This second book in Wiles’s Sixties Trilogy focuses on the Freedom Summer of 1964. A documentary fiction format that tells the story of three young people of Mississippi is interspersed with sound clips and re-enactments of real events. The cast performs ably, and the story is compelling, but the audiobook struggles with its format. A sixteen-minute prologue (a sound montage that takes the listener back to the sixties) leads to the story of Gillette, Sunny, and Raymond (kids—two white and one black), which is interwoven with more extended historical interludes between chapters. With such a busy structure, the story fails to flow. This is a book that works better in print, a medium that allows the reader to both control the pace and examine the documents of the era while experiencing the story. N.E.M. 2015 Audies Finalist © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
The summer heat is on. Summer memories maybe be filled with pool visits, popsicles, and road trips. But they’re also times of self-exploration, discovery, and those coming-of-age moments that will be looked back upon years later. Here are eight middle grade reads that celebrate summer in all its forms. What books have you reminiscing this […]