Acts of courage come in all shapes and sizes.In the tumultuous New Orleans of 1960, thirteen-year-old Louise Collins finds her world turned upside down when a stranger from the North arrives at her mother's boarding-house. Louise's mother spends her mornings at the local elementary school with a group of women known as the Cheerleaders, who harass the school's first black student, six-year-old Ruby Bridges, as she enters the building. One day a Chevy Bel Air with a New York license plate pulls up, and out steps Morgan Miller, a man whose mysterious past is eclipsed by his intellect and open-mannerqualities that enchant mother and daughter alike. For the first time, Louise feels as if someone cares what she thinks, even if she doesn't know what she believes. But when the reason for Morgan's visit is called into question, everything Louise thinks she knows about her mother, her world, and herself will change.

Share this "harrowing and painfully honest historical novel" * at home or in the classroom. Through this "extraordinary" debut effort from the Sydney Taylor Award winner Robert Sharenow, readers will explore how "ingrained prejudices-whether acted upon or not-help destroy lives and shatter a community." **

In 1960 New Orleans, thirteen-year-old Louise is pulled out of class by her mother to protest court-ordered integration of her school.Louise's mother is one of the jeering "Cheerleaders." Each morning the Cheerleaders gather at the school toharass the school's first black student, six-year-old Ruby Bridges, as she enters the building.

After a mysterious man from New York named Morgan arrives in town and takes up residence in the family's crumbling boarding house, Louise's acceptance of "the way things are" begins to crumble.

Through conversations with Morgan and firsthand observations, Louise begins to wonder about the morality of the Cheerleaders' activities-andeverything Louise thinks she knows about her mother, her world, and herself will change.

In a starred review, Booklist commented: "Readers will be held fast by the history told from the inside as adult Louise remembers the vicious role of ordinary people."

*School Library Journal(starred review) ; **Chicago Tribune



Autorentext

Robert Sharenow is an award-winning writer and television producer. He is the author of the middle-grade novel The Girl in the Torch, as well as the teen novels My Mother the Cheerleader and The Berlin Boxing Club. Since its publication in 2012, The Berlin Boxing Club has been named a Sydney Taylor Book Award winner and an Amelia Walden Award finalist, and has received multiple received multiple starred reviews, as well as a spot on ALA's Best Books for Young Adults list. The novel has been published in several countries and languages and is perennially taught in high school curriculums in the United States and around the world. Sharenow lives in New York with his wife and two daughters.



Klappentext

Share this "harrowing and painfully honest historical novel"* at home or in the classroom. Through this "extraordinary" debut effort from the Sydney Taylor Award winner Robert Sharenow, readers will explore how "ingrained prejudices—whether acted upon or not—help destroy lives and shatter a community."**

In 1960 New Orleans, thirteen-year-old Louise is pulled out of class by her mother to protest court-ordered integration of her school. Louise's mother is one of the jeering "Cheerleaders.” Each morning the Cheerleaders gather at the school to harass the school's first black student, six-year-old Ruby Bridges, as she enters the building.

After a mysterious man from New York named Morgan arrives in town and takes up residence in the family's crumbling boarding house, Louise's acceptance of "the way things are" begins to crumble.

Through conversations with Morgan and firsthand observations, Louise begins to wonder about the morality of the Cheerleaders' activities—and everything Louise thinks she knows about her mother, her world, and herself will change.

In a starred review, Booklist commented: "Readers will be held fast by the history told from the inside as adult Louise remembers the vicious role of ordinary people."

*School Library Journal (starred review) ; **Chicago Tribune

Titel
My Mother the Cheerleader
Untertitel
A Novel
EAN
9780061851308
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
19.03.2024
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Anzahl Seiten
320
Features
Unterstützte Lesegerätegruppen: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet