Book Descriptions
for City Boy by Jan Michael
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
From The United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY)
Sam vows he won’t wear his new running shoes until his mother’s cough improves. Instead, eight months later, he is staring at her casket in a gaping hole at his feet. Before the earth settles on his mother’s grave, Sam is whisked off to his Aunt Mercy’s village, far from his comfortable home, school, and friends. He must even sacrifice his computer; there is no electricity in the country. This is a thought-provoking portrait of a country and a disease that most American children know nothing about. However, the overarching themes are universal: selfishness, loneliness, fear, and bravery. 2010 USBBY Outstanding International Books List. lmp
Originally published by Andersen Press Great Britain, in 2008.
From the Publisher
Sam's widowed mother has died from "the Disease," and Sam is claimed by his aunt Mercy, who lives in the small African village where Sam's mother was born and raised. The gap between Sam's life in the city, where he had his own room, attended private school, and used a computer, and his new life in the dirt-floored one-room hut, which he is to share with his aunt and cousins, is vast beyond imagining. Grief, loneliness, and the absence of everything familiar make for a rocky transition to atraditional culture where possessions count for little and everyone is expected to do his or her share.