Horn Book
(Sat Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2009)
Woodrow befriends his new next-door neighbor Senator Crawford, hoping to find a father figure. The boy quickly learns that friendship comes with a price--membership in the Ku Klux Klan. The story's resolution is too abrupt, but the hold the Klan had on a small 1920s Oklahoma town is described in a terrifying and historically accurate narrative.
Kirkus Reviews
In 1928, after his father died in a car crash, 13-year-old Woodrow Harper and his mother move from Washington, D.C. to Lawton, Okla., where Woodrow is befriended by Senator Crawford, his next-door neighbor. The senator lost his son in World War I, so Woodrow becomes a surrogate son while Crawford becomes the father Woodrow has lost. However, when Woodrow realizes that his new friend is involved with the Ku Klux Klan, he is torn: The Klan offers a way for a newcomer to belong and meet the "right people," but at a price. Woodrow's first-person narration is immediate and appropriately naive, the plot compelling enough to keep readers going to see if Woodrow can extricate himself from the Klan's clutches. While not a subtle novel by any means, the theme of individual conscience versus mob mentality plays out well, though characterization and setting are not as developed as they might be. Still, a solid work for the intended audience. (Historical fiction. 9-13)
School Library Journal
(Tue Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2009)
Gr 7-10 A thought-provoking novel about racism in rural Oklahoma. It's 1928, and Woodrow and his recently widowed mother relocate from Washington, DC, to Lawton, his father's hometown. The 13-year-old misses his father but hopes that his neighbor, Senator Crawford, who had lost his own son, will fill that void. Crawford takes Woodrow under his wing and introduces him to "the right kind of people." However, before long, the town's ugly secrets are revealed. Woodrow discovers that the senator is the imperial wizard of the local Ku Klux Klan and witnesses Crawford whipping a "Negro man" during a nighttime meeting. Afterward, the senator pressures Woodrow to commit to this way of life, and the boy struggles between wanting the acceptance and love of this father figure and following his own moral compass. Tensions build to a fever pitch, positioning Woodrow to make complicated decisions and perform hurtful actions that have consequences beyond his understanding. Eventually, he learns that knowing the "right people" and doing the right thing are not necessarily the same. Stanley's highly charged, emotional story tells of a very dark period in this country's history and can perhaps be incorporated into American History classes so that students can better understand racism and its ugly by-products. Sharon Morrison, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, Durant, OK