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Hurricane Katrina, 2005. Juvenile fiction.
African American families. Louisiana. New Orleans. Juvenile fiction.
Survival. Louisiana. New Orleans. Juvenile fiction.
Hurricane Katrina, 2005. Fiction.
African Americans. Fiction.
Family life. Louisiana. Fiction.
Survival. Fiction.
Lower Ninth Ward (New Orleans, La.). Juvenile fiction.
New Orleans (La.). Juvenile fiction.
New Orleans (La.). Fiction.
Armani Curtis tells the story of the week she turned 10, when Hurricane Katrina came to her birthday party and destroyed her world. Over the course of this accomplished debut, Armani grows up far more than anyone would wish. She watches family members die and disappear, becomes separated from her mother and asthmatic baby brother, and is forced to make huge decisions when she's left caring for her two younger sisters. Some, such as leaving the overcrowded Superdome, are good ones. Others are not, such as when she spends days avoiding the protective services worker who finally gets help for her ill sister and connects her with surviving family members. Armani's voice is convincingly that of a child from the predominantly African American area of the Lower Ninth Ward. Readers will recognize her self-absorbed focus on her upcoming birthday, sympathize with her frequent bouts of despair, and appreciate the internalized voices of adults in her family that keep her going. Full of touching, distressing detail, this is a strong fictionalization of a very real horror.
Horn BookArmani's excitement about her upcoming tenth birthday party is quickly overshadowed by Hurricane Katrina bearing down on her home in New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward. Some storytelling problems notwithstanding, this debut novel doesn't pull any punches, instead offering a vivid and harrowing account of Katrina that will bring the event to life for those too young to remember it.
Kirkus ReviewsAs Armani Curtis' 10th birthday approaches, so does something far more ominous—a threatening storm in the Gulf of Mexico called Katrina. Armani's family, residents of New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward, doesn't have much in the way of material comforts, but they certainly have a strong and happy family, at least until Katrina blows in. During Armani's birthday party, the family is informed that the mayor has ordered an evacuation, but lacking the means to escape New Orleans, they must simply hunker down until the floodwaters force them to the roof. First, Armani's beloved grandmother dies, and then her father and brother are swept away by the floodwaters. When the rest of the Curtis clan makes its way to the Superdome, Mama must seek help for her sick baby boy, leaving Armani to get her two little sisters to a shelter until the family can be reunited. A couple of false notes notwithstanding, Lamana goes for and achieves realism here, carefully establishing the characters and setting before describing in brutal detail, beyond what is typical in youth literature, the devastating effects of Katrina—loss of multiple family members, reports of attacks in the Superdome, bodies drifting in the current and less-than-ideal shelter conditions. An honest, bleak account of a national tragedy sure to inspire discussion and research. (Historical fiction. 8-14)
School Library JournalGr 4-7 Ten-year-old Armani is crushed to learn that her long-anticipated birthday party will be cancelled due to Hurricane Katrina's imminent approach. Her disappointment quickly transforms into terror as the storm hits, separating her from her parents. She must look after her two younger sisters on a journey that takes her first to the Superdome, then to a shelter, and finally back home to the ravaged Lower Ninth Ward. This is a story that will grab avid and reluctant readers alike because of the intensity of its drama. The plot is well constructed, and the cliff-hanger endings of many chapters will ensure rapid page turning. Armani is a fully realized protagonist, and her narrative effectively conveys the novel's mood, offering a sense of foreboding that grows into palpable fear. A well-defined setting, with evocative descriptions of the neighborhood and storm, enhances the story. Lamana handles the gritty details and macabre imagery quite gracefully, and never does the account seem sensationalized. Toward the novel's end, occasional hiccups in flow mar the narrative. The portrayal of some events seems far-fetched and conveniently coincidental. Likewise, the conclusion, though satisfactorily resolved, comes about somewhat awkwardly. However, these flaws are not so grievous as to distract in a meaningful way from the story at hand. Overall, this novel gives readers a realistic and vivid sense of what it may have been like to experience the disaster firsthand. Julie Hanson, Chicago Public Library
Voice of Youth AdvocatesArmani Curtis is looking forward to celebrating her tenth birthday with lots of friends over the weekend, but it is the end of August in 2005 and she lives in New Orleans. Armani's parents and Memaw are watching the progress of Hurricane Katrina but do not hear the call to evacuate until it is too late. Now, the adults and Armani's big brother, Georgie, younger sister, Sealy, and the toddler twins are trapped in the Lower Nines while the storm rages. Once the storm has passed, the family faces a series of frightening challenges, from requiring rescue off the roof of their house to a temporary stop at the Superdome to an eventual return their home. Will the surviving Curtis family be able to regroup as their city rebuilds?Using the perspective of a ten-year-old allows young readers to more easily imagine what it might have been like to experience Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. A few continuity problems, including Armani introducing Sealy to the Boman kids at the shelter when they have been riding the same bus to the same school, and a few too many symbolic references to the same sentimental objects, such as Memaw's compass necklace, are distracting but forgivable. More importantly, this book can be used in the classroom to spark discussion of the local, state, and federal responses during and after Katrina. Students could also investigate the continuing impact of this natural disaster on those living in the poorest sections of the city and future issues of housing, levy safety, and environmental challenges facing the area.Stacey Hayman.
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Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
A gripping story of courage and survival, Upside Down in the Middle of Nowhere celebrates the power of hope and love in the face of the unthinkable.
Armani Curtis can think about only one thing: her tenth birthday. She's having a party, her mama is making a big cake, and she has a good feeling about a certain wrapped box. Turning ten years old is a big deal to Armani. It means she's older, wiser, more responsible. But when Hurricane Katrina hits the Lower Nines of New Orleans and tears her world apart, Armani realizes that being ten means being brave, watching loved ones die, and mustering all her strength to help her family weather the storm.