Monday, May 4, 2015

Module 5: Goin' Someplace Special

Book Summary:  'Tricia Ann is excited she gets to go someplace special by herself and gets dressed up.  She leaves the house full of excitement but on her journey she is challenged with Jim Crow laws that separate white people from black people.  She is not allowed to sit on the bench that is for white's only and she has to sit at the back of the bus.  It isn't until the end of the book that the reader finds out where she is going- the public library.  The sign above the library says:  Public Library:  All are Welcome.  The library is 'Tricia Ann's someplace special.

APA Reference:  McKissack, Patricia.  (2008).  Goin' someplace special.  New York, NY:  Aladdin Books.

Impressions:  I couldn't help but fall in love with this book!  The pictures by Jerry Pinkney suck you in with amazing watercolors and then you notice how great a character 'Tricia Ann is.  I love how quickly she rebounds after seeing something like the 'white's only' bench.  Her resiliency through the Jim Crow Laws are inspiring.  When times get tough she is reminded of words of wisdom from loved ones and that helps her push her way onward to someplace special.  By the end I was dying to know where her someplace special was and I was delighted to see it was the library and I loved how the author ended by simply stating the sign.

Professional Review:  McKissack draws from her childhood in Nashville for this instructive picture book. "I don't know if I'm ready to turn you loose in the world," Mama Frances tells her granddaughter when she asks if she can go by herself to "Someplace Special" (the destination remains unidentified until the end of the story). 'Tricia Ann does obtain permission, and begins a bittersweet journey downtown, her pride battered by the indignities of Jim Crow laws. She's ejected from a hotel lobby and snubbed as she walks by a movie theater ("Colored people can't come in the front door," she hears a girl explaining to her brother. "They got to go 'round back and sit up in the Buzzard's Roost"). She almost gives up, but, buoyed by the encouragement of adult acquaintances ("Carry yo'self proud," one of her grandmother's friends tells her from the Colored section on the bus), she finally arrives at Someplace Special a place Mama Frances calls "a doorway to freedom" the public library. An afterword explains McKissack's connection to the tale, and by putting such a personal face on segregation she makes its injustices painfully real for her audience. Pinkney's (previously paired with McKissack for Mirandy and Brother Wind) luminescent watercolors evoke the '50s, from fashions to finned cars, and he captures every ounce of 'Tricia Ann's eagerness, humiliation and quiet triumph at the end. Ages 4-8.

[Review of Goin' spomeplace special]  Publisher's Weekly.  Retrieved from http://www.amazon.com/Goin-Someplace-Special-Patricia-McKissack/dp/1416927352


Library Uses:  This would be an amazing book to introduce segregation and discuss equality.  I also believe it would be part of a great display for Black History Month.