MIRACLE’S BOYS BY: JACQUELINE WOODSON
Bibliographic Information:
Author: Jacqueline Woodson
Title: Miracle’s Boys
Publisher: Penguin Group
Copyright: 2000
ISBN: 9780142415535
Summary: Miracle’s Boys is a story about three brothers who are orphaned and struggling to make it in the world. Lafayette, who is twelve years old, narrates the book which takes place over a two-day period (Friday and Saturday) however the book also flashes back in time as well. Miracle, the boys’ mother, died of an adverse reaction to insulin which put her in a coma. The boys’ father died of hypothermia after saving a woman and her dog from a freezing lake in central park years before. Twenty-two-year-old Tyree is the caretaker of the three, he gave up a scholarship to MIT in order to take care of his brothers. Fifteen year old Charlie, who has spent the last two years in a juvenile detention center for armed robbery, finally comes back home to live with Lafayette and Tyree. Before Charlie went to the juvenile detention center, he was a different person and had a close bond with Lafayette. The three brothers struggle to regain their once unbreakable bond because at the end of the day all they really have is each other.
Critical Evaluation: The author deals with heavy content in this story that is very realistic and similar to sometimes circumstances that happen in real life. The boys’ mother and father died so the eldest Tyree has to take care of his younger siblings. The middle child Charlie goes to a juvenile detention center and comes out a different person. While I feel that this is a good book, I also feel that the author tried to cover too many different issues at once: being orphans, grief, a young person in a juvenile detention center, a sibling sacrificing their life dream for siblings etc. These various themes and situations are so extreme that as a reader I began to focus on the circumstances more than the actual characters. I feel that the author didn’t make the right choice making the book last over the duration of two days. It made the story feel rushed, and the ending felt very abrupt and it probably could’ve had a smoother ending. Even though the duration of the book was two days, there were circumstances that were discussed years prior to the current Friday/Saturday setting. So it was pointless to try to cram the whole book into two days, if several memories, and circumstances from the past were going to be from other points in time anyway.
Reader’s Annotation: After their mother passed away nothing was the same for brothers Tyree, Lafayette, and Charlie. Will these three brothers ever regain their bond?
Author Information: In her earlier years, Jacqueline Woodson recalls writing both everything and everywhere including on paper bags, shoes, and denim binders. She admits that as a child she also loved to lie; making up stories was fun for her and she didn’t stop her lying phase until 5th grade. Writing, even at a young age, made her happy. Once she wrote a poem about Martin Luther King, and it was so good that no one believed that she wrote it. So, in fifth grade when she turned in a story to her fifth-grade teacher, having the teacher reply: “this is good” was the start of her writing stories.
Jacqueline Woodson is an award winning African American author. She has written over twenty four books for children and young adults, which the majority of those books have won awards. Her book “Miracle’s Boys” has won both a Coretta Scott King award and the LA Times Book Prize. “Feathers”, “Show Way”, and “After Tupac”, which are other books by Woodson, have been Newbery Honor winners. Also she is the 2018-2019 National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature.
https://www.jacquelinewoodson.com/all-about-me/my-biography/
Genre– Fiction
Curriculum Ties- English
Book Talk Ideas: Family
Reading Level/Interest Age: Grades 9-12
Challenge Issues & Defense Preparation
Challenge Issues: Juvenile Detention
Selection Policy: http://ccclib.org/policies/CollectionDevelopmentAccess-1999-11-16.pdf
Library Bill of Rights: http://www.ala.org/advocacy/sites/ala.org.advocacy/files/content/intfreedom/librarybill/lbor.pdf
Right to Read: http://www2.ncte.org/statement/righttoreadguideline/
Rationale:
Bibliographic Information: Author: Jacqueline Woodson
Title: Miracle’s Boys
Publisher: Penguin Group
Copyright: 2000
ISBN: 9780142415535
Intended Audience: The intended audience is young adults specifically the upper grades of 9-12. This particular book would be beneficial for an English or social studies class. Primarily the book will be used for individual study in which every member of the class should read the book, and then afterwards there can be a group discussion of what transpired in the book as well as observations and thoughts concerning the book. “Miracle’s Boys” can be utilized to start discussions concerning losing a parent, and how to start over.
Summary: Miracle’s Boys is a story about three brothers who are orphaned and struggling to make it in the world. Lafayette, who is twelve years old, narrates the book which takes place over a two-day period (Friday and Saturday) however the book also flashes back in time as well. Miracle, the boys’ mother, died of an adverse reaction to insulin which put her in a coma. The boys’ father died of hypothermia after saving a woman and her dog from a freezing lake in central park years before. Twenty-two-year-old Tyree is the caretaker of the three, he gave up a scholarship to MIT in order to take care of his brothers. Fifteen year old Charlie, who has spent the last two years in a juvenile detention center for armed robbery, finally comes back home to live with Lafayette and Tyree. Before Charlie went to the juvenile detention center, he was a different person and had a close bond with Lafayette. The three brothers struggle to regain their once unbreakable bond because at the end of the day all they really have is each other.
Relationship to Program:
The relationship of the book to school objectives would be helping 9th graders develop their literal and inferential understanding skills and comprehension skills. Through reading this book they would learn and develop the following skills: SLE #R. 9.9.2. Identify specific ways an author accomplishes purpose, including organization, narrative and persuasive techniques, style, literary forms or genre, portrayal of themes, tone and intended audiences; R.9.9.4 Recognize how works of a given period reflect author’s background, historical events, and cultural influences; and R.9.9.5 Draw inferences from a sentence or a paragraph (including conclusions, generalizations and predictions) and support them with text evidence. Concerning summary and generalization students will utilize R.9.9.8 Summarize and paraphrase structures in informational and literary texts, including relationships among concepts and details and R. 9.9.13 Identify and discuss a position using concepts gained from reading (e.g. debate, discussion, position paper, etc.). Concerning analysis and evaluation students will utilize R. 9.9.11 Recognize and define various points of view (e.g., omniscient narrator, third person limited).
http://www.fayar.net/edvision/language/09_reading_0405.pdf
Impact: By reading this book, I think it would help students who do have parents to realize how fortunate they are. Also, it will open the teens’ eyes up as to what and who they may be taking for granted. For those that may not have a parent or both parents, they can identify with the struggles of the characters, and see that they aren’t alone. It gives them a chance to talk about their feelings concerning their own situations whereas this is something that they wouldn’t otherwise talk about.
Why Included: This is a great book and a tv show. Jacqueline Woodson really gives us a glimpse as to what it is really like to be orphans, and the struggles that siblings go through. It emphasizes the importance of family, and that it isn’t too late to start over whatever circumstances may have occurred. I enjoyed this book myself as a teen so I’m sure teens would still enjoy it.