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2006 CSK Winners

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Below are the Coretta Scott King Award Winning Books for 2006.  You'll find the author award and honor books, the illustrator and illustrator honor books as well as the John Steptoe New Talent Author Award winning Books.  Click here for the previous year's winners.

Coretta Scott King Author Awards - 2006
Announced by the American Library Association - January 23, 2006


Coretta Scott King Author Award
 

Day of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue
Click to order via Amazon

by Julius Lester

Reading level: Ages 9-12
Paperback: 192 pages
Publisher: Jump At The Sun; Reprint edition (April 1, 2007)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1423104099
 

In Day of Tears, Julius Lester exposes the devastating reality of the slave experience. The novel begins with the largest slave auction in American history (later known as The Weeping Time). During the auction, members of slave families are sold to different masters and must face the fact that they will never see each other again. Lester takes you into the minds of the slaves and masters as he follows a girl’s journey from slavery to a life of freedom.  adults read my YA books and never know that [they were] marketed for YA. I just write, and the books find the readers they’re supposed to have.

In Day of Tears, Julius Lester exposes the devastating reality of the slave
experience. The novel begins with the largest slave auction in American
history (later known as The Weeping Time). During the auction, members
of slave families are sold to different masters and must face the fact that
they will never see each other again. Lester takes you into the minds of the
slaves and masters as he follows a girl’s journey from slavery to a life of
freedom.
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A c T i v i T i E S
Keep a reading journal
Have the students write down everything they know about the slavery
of black people in America before reading the novel. Have them jot
down reactions, questions, and thoughts. Ask the students to revisit their
initial list after completing the book. Has the book revealed anything
surprising about slavery? Did the students have misconceptions that
have now changed?
research projecTs
Have two or three students work together to research a topic and give a
presentation to the class. The students should create visual aids to
accompany their presentations. Organize all of the projects in the room,
to create a museum. Invite parents, as well as other students in the school,
to visit the museum.
possible topics
• The Weeping Time (create a mural; look at the historical documents)
• Economics of slavery
• The Underground Railroad (write a description of the history; create a
3-D map in papier-mâché outlining the underground railroad and using
craft materials for people, houses, boats, etc.)
•“Jumping the broom” wedding celebrations
• High John and Brer Rabbit (the history of the oral tradition
among black Americans)
• The Civil War (prepare a time line and/or a brief overview)
• The Emancipation Proclamation
• Canadian communities of former slaves
• Runaway-slave laws
• Enslaving Virginia (explore the reactions to a modern-day reenactment
in 1999 of a slave auction in Colonial Williamsburg)
readers’ TheaTer
Ask students to choose different characters and read their sections aloud.
Discuss how the students feel assuming these roles.
WriTing exercise
Imagine yourself as a slave. Write a monologue about your experience and
feelings. Feel free to imagine your own surroundings and circumstances.
How do you get through each day? Do you have hope for freedom and a
better life?
role-playing
Argue different points of view based on the personalities of the characters
presented in the novel. Here are some examples:
Master Butler
Why you feel you have no option but to sell your slaves
Mattie
Why you fear Emma’s attending the auction
emma
Your fears about leaving your family and your hopes for
future generations
Fanny Kemble
Why you left your husband, how you feel about slavery, and how you feel
about your husband’s latest actions
jeremiah henry
How you feel about slavery and what part you can play in helping the
slaves escape to the North
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c O m p R E h E N S i O N c h E c k
D i S c u S S i O N Q u E S T i O N S F O R S m A L L G R O u p S
*
1. Why do you think it was illegal to teach slaves? What impact did this have
 
on Emma’s views on education?
2. How do you feel about Sampson’s character? What did you discover
 
about Sampson’s true feelings toward slavery and about his relationship
 
to his son?
3. Will says, “Master want to pretend like me and Mattie don’t have
 
feelings same as him.” Why do you think the slaves were treated as if they
 
were not capable of the same range of emotions as are whites?
4. How did the attitudes of the older slaves differ from those of the
 
younger slaves?
5. Blacks and whites in this novel use the word “nigger” to refer to black
 
people. How does this usage make you feel? What does it mean? Do you
 
think it is appropriate for people to use that word today?
6. Were you surprised to learn the amount of racism blacks faced in the
 
North? Write about the situation for blacks in the North based on the
 
details provided in the novel. Were blacks equal to whites? How did
 
they support themselves? Why did they have to fear being “caught”
 
again by a white person?
7. Why did Julius Lester choose to write in the first person? How does this
 
format affect the way the characters come across?
8. Julius Lester also places interludes throughout the novel. What is an
 
interlude? How does it affect the way the story is told?
*In addition to these questions, have the students submit topics from their reading
journals for discussion.
1. Describe the relationships between Mattie, Will, and Pierce Butler.
2. Why does Pierce Butler sell his slaves?
3. Why is Mattie worried about Emma’s going to the auction with
 
the Butler girls?
4. Why does Fanny Kemble leave the plantation?
5. How do Jeffrey and Dorcas get separated? What happens when Jeffrey
 
finds Dorcas years later?
6. What does Emma say to Sarah when she leaves to go with her
 
new owner?
7. Describe Sarah’s relationship with her father when he is on his deathbed.
8. Why does Emma refuse to “jump the broom” with Joe in chapter 8?
9. Who is Mr. Henry? How does he help Joe and Emma?
10. How does Sampson feel about slavery? Does Sampson really stand in the
 
way during the escape?
11. Describe Philadelphia as seen through Emma’s eyes.
12. Why does Fanny warn Emma and Joe when she sees them
 
