Ajeemah and His Son by James Berry

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(Paperback)

  • Age Range: 12
  • Pub. Date: January 1994
  • 96pp
  • Sales Rank: 290,878
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 1994
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Paperback, 96pp
    • Sales Rank: 290,878
    • Age Range: 12
    • Lexile: 760L 

    Synopsis

    In 1807, at the height of the slave trade, Ajeemah and his son, Atu, are snatched by slave traders from their home in Africa while en route to deliver a dowry to Atu's bride-to-be. Ajeemah and Atu are then taken to Jamaica and sold to neighboring plantations'never to see one another again. "Readers will come away with a new sense of respect for those who maintained their dignity and humanity under the cruelest of circumstances."'SLJ. "Each moment here of the Jamaican-born poet's terse, melodious narrative is laden with emotion. . . . Brilliant, complex, powerfully written."––K.

    Notable Children's Book of 1993 (ALA)
    1993 Best Books for Young Adults (ALA)
    1993 Fanfare Honor List (The Horn Book)
    1992 Books for Youth Editors' Choices (BL)
    Notable 1992 Children's Trade Books in Social Studies (NCSS/CBC)
    Bulletin Blue Ribbons 1992 (C)

    1993 Books for the Teen Age (NY Public Library)
    Children's Books of 1992 (Library of Congress)
    1993 Boston Globe-Horn Book Fiction Award

    Annotation

    A father and his eighteen-year-old son are each affected differently by their experiences as slaves in Jamaica in the early nineteenth century.

    Children's Literature

    In 1807 the wealthy, proud, joker Ajeemah accompanies his son Atu to the home of his bride-to-be to offer a dowry. Ajeemah has hidden gold in his sandals to surprise the bride's family. It is Ajeemah and Atu who are surprised by slave traders. And after that it is the reader who is surprised. Surprised that Berry can pack so much history and feeling into only 83 pages, surprised that the dreams and hopes of two men can be so tragically shattered, surprised that the spare text holds so much richness, and continually surprised by the events of Berry's story and the way he tells it.

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    Biography

    James Berry has received the Order of the British Empire for his contribution to poetry and the Signal Poetry Award for his children's poetry. His previous poetry collections, When I Dance and Everywhere Faces Everywhere, were published to rave reviews in the United States. His many awards and honors include the 1993 Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Fiction for his novel Ajeemah and His Son and a 1989 Coretta Scott King Honor for his collection of short stories A Thief in the Village and Other Stories of Jamaica. James Berry was born and raised in Jamaica and now lives in Brighton, England.

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