Man, things just got real in
children’s literature. Roll of Thunder,
Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor was for me the most realistic reading that
I have had so far in class. The setting for this book is more familiar to me
than the settings in Little House on the
Prairie and The Birchbark House.
I found it interesting that even though those two novels took place over half a
century before Roll of Thunder. A running theme of all of the novels I have
read for class so far seems to be the education of the children characters in
the books. In Kim, the reader is taken along with Kim in his education in
Imperial India. This would not have been interesting except that Kim is
culturally more Indian than he is Irish. In The
Birchbark House Omakayas goes through some very emotional tests and finds
her calling as a medicine women.
In Rolling Thunder, which is told
from the point of view of 9 year old Cassie Logan, the importance of education
runs through on a couple of levels. The novel starts out with the Logan children
walking to their first day off school. Mrs. Logan is a teacher and the Logan
children all have the importance of education instilled upon them all the time.
This theme is also reinforced in the small story about how Mrs. Logan’s father
scrimped and saved every penny to make sure his daughter could get an education
and pass along knowledge to others. But
there were many more lessons to be learned in this book than just to go to
school.
I found it very interesting that Taylor did not
gloss over the harsh realities of race relations that African Americans had to
deal with at the time. This was the most realistic part of the novel for me.
The scenes with Jeremy were probably the most painful for me to read. He seemed
like just a good, kindhearted sweet boy but could only be so close to the Logan
children just because of ‘the way things are’. The instances of what should
have been and fairness and the realities that existed were very harsh for
children to deal with let alone adults. Cassie’s incident in town is an example
of this. Sometimes I think that we as a country have come very far from the way
things were in the setting