in Philadelphia?
13. How do Sarah and Emma keep in touch?
14. To whom is Emma talking in the last chapter?
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Q. What was the inspiration for this novel?
a.
I know people think writers get “inspired,” but the reality is
sometimes different. The idea for the novel came from Garen Thomas,
my editor at Hyperion. I was unfamiliar with what history calls “The
Weeping Time.” I found the idea intriguing, and did some research to
see what the story possibilities were. The fact that the auction was done
for the benefit of Pierce Butler was further intriguing, as he was married
to Fanny Kemble, a remarkable woman whose name I was familiar
with. I read several biographies of Fanny Kemble, as well as the book
her youngest daughter wrote defending slavery. If there was a moment
of “inspiration” it came when I saw a notice for a photo show in a
magazine. (I am also a photographer.) The photo was a 19th-century
daguerreotype of a 9 to 10-year-old slave girl holding a white girl of
about 2-3 on her lap. I kept that photo on my desk as I wrote the book.
Q. Day of Tears is a mixture of history and fiction. how did you craft
your story around the historical facts?
a.
I’ve written a lot of historical fiction set during slavery. So, the facts of
what life was like during slavery are things I know from past research
and I don’t have to research anew. The key to historical fiction is
making the characters believable and real, and this means integrating
the facts into the narrative so they aren’t even recognizable as facts.
But the other side of historical fiction is ignoring the history to make a
better story. For example, Day of Tears opens on the last day of the slave
auction, and there is the scene in which slaves are taken to the barn
and put into a wagon and taken into town. Historically, all the slaves
were moved to town before the first day of the auction. Dramatically,
however, it was better to have a scene in which the slaves are being
moved.
Q. how did you choose the format for this novel? do you see it as a
future play?
a.
I don’t see this as a play. I don’t like plays. I think I came to the format
because, as I said, I’ve written a lot of historical fiction based on
slavery, and I didn’t want to repeat myself. So, I wondered, how could
I approach this story in a different way? Not sure how the idea of
doing it in dialogue came to me, but when it did, I was intrigued by
the challenge. Could I convey a sense of place and character without
descriptive sections?
A N i N T E R v i E w w i T h J u L i u S L E S T E R
I had a call-in radio show in New York from 1968 to 1975. I loved
radio, because all you had to use was your voice. So, in writing the
novel I think I drew on my years in radio and my consciousness of
how much the voice can convey.
Q. What do you hope readers will take from this novel?
a.
I never know how to answer this question. I have also written adult
fiction, and this is not a question I get asked about my adult books.
There seems to be an assumption that children’s books have a didactic
element. I just hope the readers are moved by the various stories in the
novel.
Q. how did you become interested in writing books for young people?
a.
I write for all ages. I’ve done picture books, YA novels, nonfiction,
poetry, and fiction and nonfiction for adult readers. I wonder sometimes
if the way we categorize books isn’t artificial, more something that is
market-driven than [something that] has any reality in the writing of
the books. I like to tell stories, and there is more opportunity to do that
in books for children, as well as science fiction and fantasy. I simply see
myself as a writer, and adults read my YA books and never know that
[they were] marketed for YA. I just write, and the books find the readers
they’re supposed to have.
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about the author of this guide
Taunya Nesin received her undergraduate degree in English and American Language and
Literature from Harvard University. She went on to Teacher’s College at Columbia University,
where she earned a master’s degree in Curriculum and Teaching. She has spent four years in the
classroom teaching various levels of elementary school. She is currently freelancing while spending
time with her toddler in Newton, Massachusetts.
I had a call-in radio show in New York from 1968-1975. I loved radio,
because all you had to use was your voice. So, in writing the novel I
think I drew on my years in radio and my consciousness of how much
the voice can convey.
Q. What was your favorite book as a child?
a.
Didn’t have one. I read tons of comic books and murder magazines.
Q. What advice would you give young writers?
a.
Read, read, read, read. To be a writer you have to know what has been
written. You have to understand how writers achieve certain effects. I
don’t care what you read. Like I said, I read comic books. I don’t read
comics anymore, but I love mysteries and detective fiction and fantasy
novels and read a lot of each. The important thing is to read.
F O R F u R T h E R R E A D i N G
Fanny Butler leigh
Ten Years on a Georgia Plantation Since the War
catherine clinton
Fanny Kemble’s Civil Wars
christopher conlon
The Weeping Time: Elegy in Three Voices
w E B S i T E S
Fanny Kemble and pierce Butler
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p1569.htm
The Weeping Time
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aua/part4/4p2918.htm
The largest slave auction
America’s Story from America’s Library
http://www.americaslibrary.gov.jb.reform/jb_reform_slaveauc_1.html

 

Coretta Scott King Author Honor Books

 

Maritcha: A Nineteenth-Century American Girl
Click to order via Amazon


by Tonya Bolden
(published by Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers)
 

Dark Sons
Click to order via Amazon

by Nikki Grimes
(published by Jump at the Sun, an imprint of Hyperion Books for Children)

 

A Wreath for Emmett Till
Click to order via Amazon

by Marilyn Nelson Illustrated by Philippe Lardy (published by Houghton Mifflin Company)

 

 


Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award
 

Rosa
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by Nikki Giovanni,

illustrated by Bryan Collier

(published by Henry Holt and Company)

 

 



Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Award
 

Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan
Click to order via Amazon

by R. Gregory Christie, illustrated by R. Gregory Christie

(published by Lee and Low Books)
 




 

John Steptoe Award for New Talent
 

Jimi & Me
Click to order via Amazon

by Jaime Adoff,










 


 

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