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Nothing Special

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Lively illustrations depict the close bond between grandfather and grandson during a child's summer visit to the South.

Selected as a Top Ten Children's Book of 2022 the New York Public Library; a selection of Social Justice Books (a Teach for Change project); Winner of the 2023 Paterson Prize Books for Young People; selected by the Association for Library Service to Children to their 2023 Summer Reading List; Next Generation Indie Book Award Finalist!

A buddy story that spans generations, and a love letter to the Black family connections that survive the Great Migration.

Six-year-old Jax can't wait to leave Detroit and spend a week with his grandparents in coastal Virginia, where he's sure he'll be spoiled with the kinds of special things he enjoys at home: toys, movies, and hamburgers. As he dreams of the adventures he'll have, his PopPop has other ideas. He fills their days with timeless summer fun—crabbing, shucking corn, and counting fireflies.

Illustrated entirely of repurposed textiles, Nothing Special celebrates the enduring connection between the generations who stayed in the South and the millions of emigrants for whom it will always be home. Between 1910 and 1970, more than six million African Americans left the Jim Crow South, but they never forgot the culture, the land, and the family they left behind. In the decades since, it has become a summer ritual for many black families to reverse the journey and return South for a visit to their homeplaces.

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      Starred review from October 15, 2022
      Preschool-Grade 3 *Starred Review* After a long drive from Detroit to his grandparents' home in Virginia, Jax is excited, wondering where PopPop and Nana will take him the next day: the zoo? a mall? a movie? Instead, PopPop shows Jax the things he himself enjoyed doing as a boy. What things? Well, as PopPop says, "Nothing special." At the beach, they sit on a pier, dangle pieces of chicken on a string into the water, and catch crabs in their net. Later, they make a kite from sticks and old newspapers and fly it. Even shucking the corn for Nana is fun. After a dinner of crabs and corn, they sit outdoors together, watching fireflies and spotting a shooting star. What does Jax wish for? "Nothing special." A good storyteller, Cooper doesn't hammer home a lesson here but lets the characters speak for themselves, quietly and effectively. In an appended note, she refers to her story as "an homage" to the southbound summer journeys that many Black families in northern states have made annually since the Great Migration. Sloane's eye-catching illustrations--three-dimensional characters and settings made from repurposed fabrics and found objects--have a distinctive handmade look that suits the story well. An evocative picture book celebrating simple pleasures and family ties.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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