Book Description
for Bird by Zetta Elliott and Shadra Strickland
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Gray skies and bare branches are the somber winter backdrop for a serious picture book about a young boy trying to make sense of tragedy and sadness. Mehkai’s nickname is Bird, and birds are one of the many things he likes to draw. He also likes spending time with Uncle Son, an old friend of his grandfather’s. “I like talking to Uncle Son ’cause he treats me like I’m grown, not like I’m some little kid who can’t understand anything.” Bird talks to Uncle Son about what happened to his older brother, Marcus, who taught Bird to draw and always encouraged him. But Marcus began taking drugs, and as the sickness of addiction overwhelmed him he was less and less the brother Bird knew. Bird wanted to know how to fix Marcus, but his Granddad explained some things can’t be fixed. Marcus’s death was followed by the death of Bird’s heartbroken grandfather. Now Bird finds solace in drawing pictures, listening to Uncle Son, who tells him a story about their African American ancestors flying to freedom, and thinking about his brother and grandfather “high above the clouds, where everything is calm and still.” (Ages 8–12)
CCBC Choices 2009. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2009. Used with permission.