graduation certificates and class pictures. Where do you think I should hang my picture? Above my bed, next to the mirror, or over the dresser?"Frita'd been thinking about this ever since she got a picture frame with smiley faces on it for her birthday.
"You can hang yours up too, and then we'll match," she told me.
"Except I don't have a picture frame, and there's no way Momma can buy me one after she already bought me this outfit for Moving-Up Day. Sure would've rather had the picture frame."Frita shrugged. "Then we'll just have to make you one. That'll be number five--starting today, we'll do projects all summer."
"And go swimming in the catfish pond . . ."
"And sleep in your tent . . ."
"And race our bikes . . ."Frita looked at me.
"Gabe," she said, "I'm glad we're friends. Good thing Daddy made me do the integrating."Integrating was one word I knew the meaning of. Frita'd said it lots of times and I used to think it meant visiting. Turns out it really means to make something whole again. Putting the parts back together. That made pretty good sense because before the Wilsons moved here, there was a Frita-sized hole right next to me."Wish we could sit next to each other at the ceremony," I said. "But I'll whistle extra loud when you get your certificate. I'll cheer enough for ten other people and I'll stand up and wave so you can see me from the stage."
"Promise?" Frita asked.
"Promise."Frita stuck out her pinky and linked it with mine. We didn't say nothing, but I reckon Frita was thinking the same thing I was. Sure was perfect down here. I could've stayed there forever, only right then we heard our teacher, Ms. Murray, calling people to line up.
"Tyler Zach, Andrew Womack, Frita Wilson . . ."Frita handed me the last sprinkly cookie--the one with the most sprinkles.
"See you later," she said, ducking out from under the picnic table.
"See ya," I said, then I whistled one of my super-duper whistles so she'd hear just how loud I could be when I wanted. Frita turned back one more time and grinned before taking off in a cloud of dust.I lay back and thought how this was going to be the best summer ever. This was the year of the Bicentennial--the 200th birthday of the United States of America--and our very own governor, Jimmy Carter, was running for president. That meant there'd be parties, parades, and rallies. Not to mention the hugest fireworks we'd ever seen on the Fourth of July. The way I figured it, if me and Frita made a list of all the great things about the summer of 1976, it would be full to overflowing.
At least, that's what I thought.
Excerpted from The Liberation of Gabriel King by K. L. Going
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Gabriel King was a born chicken. Hes afraid of spiders, corpses, loose cows, and just about everything related to the fifth grade. Gabes best friend, Frita Wilson, thinks Gabe needs some liberating from his fears. Frita knows something about being brave shes the only black kid in school in a town with an active Ku Klux Klan. Together Gabe and Frita are going to spend the summer of 1976 facing down the fears on Gabes list. But it turns out that Frita has her own list, and while shes helping Gabe confront his fears, shes avoiding the thing that scares her the most.