“We all have our la-la-la song. The thing we do when the world isn't singing a nice tune to us. We sing our own nice tune to drown out ugly.”
Delphine and her younger
sisters, Vonetta and Fern, are flying from New York to California alone. Being
the oldest, Delphine’s in charge, but it's not easy keeping two little sisters
in line. What's even harder is the fact that it's the late 1960s, and they have
the fear of Big Ma (their grandma) in them, which reminds them that they're representing all African-American people.
Delphine doesn't want her sisters to do anything wrong. When they get to
California, they are met by their mother, Cecile, who seems like a shifty
character with her sunglasses and quick ways through the airport. Cecile abandoned
them seven years before and doesn't seem very motherly when she takes them to her
apartment. She won't even let them in the kitchen! Each step of the way, Delphine acts like a little mother trying to protect her sisters and help them to have the
best experience possible. Cecile lets them do things they would never be
allowed to do back in New York, like go out to pick up Chinese food for dinner by themselves in an unfamiliar city. This whole new world brings with it a
slew of rules and way of living for Delphine and her sisters. When the girls go
to a camp that's run by the Black Panthers, they see a lifestyle that's foreign to them, but Delphine loves seeing the way the people are spreading
peace. When the girls are asked to take part in a rally, Delphine is sure that
they should not be a part of it, because she knows how her dad and Big Ma would
react. After she takes her sisters on a special sightseeing outing around San
Francisco, a trip she has planned down to the last penny, they come back
to find the police arresting Cecile and two men. What will happen now that the girls
have no parent to live with? How will each girl change? Who will help them
until it's time for them to go back to New York? What lessons are they learning? Should the girls participate in the rally? You have to read this amazing story to find out what life is like for these
three girls in 1960s Oakland.

One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia is the story of three
girls learning and growing. They move to
a world unlike any they have known before, and a new way of life is unveiled to
them. It showed me that you can't go miles
away from home and live in a different environment without seeing things in a
new light. My heart went out to Delphine as she tried to be a good older sister
and a wonderful caretaker. I was so scared for her when her mom was taken
to jail. I always feel bad for a character that has to grow up before their
time, but at least in this case the girls are able to learn some important lessons. This
book opened my eyes to a different culture and made me think about what it
might be like for people to have a parent they never really knew. The voices of the girls jumped off the page, and I still feel like I know each one and can picture them easily. I recommend this
book to kids in grades four and up because it will help them to see how far we've
come as a nation and what life was like not that long ago. This is the first
book I have read by this author, but I cannot wait to read more! I recently heard
there is a sequel, and I look forward to picking it up. A must read for people that
enjoy historical fiction and strong characters!
Has anyone else read One
Crazy Summer? Or have you read another book by Rita Williams-Garcia? We’d love to hear your thoughts.
Happy Reading!
~L
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