Best friends Joe and John Henry enjoy many of the usual pleasures of boyhood together one hot summer - swimming in Fiddler's Creek (in their birthday suits!), savoring the ice pops from Mr. Mason's General Store - but the realities of segregated life in 1964 Mississippi intrude, keeping them from doing everything they would like, and from being too open about their friendship. When they learn that a new law requires their town to permit everyone - black and white - to use public facilities like the swimming pool, they are excited at the prospect of swimming in those crystal-clear waters together, for the very first time. But when they arrive at the pool on the fateful morning in question, they discover that the town, determined to resist integration, has filled it with hot tar, rather than allow blacks to swim. The law may have changed, but the people still had a long way to go...
Based upon author Deborah Wiles' memories of growing up in the South during the tumultuous Civil Rights era, Freedom Summer is a poignant exploration of friendship across racial lines, narrated by a young white boy (Joe) who, although content to have a black boy (John Henry) as a boon companion, has never really questioned the "way things are." It is only when change seems possible, and then impossible, that Joe truly considers how their friendship (and their town) might look to John Henry. I appreciated the perspective offered here on an important moment in our history, and the insight given, through the story, into the lives of ordinary young kids during extraordinary times. I was particularly impressed by the fact that the author chose to realistically depict "what happened next," highlighting the fact that things didn't immediately change, after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - there was (and still is) a long way to go.
With an engaging tale of friendship amidst the senseless wrongs of racism and segregation, and immensely appealing artwork by Jerome Lagarrigue, Freedom Summer is an outstanding work of historical fiction for the younger, picture-book set! Highly recommended to anyone looking for children's stories set during the Civil Rights era, or featuring interracial friendship. It could, perhaps, be paired with Jacqueline Woodson's , which presents the story of a friendship between a young black girl and her white neighbor in this same period.