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The Red Rose Box |
List Price: $16.99
Your Price: $11.55 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: The Red Rose Box Review: Brenda Woods' book The Red Rose Box is outstanding. This book takes you through many emotions as you read this book. It makes you angry as you read about how life in Louisiana was for African American people. The characters make you too feel afraid when whites spit on them and call them names. Woods does and excellent job of portraying the emotions of her characters through the vivid language and descriptions. The book is about Leah and Ruth Hopper who are living in Louisiana with their parents who are hard working African American people. Leah dreams of being a teacher one day and leaving her little town in Louisiana. Leah receives a package from her Aunt Olivia on her birthday it is an overnight case covered in red roses. Leah opens to finds what her aunt considers her femininity. Also on that day Leah's mother Rita receives and apology letter from her sister. This sets the wheels in motion for an amazing adventure for Leah and Ruth. They visit with Olivia and her husband in California. They also experience a trip to New York. All the while realizing that African American people are treaded different in the south, then in the other places they have visited. When tragedy strikes and Leah and Ruth go to California to live with their Aunt Olivia they experience the finer things in life, but terribly miss home. I like this book because the setting is during the depression. Historical settings are always interesting to me and make the book more believable. I recommend the book for older elementary age children.
Rating: Summary: Red Rose Box Review: Brenda Woods' novel, The Red Rose Box, tells the story of 10 year-old Leah Hopper from a small Louisiana town. The book begins when Leah recieves a mysterious package from her Aunt Olivia in Los Angeles. Inside is a traveling case filled with items Leah could never imaging owning, a silk bed jacket, costume jewelry among other things. Also in the package is a letter for Leah's mother Rita, who hasn't spoken to Olivia in years. The letter invites Leah, her mother, her sister Ruth, and her grandmother to visit her in Los Angeles. During thier visit the Hoppers find Aunt Olivia's life very different from thier own. Olivia is not subject to Jim Crow laws, is married to a wealthy man and lives in a fine house. Leah finds this life exciting and desirable. She calls L.A. freedom, but will she be happier there than Louisiana? Leah finds that she must answer this question after tragic events force her and Ruth to go live with Aunt Olivia. Overall, an excellant book. The characters are believable and children will be able to identify with Leah's struggle to belong, and her feelings of doubt. The book explores on an elementary level, the difference between life for African Americans in the North and South in the years before the Civil Rights movement. However, very few actual historical events are included in the book. Additionally, the book tries to cover two years of Leah's life, which results in little character development and brief explainations of many events. Still, the Red Rose Box is an excellant addition to children's literature
Rating: Summary: Red Rose Box Review: Brenda Woods' novel, The Red Rose Box, tells the story of 10 year-old Leah Hopper from a small Louisiana town. The book begins when Leah recieves a mysterious package from her Aunt Olivia in Los Angeles. Inside is a traveling case filled with items Leah could never imaging owning, a silk bed jacket, costume jewelry among other things. Also in the package is a letter for Leah's mother Rita, who hasn't spoken to Olivia in years. The letter invites Leah, her mother, her sister Ruth, and her grandmother to visit her in Los Angeles. During thier visit the Hoppers find Aunt Olivia's life very different from thier own. Olivia is not subject to Jim Crow laws, is married to a wealthy man and lives in a fine house. Leah finds this life exciting and desirable. She calls L.A. freedom, but will she be happier there than Louisiana? Leah finds that she must answer this question after tragic events force her and Ruth to go live with Aunt Olivia. Overall, an excellant book. The characters are believable and children will be able to identify with Leah's struggle to belong, and her feelings of doubt. The book explores on an elementary level, the difference between life for African Americans in the North and South in the years before the Civil Rights movement. However, very few actual historical events are included in the book. Additionally, the book tries to cover two years of Leah's life, which results in little character development and brief explainations of many events. Still, the Red Rose Box is an excellant addition to children's literature
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