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  • Brown Girl Dreaming (Newbery Honor Book)
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Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
4,252 global ratings
5 star
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4 star
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3 star
3%
2 star
1%
1 star
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Brown Girl Dreaming (Newbery Honor Book)

Brown Girl Dreaming (Newbery Honor Book)

byJacqueline Woodson
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Top positive review

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David M. Track
5.0 out of 5 starsJust remarkable
Reviewed in Canada on October 28, 2021
I'm using this book with a class of students and the reception has been so heartwarming. The language is approachable. The style is artful and engaging and the subject matter is important.
This week it received the greatest compliment of all: a student asked, "Do you have any more books like this?" I'm so glad this book exists.
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Top critical review

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thecinnamongirl.blog
3.0 out of 5 starsA feel-good childhood memoir
Reviewed in Canada on September 20, 2016
I was inspired to read this book after hearing a wonderful interview with the author on NPR’s Fresh Air with Terri Gross. The idea of a memoir for young adults written in poetry really intrigued me. I immediately ordered it, along with the author’s next book, Another Brooklyn, on Amazon. The books arrived, and this one is particularly beautiful-looking: a silhouette of a young black girl holding a book, awash in a blue-green-yellow swirl of butterflies, and festooned with prestigious literary awards. Needless to say, my expectations for this book were very high.

Perhaps if my expectations had not been so high I would be giving this book a higher rating right now. As it is, I have positive and negative things to say about it. On the positive side, it is a lovely feel-good childhood memoir. It provided me when many, many, warm-and-fuzzy feelings throughout. You really feel that the author felt deeply loved as a child, although, if you read between the lines, it is pretty obvious that she was probably quite poor growing up, her father seems to have abandoned the family, and then her mother suddenly gets pregnant by an unidentified man, and the father of that boy (Roman) seems to be absent as well. Plus, the mother’s sister dies in a terrible accident and her brother spends time in jail. So, from an adult perspective, although tragedies befall this family (it certainly isn’t a bed of roses), the grandparents’ and mother’s love for the children is absolutely palpable and a delight to behold. The children clearly love and support one another as well, which personally I think is a rare gift. The character I loved the most was “Daddy”, the children’s grandfather; I could practically hear his voice, see his lean, work-worn body, and feel the love that emanated from him. It was sad when he passed away, but Woodson really showed the reader what a blessing he was in their lives.

On the negative side, as I said earlier, I was not too impressed with Woodson’s “poetry”. Perhaps if it had been marketed as “prose-poetry” it would have been more accurate. After a while, the fact that it was just prose with judiciously-placed line breaks got on my nerves. Writing good poetry is a different art form from writing good prose. Personally, I found her style too predictable to be called poetry. I feel that good poetry should, through veiling and unveiling, hint at nuanced meanings that can be interpreted in multiple ways, and this book didn’t provide that.
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From Canada

David M. Track
5.0 out of 5 stars Just remarkable
Reviewed in Canada on October 28, 2021
Verified Purchase
I'm using this book with a class of students and the reception has been so heartwarming. The language is approachable. The style is artful and engaging and the subject matter is important.
This week it received the greatest compliment of all: a student asked, "Do you have any more books like this?" I'm so glad this book exists.
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Anonymous
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
Reviewed in Canada on June 18, 2020
Verified Purchase
Lovely but all the pages of the book have rough edges
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Elizabeth Da Silva
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Reviewed in Canada on January 13, 2019
Verified Purchase
Great book for a young girl
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Damiaan Moghaddam
5.0 out of 5 stars My daughter loves it.
Reviewed in Canada on January 4, 2017
Verified Purchase
My daughter loves it.
One person found this helpful
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Steven R.A. Markin
5.0 out of 5 stars Read it.
Reviewed in Canada on October 1, 2017
Verified Purchase
Excellent book. Read it.
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Mame
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada on June 30, 2015
Verified Purchase
Awesome story and writing in poetry is refreshing and so original!
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Avidaid Inc.
5.0 out of 5 stars A compelling story of growing up black in America
Reviewed in Canada on February 14, 2022
Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson is a powerful memoir in prose poems of her growing up black during the 1960s and 70s in the north and segregated South. It is both intimate and honest. The author shares her personal experience of being born in Ohio where her father’s family were doctors and lawyers. Following a divorce when she was an infant, she and her siblings were taken to South Carolina where her mother had grown up. We see prejudice and the constant threat people of color faced every day in a state where they could not look a white person in the eyes and were compelled to address them as sir and ma’am. Yet, the book is filled with the love of family that everyone can identify with. There are scenes that are funny and sad and at times heartbreaking. Ms. Woodson skillfully details the journey of her early life and her conviction to become a writer.
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Sherise Falk
5.0 out of 5 stars I LOVED this book
Reviewed in Canada on February 7, 2020
I LOVED this book. I'm not usually a huge fan of poetry, but Brown Girl Dreaming was beautiful. I will definitely be picking up more books by Woodson in the future.
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L. M. Lemieux
5.0 out of 5 stars lovely copy
Reviewed in Canada on December 22, 2018
Thank you exactly what I wanted
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From other countries

Lady Fancifull
TOP 500 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely not only for the children
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 16, 2015
Verified Purchase
I discovered Jacqueline Woodson's autobiography-through-poetry book through the blog of an American writer and champion of excellent books for children

Woodson is a black American, and tells her story as a `brown girl' born in 1963, both as her own, individual family story and the wider story of black history from a particular time and place. She is an award winning writer for children and teens, but her reach goes way beyond being confined to appeal `only to children'

In many ways, I think the challenge involved in recognising that children are completely capable of understanding great and subtle complexity of meaning, but that they may not have quite the sophistication of adult vocabulary, is a brilliant discipline for a writer - it hones their craft. Some writing about complexity for adults leads to writing becoming over fussy, even designed to confuse or show off dexterity, but the really excellent writer who chooses to write for a younger audience - like Woodson - somehow keeps all the layers of meaning held within simply arresting, clear images, clear language

I had to take this clear and pared down book extremely slowly and very carefully, anxious not to miss anything.

Woodson's words are spoken softly, but they are powerful, and her images rolled unstoppably over me, leaving me, many times, breathlessly weeping

The starting point, is a poem by Langston Hughes, the rest of the story is Woodson's

Hold fast to dreams
For if dreams die
Life is a broken-winged bird
That cannot fly

Hold fast to dreams
For when dreams go
Life is a barren field
Frozen with snow

Born in Ohio, but raised also in South Carolina, where her mother and her father's mother were from, she tells of an experience from the North and the South.

She reminds us that in 1963:

In Birmingham, Alabama, Martin Luther King Jr.
is planning a march on Washington, where
John F. Kennedy is president.
In Harlem, Malcolm X is standing on a soapbox
talking about a revolution

meanwhile :

In Montgomery, only seven years have passed
since Rosa Parks refused
to give up
her seat on a city bus

She recounts the confusing experience of marital break-up, from the child's viewpoint, and the pain when families are torn apart, the conflicts when the people you love are no longer all living together - a sense that `home' is forever lost because it now belongs in several different places

Our feet are beginning to belong
in two different worlds-Greenville
and New York. We don't know how to come
home
and leave
home
behind us.

To set against the pain of loss and breakup as relationships end and the older generation who were strong and powerful become frail and the ones to be looked after, is Jacqueline's secret excitement at beginning to master words, to discover that she is, she will be, a teller or stories

For days and days, I could only sniff the pages
hold the notebook close
listen to the sound the papers made.
Nothing in the world is like this-
a bright white page with
pale blue lines. The smell of a newly sharpened pencil
the soft hush of it
moving finally
one day
into letters

This would indeed be a wonderful book for a child, and probably an even more wonderful one for parents and children to find delight in together.
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